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come on, it's different time frame. You might not care about 5% pullback, but I and I believe lots of people here do care. For me, 1% is already lots of money, no to mention 5%. Didn't market pullback about 5% recently? At least it proves that smart money historically short is not good thing. You can say, overall, it's still up, yes, on weekly chart, it's not even a dent, but on 60 min chart it's already 2 legged pullback. I'd be very happy to catch those 2 legs. Again and again, we have different time frame. If you insist that 5% pullback is nothing, we're on different time frame, period. I trade ES everyday, you can try to long, say, 20 ES to ride down from 1840 to 1740, which is 20 * 100 * 50 = $100,000, that is at the worst time, you're down $100,000. Well, maybe it's nothing to you but I believe to most of us, down $100,000 is already big enough, so yes, I do care about 5% swing, I care about 1% swing actually, and in fact, in day trade, I care about every tick, that is 0.25 point. Lots of time, miss just a single tick is about losing the whole trade.cletus wrote:Has the market gone up or down since hedgers went net short? Just curious since it seems like everyone thinks that it's a bad thing when they're short.

Thanks for the charts Cobra,Cobra wrote:The interesting part is smart money has covered a lot which could mean the low was in already. I cannot believe this but well, at least this scale of covering has been the low recently (red lines are just few examples).
The institutional buying and selling chart (courtesy from stocktiming) shows more distribution than accumulation. The chart doesn't tell future only confirms what happens yesterday. Hopefully today's huge up has changed everything.
Nikkei obviously skewed by AbeonomicsAl_Dente wrote: Another view: if commodities are indeed in the early stages of inflation, then strength should show in the commodity producers (suppliers; sellers) and the commodity consumers (demand; buyers) chart.
good pointrhight wrote:Nikkei obviously skewed by AbeonomicsAl_Dente wrote: Another view: if commodities are indeed in the early stages of inflation, then strength should show in the commodity producers (suppliers; sellers) and the commodity consumers (demand; buyers) chart.
FXE/FXY has the highest correlation to US equities (lately), I keep an eye on that (Daily EOD); it had a lengthy negative divergence with spx during Jan high...
Thank you.daytradingES wrote:Thanks for the charts Cobra,Cobra wrote:The interesting part is smart money has covered a lot which could mean the low was in already. I cannot believe this but well, at least this scale of covering has been the low recently (red lines are just few examples).
The institutional buying and selling chart (courtesy from stocktiming) shows more distribution than accumulation. The chart doesn't tell future only confirms what happens yesterday. Hopefully today's huge up has changed everything.
I appreciate them and understand your point on time-frame (in your reply to re 5% and $100,000) as I too trade the ES (I trade on an intraday basis RTH only).
I think the downwards move is intact and this ramp of Thursday-Friday is just a show of force by the manipulators - so I'm with the institutions in leaning to distribution. While they may push it higher in the early part of next week they have moved it to a 55% retrace of the 113 points down from 15 Jan and that may be enough but as in the video they could move it to the resistance of the low of Jan 13 (1809.50).
The one minute ES bar of Friday morning with a t 7:30 speaks volumes, I feel.
http://screencast.com/t/DzarprxqHY