Wrong-Way Small Traders Still Fading Rally; Gas Could Rally, But not Gold
Posted on March 12, 2010 at 15:56 PM EST
How overbought can a rally get? As Stephen Vita has been pointing out, it feels a lot like Q4 1999. What do the new Commitments of Traders numbers out today tell us? I've put up the data and new signals on my latest signals table. Some highlights:
- S&P 500: The wrong-way small traders have gotten more bearish, according to this afternoon's COT report. They've in fact had a bearish tilt in their net positioning in future and options since early January - fading the entire rally. Since my trading setup for the S&P 500 trades opposite to the small traders, their latest more to get more relatively bearish should be a good sign for the rally. On the other hand, the commercial hedgers also got a little more bearish this past week. And both sets of data correlate poorly with week-to-week fluctuations in S&P 500 prices. The main point is we're still very far from the kinds of positioning extremes needed to signal a turn in this market, at least if past data is any indication. So the setup remains long.
- Banks: The data on U.S. financials is also mixed, as you can see on that table. My setup for the BKX U.S. Bank Index remains in cash this week.
- Nikkei: My trading setup for Japan's Nikkei Average goes to cash after seven weeks being short. The setup went short in late January just as the market was selling off, so it'll wind up around even, probably with a small loss. The setup will stay in cash for a spell, then go long in late April.
- Gold: Gold and other precious metals haven't kept pace with the rest of the rally and sold off this week while my setup was in cash. The setup will remain in cash next week, and the data foretells more weakness for bullion. The large speculators have cut their net position and total open interest - and both of those sets of data have correlated quite well with gold prices the following week.
- Natural gas: My setup for gas, after being in cash five weeks, is now signaling to go long in a week's time - i.e. on the open of trading the week of March 22. As I noted in last week's post, the data has started to suggest the bloodbath might be finally over for gas. Now, the setup has officially gone to the bullish column.
Hope you did nicely this week and that you have a great weekend. Check in early next week for an update to my portfolio page.
TAGS: SPX, S&P 500, gold, BKX, Bank Index, natural gas, Nikkei, crude oil, Treasury, bond, COT, Commitments of Traders,derivatives, Black Swans, market timing, trading system development, CFTC, Commodity Futures Trading Commission,COTs Timer, out-of-sample testing, walk-around testing
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