A Potentially Bearish Retreat From Overbought Conditions?

 | Nov 28, 2014 01:20AM ET

T2108 Status: 63.5%
T2107 Status: 52.8%
VIX Status: 13.3 (increase of 10.4%)
General (Short-term) Trading Call: Hold (bullish positions) – see below for caveats
Active T2108 periods: Day #29 over 20%, Day #27 over 30%, Day #24 over 40%, Day #22 over 50%, Day #17 over 60% (overperiod), Day #99 under 70% (underperiod)

Commentary

The sun sets on the oil patch

Source: Business Insider, © AFP/File Karen Bleier

“@howardlindzon: Never seen an energy sea of red like this in Stocktwits trending … $USO #oil http://stks.co/d1Inj”

A sea of red for energy-related stocks

This post on StockTwits says it all for the a holiday-shortened day of trading in the U.S.

OPEC confirmed it is trapped into continuing to produce oil into a declining price environment, and the results in the oil patch were dramatic. The impact was far-reaching as it seems the entire commodities-related complex went into a freefall on the day. So, I can excuse T2108 from backing off over-bought conditions as it tumbled 4 percentage points to 63.5% despite the S&P 500 barely budging to the downside.

The S&P 500 does not even show a hint of the carnage extending throughout the world of commodities

The strategy I outlined for trading overbought conditions dictates sending up a definitive red flag warning of a potential top in the market. However, the tension here is that falling energy prices are also good for consumption of a whole host of other goods. Indeed, the IMF supposedly estimates that each $10 plunge in oil prices adds about 0.2 percentage points to global GDP growth. So, it is very possible that the stock market continues its rally but at a much slower pace as energy-related stocks continue to weigh on the index.

My tune will get bearish if the S&P 500 follows through with more selling next week that produces a close below 2052 or so. This would close the gap up from the surprise Chinese rate cut. It would also end the nice uptrend through the channel creates by the first and second Bollinger Bands® (BB).

There was also an interesting dichotomy in the two main resource-related currencies: the Canadian dollar (Rydex CurrencyShares CAD Trust (NYSE:FXC)) and the Australian dollar (Rydex CurrencyShares AUD Trust (NYSE:FXA)).

Canada delivered great GDP growth results for the previous quarter, but it was not enough to slow down the commodities train wreck:

The Canadian dollar weakens despite a strong GDP print – selling in the oil-patch dominates trading

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

Given this move, I would expect the Australian dollar to get absolutely hammered. Quite the opposite. AUD/USD actually RALLIED and ended the day with a gain despite a late pullback. Most important for trading purposes, the Australian dollar held firm against the Japanese yen (AUD/JPY). This made my buy of the dip earlier in the week even more fortuitous. I thanked my lucky stars and snatched my profits.

The Australian dollar versus the Japanese yen holds firm against otherwise bearish signals taking root elsewhere

Despite my hasty exit from the long AUD/JPY position, I still consider this current stability a strong signal that invalidates any bearish misgivings I may otherwise harvest. I just did not want to leave these profits on the table over the weekend. Regardless, you can bet that I am watching AUD/JPY even more closely now.

There is SO much I would love to write about the oil patch and the collapse in commodities in general. I hope to dribble these out over time. For one thing, it is definitely time to update and upgrade my old Commodities Crash Playbook from 2011! (“Preparing for Profits in a Resource-Constrained World” and“Profiting from Physical Assets in a Resource-Constrained World – Rules and Picks“). For now, I turn your attention to Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF SPDR Energy Select Sector Fund (ARCA:XLE)) and PowerShares DB Oil ETF (NYSE:DBO)

Readers may recall my fortuitous short of XLE that was interrupted by the Halliburton Company (HAL) deal to acquire energy services competitor Baker Hughes Incorporated (BHI). As luck would have it, I could have held that short position even if it meant watching my profits melt away before hitting the real jackpot.

With only a half day of trading available, traders rushed for the SPDR Energy Select Sector Fund (ARCA:XLE) exits with particular speed and alacrity

This breakdown in XLE is a classic follow-through of a bearish break of the 50DMA just two trading days ago. Technically, I should have been all over that move. My only defense is that I had little interest in trying to out-guess the politicizing and strategizing surrounding the OPEC meeting.

Now that the cat is out of the bag – and perhaps we are witnessing the beginning of the end of OPEC as we have come to know and love – trading opportunities abound. The FIRST thing that came to my mind is that HAL may have to back down out of its deal for BHI. The collapse in its stock price back to June, 2013 levels means that the deal for BHI has gotten ever more expensive. HAL is handing over 1.12 HAL shares and $19 in cash for every share of BHI. Those shares are now worth a lot less. Perhaps BHI will still be grateful for its savior and accept the same price. Perhaps this on-going plunge in oil prices does not change a thing. Maybe it even makes the deal MORE attractive because of supposed cost synergies. But just in case the odds of a deal collapse just got higher, I had no problem rushing in to buy April call options on HAL against April put options on BHI. Moreover, I think the out-sized beating being delivered to HAL is an expression of growing displeasure with the deal.

Traders rush for the exits from HAL in a massive display of force. An 11% loss in just one day.

BHI is on its way to losing even the rumor-driven premium from the HAL deal

This trade should pay off if the deal collapses and HAL regains whatever premium it lost and BHI rushes downward to catch up to the rest of its cousins in the oil patch. It should also pay pay off if oil somehow finds a bottom and starts rallying again at some point soon. However, the gap down in DBO suggests that the latter is NOT the likely scenario.