It’s an old commodity market maxim that never fails to deliver. The cattle, sugar, and OJ markets embodied this truth last year.
But as the calendar flips to 2024, it’s time to track those markets that failed to launch in 2023.
Here are three of my favorites…
Coffee
Unlike other softs such as cocoa and sugar, coffee failed to produce monster gains last year.
But it’s now attempting to carve out a multi-year double bottom:
Notice the resistance level at approximately 197 coincides with a key retracement level and a shelf of former lows. That’s our breakout level.
Also, note that the 168 level proved an excellent area to define our risk and get long well before our current line in the sand. A similar early-entry opportunity is taking shape in the cotton market.
But first, a daily chart of March coffee:
I like buying coffee futures on a decisive close...
Here is a list of trade ideas organized by date, ticker symbol and directional bias. Please make sure you have clicked on the link and read the details surrounding the trade before acting upon any of them. Also, make sure you have checked with your financial advisor and tax accountants to make sure you are suitable to be executing what is discussed on this website. The risk management procedures and targets are detailed for each idea. Please read and review the terms and conditions page before making any trades of your own.
Here is a list of trade ideas organized by date, ticker symbol and directional bias. Please make sure you have clicked on the link and read the details surrounding the trade before acting upon any of them. Also, make sure you have checked with your financial advisor and tax accountants to make sure you are suitable to be executing what is discussed on this website. The risk management procedures and targets are detailed for each idea. Please read and review the terms and conditions page before making any trades of your own.
I’ve had palladium on my mind for a while – long before gold posted a new all-time high.
Why palladium?
It all started with an extreme Commitment of Traders (COT) profile…
Check out the longer-term chart of palladium futures with the COT in the lower pane:
Commercial hedgers posted a new record-long position back in April.
Notice the sustained trends following similar commercial positions in 2012, 2016, and 2018.
Commercials represent the strongest hands with the deepest pockets. Plus, they have inside knowledge of the supply and demand dynamics of the market in question. It’s OK to think of them as “smart money.”
But record-long positioning isn’t a signal on its own. It doesn’t help us define our risk. It simply indicates the market structure.
Case in point: Record-breaking long positioning became the norm for commercials as price continued to fall throughout the year.
Holding a long position since the spring required deep pockets and proved a painful opportunity cost.
But the pain of owning palladium is likely behind us as long as the futures...
Last week’s fresh all-time highs left many gold bugs empty-hearted.
The market continues to torment precious metal bulls as they wonder what could have been.
But hopes and dreams aren’t a viable strategy.
The only “what if” that concerns me is whether the yellow metal flashed a failed breakout.
Or are we simply dealing with a a premature move?
Let’s dig in…
Check out the weekly chart of gold futures, highlighting the breakout in question:
Bulls sliced through overhead supply, vaulting gold to new heights. But the bearish momentum divergence in the lower pane reveals a lack of fervor for the shiny yellow rock.
Divergences between momentum and price don’t guarantee a major reversal.
Gold can still break out as momentum divergences have a way of righting themselves. That’s why I prefer to focus on momentum regimes. They’re just more reliable.
From a structural perspective, the real nail in the coffin for gold lies just below the right shoulder trough at approximately 1,820. A decisive close below that level completes a failed inverted head-and-...