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Our View
I have been having a hard time trading the ES and I don't think I have company, I know it. Are you in that company as well?
If you are, there’s no shame in it. If you’re not, then pat yourself on the back. This has been a tough, choppy tape — and that’s exactly what choppy tapes are designed to do: take money from both sets of traders.
I keep trying to explain that this has become an algorithmic shooting gallery. Like yesterday, the ES puked hard early but then closed just off the highs of the day. The bulls want higher prices and every time the ES sells off, the bears are saying the crash is coming — but what if this is just a 200 or 300 point trading range that keeps whiplashing everyone when they get too long or too short?
Our Lean
This is the section where Danny lays out his Lean on the market and his approach to today’s trading session.
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Danny Riley is a 39-year veteran of the CME trading floor. He has run one of the largest S&P desks on the floor of the CME Group since 1985.
MiM and Daily Recap
The ES traded a high of 4040.50 on the Globex high, a low of 3985.50 and opened at 3987.50 on Wednesday. From there, the ES traded up to 3994.50 in the opening 15 minutes, then down to 3969.50 at 10:00 ET, before rebounding to a lower high at 3986.50 a few minutes later. The ES traded down to the session low of 3972.25 at 10:40 before the market began to roar higher.
The ES climbed 42.50 handles off the low, tagging yesterday's low of 4005.25 and pulling back about 12 points at 12:15. From there, the ES rallied another 42 handles to a regular session high of 4035.75 just after 3:00. At 3:50, the ES traded 4025.50 as the MIM revealed $1.2 billion to sell. It traded 4032.50 at the 4:00 cash close and settled at 4029.50 on the 5:00 close, down 0.75 points or 0.02%.
In the end, MSFT opened lower by 3%, fell almost 5% then closed nearly flat. It dragged the markets down and powered them back up. In terms of the ES's overall tone, with the exception of the early sell programs the ES was extremely firm. In terms of the ES's overall trade, volume was slightly higher than average at 1.7 million contacts.
Technical Edge —
NYSE Breadth: 62.5% Upside Volume
Advance/Decline: 54% Advance
VIX: ~$19.25
I want to do something a little different today. Instead of the typical look at the charts, I want to do a more detailed breakdown of yesterday’s action. Because when you zoom in on the price action, it was honestly fascinating and I am hoping that it can help traders navigate the recent action better.
S&P — SPX
Coming into the day, we were looking at two zones: Either 10-day + 200-day + 50% retrace to hold as support, or the 50-day + 61.8% retrace. In the end, it was the latter — the 50-day and 61.8% retrace — that held as support.
Above is an intraday look at the SPX index on the 15-min chart.
Notice how we came down hard off the open and began to consolidate the opening 60 minutes of action (blue box is the H1 range).
We broke the low, but then bounced back (twice) as the S&P wicked off the lows. From there, the SPX powered up through the session high and ran all the way to yesterday’s low.
It was rejected initially, but reset at the rising 10-ema and opening-hour high, then powered to new highs and ran to last week’s high. It reset at the 10-ema again in the final 10 minutes for anyone who wanted to take a lotto shot on a bounce into the close.
There’s nothing groundbreaking here. However, I hope it acts as a reminder to keep an open mind when trading. Conviction is important, but so is flexibility. It helped to sell the rallies early, as the S&P struggled for upside. However, it paid better to turn bullish once the price action told us to.
For me, that was most telling at around 12:30 when the S&P pulled back and held the opening-hour range high + 10-ema. That was a low-risk long opportunity.
S&P 500 — ES
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Open Positions
Numbered are the trades that are open.
Bold are the trades with recent updates.
Italics show means the trade is closed.
— Any positions that get down to ¼ or less (AKA runners) are removed from the list below and left up to you to manage. My only suggestion would be, B/E or better stops.
From this latest round, that includes TLT, DE and FSLR.
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Go-To Watchlist
*Feel free to build your own trades off these relative strength leaders*
Relative strength leaders →
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