Contracted Volatility is a Trading Opportunity

Kevin Haggerty is a
full-time professional trader who was head of trading for Fidelity Capital
Markets for seven years. Would you like Kevin to alert you of opportunities in
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After the +9.9% gain from the 1270.05 low to 1396 (2/13), the SPX declined
-5.7% to 1316.75, which is the .618 retracement zone (1318) and then bounced
+4.0% to 1369.23 last Wednesday (2/13) before closing at 1350 (+.08%) on option
expiration Friday. The other major indexes finished red Friday, with the $INDU
-0.2%, QQQQ -0.3% and $COMPX -0.5%. The SPX was the major index leader on the
week at +1.5%, following a -4.7% loss the previous week. Volatility has
contracted, with the SPX finishing the week in a narrow-range triangle (chart)
and closing at 1350. Contracting volatility patterns usually get resolved with
aggressive moves. As you would expect with a contracting volatility situation,
the short-term internals are neutral, with the 4-MA of the volume ratio at 51
and breadth -109. Both of these are about as dead-center as it gets, so there is
no obvious short-term trading edge, on either a price or a momentum basis. It is
a bear market, and daytraders have capitalized on the extended news reactions in
both directions. The initial resistance the last 4 days has been the 1364-1371
price zone, which has provided several good intraday strategy short
opportunities. The next high probability short-term position trade will be if
the SPX hits that 1420-1450 price zone or 1270 gets taken out.

The SPX would have been hard-pressed to finish +1.5% on the week without the
leadership of the energy and commodity related sectors. The OIH was +6.1% on the
week, with the XLE +4.1%, and XLB +2.5%. The XME, which is the S&P Metals and
Mining SPDR, closed at 69.60, just below a new high-range breakout at 71.37. The
XME has advanced +31.3% in 18 days off the 1/23 53 low, to the 71.12 intraday
high on Thursday, while the XLE was +17.8% and OIH +17.4% for the same period.
Crude oil has rallied from the low of its 4-month trading range at 85.42 and
closed Friday at 95.45 ($WTIC). That is versus the all-time high close of 99.62
on 1/2/08.

The financials are 20% of the SPX, and the focal point of the expanding
liquidity/credit crisis, with the increasing pressure on the banks and broker’s
balance sheets/capacity. The banks are obviously in a fear mode regarding
extending credit, and are hardly even lending to each other in overnight
markets, which is obviously negative. Last week, GS and C backed away from the
failed municipal bond auction, and will not commit their own capital to the
debt. The bond insurer/Rating problems will probably be the focal point of the
news this week, and if that is the case, then that $SPX contracted volatility
pattern will be resolved quickly. The XLF financial SPDR bounced 24.1% off its
1/23 24.11 to 29.93 in 8 days to 1/31, but has declined to a 26.17 low on
Friday, versus the .618 RT to 24.11 at 26.33 before closing at 26.83. The $XBD
has retraced to just below the .50 RT level to its 1/23 168.92 low from the
212.84 rally high, and closed Friday at 193.21, so it is also in position for a
possible reversal this week, news permitting. The XLF is the financial ETF to
use, because it uses both the banks and the brokers, but if you want to focus on
the brokers, use the IAI
ETF.

The foreign markets were open Monday and finished to the upside, with the S&P
emini future finishing +1.24% (+16.75 points) to 1368 from Friday 1351.25 close.
As I complete this at 6:00 AM ET, it is trading at 1358 which is +6.75 points
from Friday’s 1351.25 close.

The SPX (cash index) Volatility Band levels for today are (rounded off):

Standard Deviation Volatility Band Level
+ 2.00 1385
+ 1.50 1376
+ 1.28 1372
+ 1.00 1367
– 1.00 1333
– 1.28 1328
– 1.50 1324
– 2.00 1315

Check out Kevin’s strategies and more in
the

1st Hour Reversals Module
,

Sequence Trading Module
,

Trading With The Generals 2004
and the

1-2-3 Trading Module
.

Have a good trading day,

Kevin Haggerty