Odds Czar: Simple Biases In the Futures Market: 2008

Discussion in 'Journals' started by Art Collins, Dec 31, 2007.

  1. Art's futures biases for Sep 29.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________


    For Monday, expect an up-move in the bond complex.
     
    #251     Sep 26, 2008
  2. Art's futures biases for Sep 30.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________


    For Tuesday, the only bias worth noting is the slightly bullish one in the continental currencies. I will predict an up-move in the stock sector based on normal month-end bullishness as well as the tendency these markets have of not following through following mega down-moves, if my non-systematic two cents means anything. (Not much I say).
     
    #252     Sep 29, 2008
  3. Art's futures biases for Oct 1.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________

    For Wednesday, look for weakness in the bond complex, particularly the 10-year.
     
    #253     Sep 30, 2008
  4. Art's futures biases for Oct 2.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________

    For Thursday, the Czar Charts continue to argue for a downturn in the bond complex.
     
    #254     Oct 1, 2008
  5. Art's futures biases for Oct 3.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________

    The CzarCharts say to be short the bond complex on Friday. The indices are slightly mixed with an overall bias to the buy side. The environment is scary and anyone deciding to sidestep it certainly can't be faulted. If you're inclined to take a position though, one could argue that the market is significantly oversold.
     
    #255     Oct 2, 2008
  6. Art's futures biases for Oct 6.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
     
    #256     Oct 3, 2008
  7. Art's futures biases for Oct 7.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________

    Despite the seasonals remaining negative in the index calendar biases, the other two major signal categories are urging buys. Monday's late rally demonstrated how the shorts could suddenly be facing the same fire that's been dogging the buyers for the last few weeks. The day-of-month signal just flipped to the mid-month short side, tipping the overall box, but it were to be a mere day off, you'd see solid buy signals. I'm thinking the majority would be good to follow on Tuesday, assuming you care to play at all. They say buy, and certainly anything stock-related is heavily oversold at present.
     
    #257     Oct 6, 2008
  8. Art's futures biases for Oct 8.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
     
    #258     Oct 7, 2008
  9. Art's futures biases for Oct 9.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________

    I could get cute and continue to tout a stock market rally on the strength of a bullish majority of the Czar signals. Besides that, six down days in a row in the Dow is kind of hinting that the shorts are getting nearer to having their feet put to the fire in the fashion the longs have been enduring.
    One thing that stops me from doing that is the fact that there are also buy signals in the bond complex, particularly the 5-year. Unlike the indices, these are uncontested. I suppose both can rise on Thursday. After all, both declined on both Tuesday and Wednesday.
     
    #259     Oct 8, 2008
  10. Art's futures biases for Oct 10.

    A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.

    ______________________________________________

    I am urging everyone to not consider any of my signals for at least the next two days. As a mechanical trader, I haven't had a very good history of making seat-of-the pants decisions particularly in the face of unprecedented shelling. I have to cop to something in all honesty however. Every system I trade has been tested in relatively normal market environments, the occasional singular shock (Black Monday, 9-11) notwithstanding. What we're seeing now goes way beyond that. Certainly "reversion -to-mean" systems have been getting killed as the market goes into relentless freefall. Momentum is distorted: it may work relative to the huge arcs that are now mandated, but who can sit through them?
    You hear a lot about a necessity of a "washout"--a capitulation point where the last of the panicked share holders demand to get out at any price. Again, I only trade off historical results, but the closest thing I can reference to our current environment is the week leading into Black Monday. The volatility was relentless and the point drops unprecedented. The Friday prior to Black Monday was the first day ever that the Dow lost more than 100 points on the close. It looked like the end of the world right there, but of course, the infamous Monday lost several multiples of that amount. (Remember, the Dow was only in the low 2000's going into that event). The next day was even more precarious for the overall economy although few people remember that. The markets opened sharply higher on unprecedented higher gaps. Then the market started a steady slide until it broke through Monday's lows and seemed to be heading for oblivion. That's when they closed every index market for a brief inter-day period except for the Board of Trade's Maxi contract. Buyers came into that pit with a flurry--the result being that when the other markets re-opened, the shorts were handed their lunch.
    That day, Tuesday, represented the ultimate market low. Trade wasn't great after that mainly because volatility went 180 degrees to the ultra-light level for several years. The slope from there, however, was relentlessly upward.
    I'm going to go out on a limb based on that mere one-time model to suggest that there is much pain coming on Friday--perhaps the first ever Dow quadruple point decline. Monday will be worse. Tuesday will see lower intra-day prices still, but the close will be sharply higher. I think that may be the ultimate capitulation. It's based on a singular event, but I can't think of any other one (or group of them) that is more plausible.
    One final thought: it's 4 p.m. central as I write this. If you can get access to the Asian markets, start monitoring them at 6 p.m. If they're going to melt as a result of our activity, I can't imagine how the indices won't start a huge swoon of their own in the overnight session. On the other hand, overnight stability here and abroad might be the best clue that the markets won't fall Friday after all and I'm probably dead wrong about everything.
    I guess it will be good news if I'm dead wrong. Then again, the washout will still be ahead of us.
     
    #260     Oct 9, 2008