
Joe F. Rocks! home
Joe F. Rocks!
Growth Stock Investor &
Market Strategist
Trade the Cycles Info (as of 12-22-04)
- I know some of you have
difficulty grasping some of the technical work that's part of my
original "Trade the Cycles" system. Well, I have great news for you. By
far the
most important part
of my system, the basis and crux of my system, are the cycles (very
long term (about 35 years for an entire cycle up and down), Cyclical
Bull or Bear Market (about 1 to 6 years typically), long term
(1
to 3 years), intermediate term (1 to 12 months), short term
(days/weeks), very short term (hours/days), intraday) and their
channels/trendlines (see the charts).
If you can't deal with the
detailed technical work you can simply use cycle channels/trendlines on
the charts in concert with Elliott Wave patterns and gaps in order
to time gold/silver stocks or
any other market. You
also have to keep in mind that cycles tend to become more
parabolic/sharply rising or declining over time. Following the Trade the Cycles Blog
is a great way to learn how "Trade
the Cycles" is used.
- The
fact that HUI,
NEM, and the XAU are in very long term upcycles since late 2000 (see
very long term upcycle charts) and the fact that HUI, NEM,
and
the XAU are in long term upcycles since May 10, 2004 (see
charts) are by far the most important factors.
Therefore, one really just needs to use cycles and their channels/trendlines in
the
charts in order to time gold/silver stocks (or any other market). The
indicators and COT data are more for finetuning entry/exit points (more
for traders).
- Keep in mind that my "Trade The
Cycles" system is
relatively new and
only reached a well developed stage (with a good understanding of
cycles and the three indicators, the NEM Lead Indicator, XAU Implied
Volatility, and the XAU
Put/Call Ratio, as well as the Commitments of Traders (COT) data) in mid 2003. Therefore, my application
and
understanding of the
system is still somewhat on a learning curve. My
system/research/analysis is relatively new and will probably continue
for years. The cycle
channels/trendlines in the charts are the
basis/crux of my system and help greatly to provide a comfort zone for
most I think.
- The intermediate term cycle
buy/sell signals my system uses are straightforward. Straight trendline intermediate term cycle buy/sell
signals occur when trendlines connecting short term cycle highs or lows
are broken and confirmed by sufficient follow through (1 to 2%). See the
charts for examples.
- Usually when the parabolic
trendline intermediate
term cycle sell signals occur,
the intermediate
term upcycle has at least begun to roll over (rate of ascent begins
decreasing) and it's possible the intermediate
term cycle highs are in, but often higher highs will occur.
- Once the parabolic trendline intermediate
term cycle sell signals occur, traders should look to take profits in
the near future. The topping process (cycle rolling over), if the highs
aren't already in as sometimes is the case (such as 8-20-04 for
HUI/XAU),
begins after the parabolic trendline sell signal.
- There tends to be choppy
sideways action (the intermediate term cycle flattens out/rolls over)
for a few days to a week near intermediate
term cycle
highs (see highs near the top of long term upcycle channels), but every
cycle is different. Taking profits in 2-3 stages probably
makes sense. The intermediate term cycle highs that occurred on 8-20
for HUI/XAU occurred just before the parabolic
trendline intermediate
term cycle sell signals, whereas NEM managed to make a slightly higher
high at 44.84 on 9-1 than it's high at 44.74 on 8-20 following it's parabolic trendline intermediate
term cycle sell signal.
- Those trading intermediate term cycles (probably the
shortest timeframe the vast majority should trade, the majority should
trade long term cycles that last 1 to 3 years for an entire cycle up
and down) should never
(unless you're trying to pick a top which is impossible to do
consistently) sell
prior to parabolic
trendline intermediate
term cycle sell signals and
can begin to sell afterwards or simply wait for the straight trendline intermediate
term cycle sell signal IF it doesn't result in a stop that's too loose
(trendline may sometimes be too flat to wait for it to break down).
- Trading short intermediate
term cycles typically will result in being long about 2-4 weeks and
being in cash and/or short for
about 1 to 3 weeks.
- With my system, I only begin
looking for an intermediate term cycle high after the rate of ascent
slows (the intermediate term
cycle starts to roll over),
which occurs after parabolic intermediate
term cycle trendline sell signals (occurred on 10-4-04 for HUI/XAU).
- To keep things simple, investors and traders basically buy
near the bottom of the channel(s) and sell near the top depending on
which timeframe you're investing/trading, using parabolic (more for
traders) and straight trendline cycle buy/sell signals (see charts)
with straight trendline cycle buy/sell signals confirming
parabolic trendline cycle buy/sell signals. For example,
intermediate term cycle highs occur near or at the top of the long term
upcycle channels (NEM did in late May, mid July, and on September 1,
2004)
and intermediate term cycle lows occur near or at the bottom of
the long term upcycle channels. It helps immensely to understand
the nature of cycles with cycle highs usually occurring after dramatic
spike moves (cycle trendline turns nearly straight up) and cycle lows
usually occurring after dramatic plunges (cycle trendline turns
nearly straight down).
