TBT
Sell the hell out of LT treasuries if we pullback to the meanOne of the most obvious trades out there. Pullback to mean would be KILLER value. Will be watching this closely and using Marty Armstrong's Socrates levels for confirmation.
There is certainly a chance we continue down further to that next support trend line before pulling back. In that instance we may see a H&S formation occur with the right shoulder at fib.
Bounce in Bonds? TLT ZN!1 TBT Bonds usually bounce after huge sell offs
before continuing to sell off. 2013 multi week sell off had
mid week bounces to roughly 50% of previous week's range.
good spot to buy some longer dated calls (dec?) at 126'235
for a bounce next week to around high 127s or low 128s+.
RSI lowest in years, closed 4 days outside lower BB, very oversold.
good statistical probability. however, might fail due to unprecedented political climate and china dumping
TLT lower for longer :)Please forgive for the poor title choice. TLT coming into contact with a multiple points of resistance: the 50d ma as well as the 138 line. Momentum a key driver of the rally in lower bond yields appears to be fading. Although I still think yields head much lower in the US, now is not the time to hold a big long position.
Short Term Short TLTStill think rates will head lower due for a myriad of reasons, but in the short term, it is plausible that rates will go higher for technical reasons.
Longer-Term Reasons for lower rates (i.e. lower for longer)-
1) Monetary Policy remains accommodative
2) Growth/Inflation expectations remain subdued
3) Foreign buying interest from places with negative yields on rates (see japan, europe)
Near term reasons for the long bond to go up in yield-
1) Hawkish Fed Talk
2) Technicals as seen in the diagram (e.g. long term toppyness, decelerating RSI, declerating CCI, potential MACD bearish cross-over)
TRADES TO MAKE IN PREPARATION FOR A BREMAIN RESULTI don't trade news, but this is an event whose outcome I think is now relatively certain (Bremain) such that it might be worthwhile to take a small position to take advantage of the relief rally that will occur if that is the result. Naturally, I could be totally wrong on the result, but the probability of a Bremain vote is currently higher than a Brexit vote, if the bookies have anything to contribute to the discussion ... .
In any event, here are the ideas, roughly in the order of my preference:
1. Gold Short. Gold is again butting its head against the psychological 1300 resistance level here, and its been sideways between 1200 and 1300 since mid-February, having previously unsuccessfully challenged the +1300 mark in early May before giving up the ghost all the way back to 1200 by May's end. A meaningful relief rally in equities on a Bremain vote may guide the precious metal lower.
Because I'm currently in a GLD position, I've chosen to close the put wing sides of my GLD iron condors, leaving short call verticals in place to take advantage of any downturn. If the short call verticals don't hit max profit outright, I'll merely wait and buy the dip by adding the short put wings back in if there's a significant drop in price.
Trades: GLD or GDX short call verticals above current resistance.
2. TLT short/TBT long. Traders have fled risk-on assets a little bit here in advance of the referendum. As with gold, they've sought out safe havens such as treasuries, driving TLT to within 5% of its 52-week high and TBT to within 5% of its 52 week low (TBT is the inverse of TLT).
Trades: TLT short call verticals above current resistance; TBT short put verticals below current support.
3. European Indices/Index ETF's Long. Naturally, you can play US equities indices long here, but since this is uniquely a European "thing," I would think you'd want to put plays in European indices or index ETF's to get the full brunt of the relief rally and not the spillover that will occur into US markets. Although the Euro index ETF's have already experienced a bit of resurgence off of lows, they may have further upside once the referendum is over.
Trades: EFA short put verticals below current support.
4. Cable Pairs. GBPUSD is the most obvious choice for a bullish assumption, although it's already rallied from the 6/16 low by 200+ pips, although it may have another 350 pips to the upside in it (the 5/26 high).
In all of these instances, I would trade small and, if trading the underlyings directly, I would common sense in setting stops. Keep in mind that all these assets are likely to move "in tandem," so I would pick one to trade and not put on trades in the others. The reason my preference is for a gold trade is that (a) it's a mover; (b) it's already at resistance; and (c) well, to be honest, I've already got a GLD trade on that I can use to take advantage of the movement.