Is it all over for the bull market rally since... how long has it been now?... since 2009! And what a rally it was. Trader positioning in the futures and options markets gives me a bullish signal for the
BKX U.S. Bank Index, taking effect on today's open of trading. On the other hand, my bearish signal for the
S&P 500 is still in effect, too. In fact, the latest COT data from the CFTC shows trader positioning in that market getting even worse.
The explanation could be simple: My BKX trading setup uses three component signals and thus tends to go in and out of positions on a shorter time frame than my S&P 500 setup, which is based on just two signals. In other words, both setups could be right. If that's the case, we could see a little rally within a larger decline.
See my newly updated
latest signals table for more details on these and my other signals. Good luck this week!
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
2 comments:
Thanks for the work, Alex. There aren't a lot of comments on your blog, but I imagine there are quite a few people following your COT analysis.
Hi Turning Japanese,
Thanks for your message. This blog gets 300 to 500 page views a day. It used to get a lot more comments, which were mostly questions about how the system works. Then I created my FAQs page to answer the most commonly asked questions, and the comments have dropped off significantly. I also find the comments increase when there's a bull market or confidence. These days, even with the long rallies, many market participants have an overriding sense of nervousness. That makes many people cocoon!
Regards,
Alex
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