- I want to make sure everyone
understands what I mean by an intermediate
term (1-12 months for the
entire cycle up and down)
cycle. An intermediate term
(months) cycle lasts anywhere from 1 to 12 months and usually lasts 1
to 3 months for the entire cycle up and down. An intermediate term downcycle refers to the
down portion of an intermediate
term cycle, typically only lasts a few short weeks, and many times
lasts less than two weeks.
- A trendline for an entire cycle
is comprised of various segments, which, when combined, form a parabolic shape. That's why I talk
about "the straight trendline since the May 10 long term cycle low" or
the
"parabolic/sharply rising uptrendlines for HUI/XAU since late July."
- With
the XAU Put/Call Ratio I
calculate it prior to the open and compare it to the prior session's
value, with a rise up to 6% portending strength and a decline up to 6% portending weakness. At greater
than 6% moves the XAU Put/Call Ratio becomes non contrarian
probably because something's up which causes so many traders to buy
puts or calls. It's kind of a voting machine. When there's enough votes
for weakness (many puts being bought) then weakness/a downtrend usually
results
and vice versa.
- For XAU Implied Volatility, as I do weekly in
my updates, I compare the prior session's change with that of the
XAU and come up with a delta that's used exactly as discussed
above. For example, if the XAU rises 2% and XAU Implied Volatility falls 1% that's a
+1% change/delta which is a significant (0.50%-1.99%) rise in fear that
portends strength. The XAU wall of worry held up well during the prior
session which portends strength. If I had real time XAU Implied Volatility I could do that
calculation just prior to doing a trade. The next best thing I use now
intraday is VIX (S & P 500 Volatility Index) since NEM is in the S
& P 500. I get real-time VIX from ASKResearch.com for $25/month. I
have no affiliation with them except I'm a subscriber.
- These indicators portend
trends/a session's tone rather than plus/minus for the session. Even if
both indicators portend weakness for a particular session, there could
be a large gap up at the open followed by a downtrend most of the
session, potentially closing higher for the session, in which case the
indicators still worked properly. They portend a tone/trend (weakness
or
strength/downtrend or uptrend) rather than wether that session will
close with a gain or a
loss. Gaps up or down are very common with gold/silver stocks. Also,
more
strength is likely in an intermediate
term upcycle than an intermediate
term downcycle if an indicator
portends strength for example. Of course, one must know
support/resistance
levels using long term cycle,
intermediate term cycle, and short term cycle channels/trendlines.
- When timing cycle lows, wait for
a substantial plunge into the target range. Then there
usually is a significant but relatively modest rally/very short term
upcycle followed by a decline again, which, if a higher low occurs,
probably means that the intermediate
term cycle lows are in. One can also wait for an intermediate term
cycle straight trendline buy signal, but sometimes gold/silver stocks will "run away from you"
if you wait for that buy signal. Basically, if the plunge takes HUI,
NEM, and the XAU close to the bottom of their long term
upcycle channels, you can buy if you're confident in those channels.
What helps a lot also is that NEM usually/almost always leads, so
watching NEM is usually like having a window into the future. After the
intermediate term cycle
lows are in there should be (usually is) a few hours or even a few days
of sideways action. Something
to look
for. Cycles tend to start out
relatively flat (flat rising troughs/bottoms uptrendline) and become
more parabolic/sharply rising over time, usually culminating in
dramatic spike rallies at cycle highs.
- The deltas or changes in the COT
data are the important thing to look at, because they reveal the
trading activity of the commercial
traders versus the speculators.
The notoriously contrarian (in
terms of their trading activity) gold/silver speculators have been
correctly positioned for gold strength in recent months, but are poor
traders as evidenced by their tendency to enter huge trades at the
wrong time (go long in a huge way near the top or short near the
bottom). This has
occurred at least 3 times in recent months. The reliable non contrarian gold/silver commercial traders made correct
huge trades in recent months at least 3 times. So, the gold/silver commercial traders are far
superior traders than the gold/silver
speculators are, which is what has allowed them to maintain their large
net short position for a long time, despite gold/silver's Bull
Market/very long term upcycle since 2001 (gold/silver stocks since late
2000).
- A very important point to make
for buy and hold investors and long term cycle traders is: The best time to buy is when
HUI and the XAU are near their Bull Market/very long term upcycle
trendlines (in place since November 2000 for HUI/October 2000 for the
XAU). That is, buy near a long term cycle low (HUI long term cycle low
at 163.81 on 5-10-04). Long term cycle lows
occur at the very long term upcycle
trendlines (see the long term charts below). Of course, you also need
to determine those trendlines for whatever gold/silver stocks you're
investing in/trading, but if HUI/XAU are near their Bull market/very long term upcycle trendlines, then
most gold/silver stocks should
be very timely/be close to their Bull Market trendlines.
- The next best time to buy is when HUI and the XAU are near
their long term upcycle trendlines (or maybe the bottom of their long
term upcycle channels, there can be a difference early in the cycle) in
place since the 5-10-04 long term cycle lows.
