Today did not take out the risk area proposed in cash or either sole ES futures contract (JUN or SEP), but it did exceed it in the roll-over contract (SEP stitched to JUN on the volume roll-over-day). The risk area could be history in the next day or two - especially with a FOMC meeting coming up. Or it might hold. But the odds favor the former.
Any number of people complained about the ugliness of the market movements today, and how ugly structures are made or typical technical levels broken just to trick the public into different counts. I want to tell you why it has to be so. Think of it like this ... I do.
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| Hint: You are Not Dressed in White |
Look when - as a trader - not an investor, you sign up with a brokerage firm, they know everything about your finances - which is all they care about. They could care less about whether you're a Moving Average Trader, or a Breakout Trader, or a Range Trader, or an Elliott Wave trader. Not relevant.
You sign up (if with a futures firm) and you must agree to the following conditions: A) a Clearing Firm will clear all of your trades - that means they know which trades you put on and where you put them on in the market, and where you take them off. B) They know the size of your trade. Did you just trade one micro at the market? Did you trade 10 E-mini's on a limit-entry? Regardless, they know. C) They also know your margin - and in fact, display it back to you in real time (big hint: they are tracking it!). They are required by law to track it, so you don't wind up in a margin call. D) They also know historically when you trade. Do you usually stop trading at the close - possibly because of margin? Do you usually stop trading at 11 pm so you can get some sleep. In short, they know. They know you. E) Your brokerage agreement also specifically states that your brokerage firm may take trades against your position. Really? You heard it. And if that isn't bad enough, F) Your margin may be swept by the brokerage firm, so that they can earn interest on the balance or use it otherwise. Listen to that again: let's say you go short a futures contract. You post the margin to do it. The clearing firm sweeps that margin balance to your brokerage, and the broker can use that money to trade against you.
Your money being used against you. This is just as long as they segregate your funds for the brief reporting period at the end of the day, so they can account for what is yours and what is theirs (they robbed from you). All of that became clear in the MF Global bankruptcy and following settlements.
Now can anyone tell me they signed a brokerage agreement that says, "This Brokerage will not keep a historical record of their client's activities over time."? Well, certainly not. The brokerage might need that information to defend themselves in court. And what says they won't store such data to build a profile of you - including your typical risk tolerance? Is Bob ok with a $1,000 loss usually? Does Janet usually bail at $450 in the red?
Do you get the picture here? Look at how much information they have about you. Period. Now ask yourself, "what do you honestly know about them?" Do you know what trades are on Blackrock's servers? Not a chance. That is proprietary information. Do you know what Megacap company is going to do a buyback, on what date, in what size & what time of day? Not a chance. That is proprietary information, too. Do you know how much money Goldman allots to the "closing buy-back" that usually lifts the market at the end of the day? Not a prayer. More proprietary information. (Although this is a documented fact that their customers once publicly complained they were not keeping a big enough balance at the close to keep driving the market to higher highs). Oh, and let's not forget the FED & the Treasury. Do you know when the Treasury is going to force a change in currency spreads to work a balance issue? Do you know exactly when the FED is going to reverse-repo somebody out of a problem?
They know. You don't. They can usually trade on it and mange it. They have the size and the capitalization to give them flexibility. You most assuredly don't know when. And if you did, you probably don't have the size to manage it.
Now look, nobody - but nobody - can manage this market & economic complexity without computers, and probably without A-I. We know there are so-called market-making algorithms to handle the trades. We already know Blackrock is using A-I. You think they're doing it to feed your account?
See, if you're a trader, you actually signed up for this. It's all part of the Ponzi scheme. They win, and if you place enough trades over time, you will probably lose. You might have good weeks, good months, but it is hard to beat their track-records with the information they have and that you don't. And it is legal that they win. There wouldn't be a brokerage business if they couldn't.
So, you think I'm done with this rant? Heck no. I've only hit the tip-of-the-iceberg, above: the legal stuff. Never, never, never doubt there is illegal stuff being done to you, too. Besides Congressional insider trading, and possibly higher, I'll give you one other example.
I'll never forget when Gary Gensler, then Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission came on a TV interview and admitted, shortly after the pandemic, "look, during Covid, I had to literally call these several hedge fund managers up and tell them to stop texting each other with 'trading ideas' that would be otherwise be considered as 'market manipulation' as we were keeping a record of it at the SEC." They stopped. Did anything become of it? Never heard of any prosecutions as a result. But they had already done it!
They have to keep the music playing. The game must go on. One OTHER small problem is most of us can't see the nano-trades. In today's market, algorithmic trading accounts for roughly 70% of ALL trades, including the High Frequency Trading but other arbitrage & similar schemes, too.
All I can say is "the prices are in the waves", the trade details are not, except a bit with volume. So, if it were me, knowing the above, I would trade like there's a robot facing me, saying "Go ahead, punk. Make my day."
Have an excellent rest of the evening,
TraderJoe