US10Y Weekly buy?We find different trendlines and an important support at this point. If the stock market keeps rising we might have a lower price, also because commodities and bonds trend inversely (1) we could have a small change in the trend, because both oil and gold have fallen.
1. Murphy, J. J. (2015). Trading with Intermarket Analysis: A Visual Approach to Beating the Financial Markets Using Exchange-traded Funds (Vol. 586). John Wiley & Sons.
10yearnote
This is the end of the bearish run. Confirmed by XABCD, RSI, etcI want to first direct your attention to last year, as most traders have also seen the resemblance between the start of the bullish market and this year. This will also play (due to the blatant resemblance) into the fear of bears that have leverage futures to really drive this metal down.
Technicals :
Second, this is the lowest levels of RSI continuity also recorded on this instrument, displaying bold downward pressure and bulls yielding their positions.
What is rock bottom? Rock bottom started forming on Friday, but I suspect it may not be completely over as of yet. Due to the propensity of market participants to favor current channels and direction as opposed to the proverbial "catching a falling knife".
Bullish XABCD pattern found but not perfect with the harmonic numbers.
Catalyst: The single major catalyst this week will be the FOMC meetings.
More on the Catalyst and trade methodology:
The Fed had recently warned markets that there is a rate coming, the market expects it, and if you look at what the market believes, the likelihood seems to be around 75+%. That type of certainty is what prompted to treasuries on the long end of the curve(i.e. 10Y) selling off so that yields go higher. For those of you who are not as familiar with fixed income - I invite you to learn more. Another thing to note is that there are 3 reasons why this was bad for Gold
1) Higher rates mean that holding Gold is more expensive since the discount rate will be higher. Hence, think of your basic PV = FV/(1+i)^t. So the tradeoff in holding gold is the yield you would otherwise receive if you put your money in bonds.
2) The dollar is also higher with the promise of a rate hike & more importantly the idea that Trump will be good for the US economy.
3) Not surprisingly given the points 1) 2). Valuations also went up on stocks - specifically US stocks. And this is widely documented if you look at capital flows to equities and treasuries vs. Gold - a negative correlation with the latter.
Trade:
So here is what I am doing.
1) expecting that gold is going higher by Feb. and this is around the bottom. Next support will be 1150 and 44.
2) The 75%+ certainty that it will happen is data that looks back to the last 2 weeks. But the buying has continued so we can assume that the certainty of the hike is actually higher.
3) I will not go into too much depth on the math but the market is expecting 25bps this week. And 3 other hikes next year.
So if the fed is even hinting that they will be dovish or if they seem complacent you will see a flight out of the trades that were so profitable in the past few weeks and gold will rise.
If on the other hand they confirm market expectations - you are fine because it is largely priced in.
Hypothesis: In the days before the meeting, some funds will also be careful about this "almost certain" hike and they will take up positions in Gold and other hedge assets and instruments because they don't want to get caught with their pants down, which will give bulls a relief rally.
PS. Also check out: Shiller index PE on google.
Only trade risk capital whether you are long or short. And remember, bull or bear, piranhas will eat you ;)
Good luck and have fun!
The Human Piranha.
Positioning | Net Non-Commercial US 10y T-NotesAt extreme levels, however, the data doesn't look correct... I'm certain it is the most extreme since 2005!
Downside Risk Potential For The EuroThere is downside risk for the euro as price action for EURUSD failed to close above 1.1342, essentially creating an asymmetric double top with the fizzled mid-February rally.
The pair looks to fade back to the 200-day EMA near 1.1108. The rally in the dollar following its steep declines last week could cause a more pronounced slide as long as the DXY remains supported (92.50 remains a key near-term support level).
Next, traders are saw bunds bid while the U.S. 10Y remained rather muted, causing spreads to become the widest since last December.
The U.S. 10Y has held a relatively strong negative correlation with the dollar index going back to last August. If the dollar remains supported, there will likely be dampened demand for U.S. paper outside of any significant headline risk that could spark demand.
If price action does not confirm a downtrend break above 1.1342, the euro will likely slide against the dollar and challenge the minor uptrend created in December.
S/R levels remain key targets for advancement and pullbacks.
Check my posts out at:
bullion.directory
www.investing.com
www.teachingcurrencytrading.com
oilpro.com