Those trendlines are at 187ish for HUI and at 89ish for the
XAU (11-12-04) versus closes on 11-12-04 at 241.86 for HUI and at
108.59
for the XAU.
- I believe most investors
should trade long term cycles, because they give far too much back
between long term cycle highs and long term cycle lows. HUI fell 36.66%
from it's long term cycle high at 258.60 on 12-2-03 to it's long term
cycle low at 163.81 on 5-10-04, which means that many gold/silver
stocks fell considerably more than that, some more than 50%. However,
one can do very well (putting it mildly in many cases) with simple buy
and hold (secular Bull Market/very long term upcycle lasting about 15
to
20 years) in most cases with gold/silver stocks, assuming reasonably
good stock selection.
- I've added a new cycle to my
system called a long intermediate term cycle that's comprised of two or
more short intermediate term cycles. On May 10, 2004 and in late July 2004 long intermediate term cycles began for
gold/silver stocks and the metals. The typical (short) intermediate term cycle lasts 4-6
weeks in it's entirety (from
cycle low to the next cycle low) for gold/silver stocks and a long intermediate term cycle typically lasts
about 3-6 months, but more research and observation are required.
- Something to keep in mind is
that gold/silver stocks tend to follow the major averages largely
because NEM is in the S & P 500 and is therefore traded by index
funds and other funds that correlate highly with the S & P 500.
- Reliable lead indicator NEM
(down 18.62% as of 8-13-04 from the 50.28 long term cycle high on
12-2-03) outperforming HUI
(-26.59% as of 8-13-04 from
the 258.60 long
term cycle high on 12-2-03) and
the XAU (-22.55% as of 8-13-04
from the
113.41 long term cycle high on 1-6-04) correctly portended
strength.
- Reliable lead
indicator NEM confirmed that a parabolic trendline long term cycle buy
signal occurred in May when a straight trendline long
term cycle buy signal occurred on
Thursday 8-19-04 (see NEM charts).
The XAU confirmed that a parabolic trendline long term cycle buy signal occurred in May
when
a straight trendline long term cycle buy
signal occurred on Friday 8-20 (see charts). HUI has yet to confirm a long term cycle buy signal, but
it's a foregone conclusion given that NEM and the XAU have done so.
- NEM's straight long term cycle buy signal that occurred on
Thursday 8-19-04 was accompanied by very high volume of about 8 million
shares and NEM trended up the entire session into the early part of
Friday 8-20's session, so the straight
long term cycle buy signal
on 8-19-04 was confirmed by sufficient follow through on very high
volume.
NEM rose 4.16% on 8-19 which is a very big day for NEM which tends to
have lower volatility than many gold/silver stocks because it has the
largest market capitalization of any gold/silver stock to my knowledge.
- The relatively flat start to
this long term upcycle since 5-10-04 implies that it will be a long
one, possibly longer than the prior long term upcycle that lasted from
7-26-02 until December 2, 2003 for HUI/NEM and until January 6, 2004
for the XAU. Also, the fact that the very long term upcycles for HUI,
NEM, and the XAU have all turned up and increased in strength is a
major positive which implies that the gains seen in this long term
upcycle are likely to exceed those in the prior long term upcycle
during which HUI rose 178.6% from it's long term cycle low at 92.82 on
7-26-02 to
it's long term cycle high at 258.60 on 12-2-03.
- NEM (Newmont Mining) again
proved to be a reliable lead indicator by flashing a straight trendline
long term cycle buy signal on 8-19-04 one day before the XAU did, and
by
outperforming the XAU and HUI since the long term cycle highs, it
correctly portended strength.
- Much
less extreme long term cycle
lows occurred than was suggested by their very long term upcycle
trendlines. The very long term
upcycle trendlines have turned up (See very long
term upcycle trendlines) after
less than four years, which is surprising and has very bullish
implications for gold/silver stocks and of course the metals, and has
very bearish implications for
the US Dollar (USD) and the US economy. This is consistent with a post
bubble very long term US economic downcycle that began in 2000.
- I'll have to find out when the
prior gold/silver stock very long term upcycle first went
parabolic/turned up, but the major averages' very long term upcycle
from 1982 until 2000 didn't go parabolic/turn up until 1995 which was
more than 12 years after the start of that cycle. 1995
was the first time that the major averages turned up in their prior
very long term upcycle.
- Silver may lag gold it appears, at least from a
very long term cycle standpoint, but I need to do more research. Silver
experienced a
very long term cycle low/Bear Market Bottom in late 2001
about 6 months after gold did for example. I
consider gold's very long term
cycle low/Bear Market low to be
in early 2001 (Aprilish) rather than in 1999 because the 1999 low was
followed by a huge spike and quickly returned to a downtrend/Bear
Market behavior, which means that the very long term cycle buy signal was never
confirmed by sufficient follow through. Gold didn't begin acting like
it was in a Bull market until after 2001's very long term cycle low, hence the Bull
Market in gold didn't begin until early 2001 while silver's Bull
Market began in
late 2001. Gold/silver stocks led the metals, beginning a Bull Market
in October/November
2000 (see the very long term cycle
charts).
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