Keep an eye on crude oil in the coming hours (especially in Europe and North American trade). The hourly RSI (seen below) stopped falling and we are in a massive descending wedge. Descending (and ascending) typically are reversal patterns, so this chart suggests in the coming 6-12 hours we should get a recovery in price (higher). I doubt it will create an actual “longer term trend change” however, if it does happen, the daily chart may set up a “higher low” which is an indication a trend may be changing in the near term.

2-2-16CL1

 

Blake Morrow

Chief Currency Strategist, Wizetrade

 

 

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Everyone is talking, blogging and tweeting about crude oil today and I figured I should throw my 2 cents in as well.

Crude oil may have found some near term support today. I am on the fence whether or not we can create a sustainable low here since the price action has been so bearish today (and recently).

What has caught my eye in the last couple sessions is the recent divergence between crude and the USD/NOK. Typically, this correlation has been very strong (crude down, USD/NOK up etc.) but the last couple sessions we have seen a strong divergence.

1-12-16USDNOKCrude1

Crude is the line chart, the USD/NOK is the candlestick chart. You notice the USD/NOK has stalled the last week as crude continues lower.

What this means to me is if crude does at least “bounce” here or near here, the probabilities of a pullback in the USD/NOK are high. As you can see below, we have also rejected a 161% extension of the last major pullback from September high to the lows in October.

 

Blake Morrow

Chief Currency Strategist, Wizetrade

 

Disclaimer: I am establishing NOK longs for the next few days.

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At some point in your investing or trading career, you find out nothing is ever “too far-fetched” for the markets. I can’t tell you how many times I have heard (or said myself) that “there is no way (insert any asset class, stock or market instrument) will drop to those prices!” Or “no way it’s going that high!” The market proves to us time and time again that trends can last a lot longer than most think.

I believe it was best said by John Maynard Keynes, “The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.”

When I look at a chart of any market, I have to assume prices can go there. Also, I have to think what type of knock on effects it may have on other asset classes in the event it does. Asset classes, like crude oil, have strong correlations with currencies like the Canadian Dollar or the Norwegian Krone because of their heavy crude oil exports. If prices in crude move aggressively, some currencies may also stage an aggressive move as well.

Today Business Insider quoted Jeffery Gundlach in a presentation from December 2014 referencing if crude oil goes to $40 then “something is very wrong with the world, not just the economy.” Fast forward to August of 2015, and we are back near $42, a price that we had been at just a few months ago in March and January right after Mr. Gunlach made that statement. So, here we are again back near those levels. Is it possible we go lower from here? Technically, not only do I think it is possible, but I think the odds are increasing daily that we do visit levels below $40. Take a look at the monthly chart:

8-11-15crudeblog

There are a lot of “days” left in the month of August, so the current monthly bar has time to change. You can see the very large red bar already developing. We are well-situated below the rising trend line of 15+ years. Also, you will notice the last several months we have had a very shallow bounce. Shallow bounces like this tell me there is not much interest to buy an asset class at these prices, even after a steep drop like we have seen in crude oil this last 12 months. In turn, this means that we may have further to drop.

Frankly, I can’t imagine crude oil drops much farther. It sounds irrational at this point. But when we were near $100 last year, it really was no surprise to me that we would come down eventually, as noted in this Yahoo Finance article back in August of 2014. I am unsure how long we will sustain these prices, but I have to ask myself as a currency trader, what am I to do in the event we do break $40 in crude oil and “what if” we sustain these lower levels? As irrational as it seems.

I turn your attention to the USD/CAD. I had been playing on the long side the USD/CAD for several weeks. I have been in and out, booking profits when I can and being very careful about being long as we are near these multi-year highs. With the BOC and the FOMC moving in opposite direction with monetary policies and the persistent weakness in crude oil prices (CAD and Crude are strongly correlated most of the time) this has been a fairly straight forward trade in recent months.

Let’s imagine that crude does break $40, and let’s also imagine that prices sustain these lower levels for the foreseeable future. The USD/CAD currency pair has a long term “cup and handle pattern” which has developed in recent months that point the pair over time towards the mid 1.5000’s exchange rate. Take a look below:

8-11-15CADblog

Here is a chart showing the strong correlation of the USD/CAD to crude prices longer term. USD/CAD is the blue line:

8-11-15CADCLblog

I know it sounds crazy, doesn’t it? It sounds almost “irrational.” C’mon, ANOTHER 2000+ pip move higher in the USD/CAD? Really? That’s just silly.

 

Blake Morrow

Chief Currency Strategist, Wizetrade

 

Disclaimer: I have both long and short CAD exposure currently.

 

 

8-11-15sticker

Do you think these Canadian/US price differences come back again?

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