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There weren't many voices last weekend calling for a bullish reversal and
rally in stocks. Come to think of it, were there any besides TTC at all? It
seems that once again, just as in about the last dozen or so major market turns,
this newsletter was alone in championing a bullish count while the entire online
analysis community grew increasingly bearish and insisted the top was in. Now
as a strong finish to the week puts us back within about 70 points of the all-time
highs, bears are again forced to rethink their positions in the face of a market
that threatens to grind higher through year-end and could still potentially
explode upwards.
Remember the last update said:
"The week closed with an obvious bearish head and shoulders pattern staring
us in the face and we won't ignore it, but at the same time we won't put
aside the bullish count that says we need to reverse and rally somewhere
between here and the next forty points or so. If I'm right and we
do get that reversal, that's going to be the big Santa Claus rally that takes
us to new highs by early 2008 and I sure as anything don't want to be short
when that happens!"
Sometimes head and shoulders are painted on the chart to be deceptive, since
they're easy to spot and can get a lot of the more gullible traders on the
wrong side of the move. In contrast, TTC called for a bullish reversal within
40 points of Friday's close. Considering that level was 1478 in the March ES
contract and the Tuesday low was at 1445.50, a difference of 32.25 points,
our outlook proved spot on! Frankly, if this kind of analysis isn't worth the
price of admission to TTC, I don't know what you want. If it is - what are
you waiting for? Members and nonmembers alike should be sure to read the bottom
of this update for details on TTC's 2008 fee increase and other changes.
In the meantime, here's a sample of our work from the week that was. To start,
the market gapped down on Monday and closed near the lows as expected. From
the previous update, TTC was looking for support to put in a bottom while others
were trading a wave 3 down, or the head and shoulders, both looking for an
elusive crash in the major market indices. These bearish expectations were
proved wrong, yet again, the following day, which opened with a 13 point gap
higher. The globex chart below was posted in our daily forum just prior to
the opening bell.

Our primary count was the black count, looking for a measured move from the
previous peak. The count needed lower so we hesitated and didn't chase the
morning rally. However, given the bullish price action and our larger picture
expectation of a Santa Claus rally, we had to make allowance for the alternate
count, in red, that would give us confirmation that the low was in and allow
us to get safely onboard for the big move. This method would keep us from missing
the bulk of the rally, frozen like a deer in the headlights as we waited for
new lows that didn't materialize. But until that confirmation was in place,
our buy target continued to be 1445.50 and aggressive members even faded the
morning gap as it showed signs of stalling.
Sticking to our guns ultimately paid off as the market did in fact roll over
and, as the chart below shows, bottomed at our target exactly to the tick.
Though such perfect confirmation doesn't always happen, it certainly isn't
the first time we've hit the number dead on, and I'd dare to say not the last.

The market rallied hard off that y bottom, giving TTC members the top and
bottom ticks that day, worth over 40 points. Our projection off the low was
to 1472, but as we approached the close, we began taking profits at 1468. Wednesday
morning's trading got as high as about 1475 before vibrating around our 1472
level. With a little help from our relative strength indicator, which suggested
the market had hit resistance, it was easy to get short once the market took
out 1472. In all, the market would lose another 20 points into Thursday, beginning
the process of what would become, as you will see, Friday's Santa Claus rally.
From Thursday's lows, it only took a modest bounce to get the market to close
in the area of the gap at 1472. The rebound at the end of the day after a sharp
selloff wasn't enough to get most buyers optimistic, but watching the charts,
we knew it setup a perfect opportunity for gapping over the previous gap and
creating an island reversal. Having gotten long the break of the ending diagonal
that put in the Thursday low at about midday, members were advised to TMAR
(take the money and run) if they didn't mind getting back in higher. Many chose
to place buy stops in the overnight market to get a piece of the gap which
looked like a high probability move going into Thursday's close. When Friday
morning opened over 1478, the island reversal was in place and again the bears
were trapped and forced to cover, launching the Santa Claus rally promised
here last week.

In all fairness, the bears have been right. There has been a major crash,
only not in the market they expected. The chart below shows a textbook Elliott
wave crash unfolding not in an intraday, but a weekly multi-year chart of mortgage
insurer MBIA. While they've been looking for the major indices to fall off
a cliff, they've gotten exactly what they were looking for, but limited to
the financial sector. If there are committed bears who've been this selective,
congratulations, but looking around the internet it seems the vast majority
were looking for the end of the world and a meltdown in the S&P.

Obviously, the mortgage crisis has dominated the headlines for months now,
so the crash isn't silent in that sense. But it's silent in that the major
indices have not followed suit even though arguably they should have! The only
reason they haven't: time and price are not yet right; My work doesn't show
a complete pattern in the broader market.
If you look at a chart of the S&P it's not entirely unlike the MBIA chart
if you shift it to the right two years. It's still potentially valid for the
S&P to follow the banks and crash, but I don't see that yet at all. The
fact that such a large part of the S&P has undeniably crashed and yet the
larger index has maintained a bullish consolidation pattern signals strength
and resilience in the overall market. Going into next year we're going to be
watching for a bottom in the banks that holds because if money starts coming
back into the financials then the S&P can shoot up like a missle, probably
farther than you think possible at this point. But remember, this time last
year I was promising volatility for 2007 as we hadn't seen in years. Going
into '08, this volatility is not over and could even get wilder as we look
for the light at the end of the tunnel in this financial sector train wreck.
Speaking of 2008, next year will be a milestone for TTC as we raise our monthly
membership fee in February and look to close our doors to retail members sometime
in the first half of the year. Institutional traders have become a major part
of our membership and we're looking forward to making them our focus. If you're
a retail trader/investor the only way to get in on TTC's proprietary targets,
indicators, forums and real time chat is to join before the lockout starts,
and if you join before February, you can still take advantage of the current
low membership fee of $89. Once the doors close to retail members, the only
way to get in will be a waiting list that we'll use to accept new members from
time to time, perhaps as often as quarterly, but only as often as we're able
to accommodate them.
To get you started I will run the refund offer again. . Subscribe by December
28th and stay for 7 days with full access to charts, chat and all TTC member
privileges. At the end of your trial, if you're not satisfied, simply send
me an email and I'll give you a full refund, no strings attached. It's that
simple! There's no better value on the web than TTC and now there's no reason
not to check it out for yourself. Click here to
register for your free trial!
Our members continue to grow as a family of traders who easily get their money's
worth month after month not only in terms of realized profits, but also in
education and a sense of community. Bearish traders in particular have learned
to overcome their previous losses, heal the psychological scars, and trade
the huge upside potential of this market.
With only four more days left in the year, now is not the time to try and
chase profits if you haven't reached your goals for the year. Instead, it's
time to prepare ourselves for the big trends of 2008 and the hints from the
market that will allow us to trade the smaller moves. I continue to think the
S&P has one more high, that grains have room to go lower, that the dollar
is only waiting for a major cycle in January to launch a surprise move to the
upside and that gold has a move lower ahead of it (read Joe's Precious Points for
more on the metals). But as you enjoy a happy holiday season, ask yourself
if you'll be trading on emotion next year or smart risk/reward setups, on tried
and true techniques or shaky analysis? Will you be trading someone's bearish
bias, or trading the charts?
Merry Christmas to all!
Have a profitable and safe week trading, and remember:
"Unbiased Elliott Wave works!"
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