As it stands, Bitcoin $BTC continues to hold above 30,000 following its brief false move. There are a number of levels we're monitoring over short time frames.
Correlations with legacy markets remain intact. But we're likely at an inflection point with respect to the co-movement between crypto and legacy.
Bear market story playing out beneath the surface.
Contrarian play is in bonds not stocks.
Challenges ahead, but commodity trends remain robust.
Friday’s mid-day swoon saw the S&P 500 move to new lows for the year and for a time had the index more than 20% below its January peak. By the end of the day, however, those losses were recovered. The index finished up on the day and closed at “only” 18.7% below its all-time high. Friday’s final hour surge was not enough to keep the index from falling for the seventh week in a row.
While these swings might pose a dilemma if you insist on seeing a 20% decline to slap a bear market label on the current environment, such is not our concern. I look around and see that it has been six months (and counting) since we last had more new highs than...
If you joined JC and the guys on our live twitter spaces session today, towards the end you heard me venting my current frustration in finding good opportunities to make directional bets in either direction right now. It's tough sticking our neck out here.
But of course, as options traders, we are not limited to just directional bets. We can attempt to pull profits from sideways markets as well. And when volatility is still elevated in most areas, there are plenty of places to look to sell premium. And the best place to do that is in an instrument that we feel is likely to continue trading in a sideways range for a period of time.
Today's idea is one such ETF that has been mired in a nice juicy range for nearly a year now.
ValueAct Partners revealed an additional purchase of roughly $10 million in Insight Enterprises $NSIT, as the activist hedge fund continues to build a position in the enterprise cloud company.
The firm now owns more than 3.8 million shares for a total ownership interest of just under 11%.
The average stock listed on the NYSE is down over 34% off its highs.
The new 52-week highs list peaked in February of last year - that was over 15 months ago!
We've now seen more stocks hitting new lows than new highs for the most consecutive weeks since the Great Financial Crisis.
The Technology, Communications and Consumer Discretionary sectors combined make up almost half of the stocks in the entire S&P500. They're each now down 26%, 33% and 35%, respectively.
In fact, almost half the stocks on the Nasdaq have seen their prices get cut in half.
And people keep asking me if we're going into a bear market?
What the hell do you call that?
If you define all that as a bull market, then I think you need to check yourself into a mental hospital.
However, during that time, commodities continued to rip higher.
Now that the rally in raw materials is reaching significant areas of overhead supply, it would make sense for this leadership space to follow stocks and enter a corrective period.
In other words, the uptrend in commodities that has persisted since 2020 is likely to take a breather and turn into a sideways trend.
Let's talk about it.
Here’s a weekly chart of the CRB Index running into...