Boohoo for 7/11/2019

#DAX #SP500 Sometimes, we review an article and wonder just why did we bother? Our last glance at Boohoo, full of logical doom, finished with just 22 words dealing with the upside. Needless to say, the prior 300 word report could be ignored as it successfully triggered and completed an upward cycle.

This time around, we’re again a little pessimistic about Boohoo but, from a big picture perspective, also fairly confident. It begs the question; is a buy opportunity about to present itself? The immediate situation suggests weakness below 257 should lead to an initial 237p. If broken, secondary calculates at 222p and at this point (roughly) life becomes dangerous. There’s a very real risk, if the price shuffles below 222p, of travel down to 150p commencing. While it’s a heck of a drop, historically there’s ample reason to hope for a bounce if such a level makes an appearance.

Our hope is travel to 237p shall be “it” with a rebound to follow from such a level.

The reason for optimism is fairly simple. We’d previously given an upper target of 251p, something the share price has managed to better. As a result, despite expecting the price to reverse to 237p, it’s already viewed as being on a track which leads to an initial 294p with secondary 344p. All we’re attempting to do is plot the potential path!

One thing we need warn about. Any movement by the market which gaps the share price down to 237p shall make the concept of growth difficult to promote. This will create one of our terrifying GaGa Gap Up/Down routines, a movement by the market which normally will suggest proper reversal.

For this reason, we’ve highlighted our bottom number at 150p, this being the calculation if a GaGa does take place.

FUTURES
Time Issued Market Price At Issue Short Entry Fast Exit Slow Exit Stop Long Entry Fast Exit Slow Exit Stop Prior
9:53:44PM BRENT 61.63                 ‘cess
9:55:38PM GOLD 1490.41                 ‘cess
9:59:06PM FTSE 7403.55                 Shambles
10:05:00PM FRANCE 5862.2                 ‘cess
10:16:33PM GERMANY 13183 13100 13057 13006 13175 13209 13293 13374 13100 Success
10:18:37PM US500 3078.42 3072 3062.5 3054 3087 3087 3093.5 3103 3071 ‘cess
10:33:04PM DOW 27480.1                
10:36:24PM NASDAQ 8205                 ‘cess
10:37:51PM JAPAN 23317                

 

 

6/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7396 points. Change of 0.11%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,739,678,595 a change of -23.11%

5/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7388 points. Change of 0.26%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,164,114,046 a change of 25.79%

4/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7369 points. Change of 0.92%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,900,286,853 a change of -8.27%

1/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7302 points. Change of 0.75%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,342,127,869 a change of -12.99%

31/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7248 points. Change of -1.12%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,139,753,782 a change of 11.95%

30/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7330 points. Change of 0.33%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,484,235,986 a change of 6.15%

29/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7306 points. Change of -0.34%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,166,736,018 a change of 9.98%

Faron Pharma. for 6/11/2019

#BRENT #NASDAQ When we last reviewed Faron, we promoted a scenario for a 25% rise (link). The move successfully happened in May and in the period since, it has more than doubled! Thankfully someone emailed to remind us this was urgently due a Big Picture update.

This one is extremely difficult to map thanks to a bunch of quite separate calculations. When we now refresh our numbers, the share price has quite several distinct formula, all pointing at a high of 276p. The other day, it bettered this level, achieving 277.5p. It has created the situation where we should anticipate price movement now exceeding 258p to provoke yet another surge, this time in the direction of 319p.

Above 319p and things get a bit vague but we can calculate a high of 392p and no further. Unless, of course, if goes higher and in which case, we shall need review the tea leaves again!

The price certainly received an absolute hammering, once it hit the 277 level. Reversing to 150p within the same session really was not fair and now, has created the situation where weakness below 180p threatens reversal to 130p initially. If broken, secondary calculates at 81p. We’re not convinced it is on the edge of doom, instead suspecting whatever drove the amazing rise has seen some sanity enter the conversation.

Regardless, by any standards, we’re fairly optimistic for this lots longer term future and dreading, once again, how to handle things if it indeed approaches the 4 quid level.

FUTURES

Time Issued

Market

Price At Issue

Short Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Long Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Prior

9:46:29PM

BRENT

62.77

61.86

61.47

60.95

62.78

62.97

63.13

63.59

62.47

‘cess

9:49:39PM

GOLD

1484.27

               

Success

9:51:27PM

FTSE

7380.55

               

9:54:06PM

FRANCE

5847.9

               

Success

9:55:40PM

GERMANY

13149

               

10:02:42PM

US500

3074.42

               

10:16:58PM

DOW

27491.5

               

10:19:23PM

NASDAQ

8206.94

8186

8167

8141

8237

8228

8239.5

8351

8188

‘cess

10:22:36PM

JAPAN

23335

               

Success

 

5/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7388 points. Change of 0.26%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,164,114,046 a change of 25.79%

4/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7369 points. Change of 0.92%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,900,286,853 a change of -8.27%

1/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7302 points. Change of 0.75%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,342,127,869 a change of -12.99%

31/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7248 points. Change of -1.12%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,139,753,782 a change of 11.95%

30/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7330 points. Change of 0.33%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,484,235,986 a change of 6.15%

29/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7306 points. Change of -0.34%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,166,736,018 a change of 9.98%

28/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7331 points. Change of 0.1%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,697,887,789 a change of 4.65%

Sylvania Platinum for 5/11/2019

#GOLD #SP500 When asked to review #Sylvania, it occurred we very rarely pay attention to this, one of the Earths rarest metals. Spanish miners once regarded it as an unwanted impurity in the silver they were mining, a mistake unlikely to be made today. There’s something happening with the price of platinum and we’ll deal with that first.

Presently trading around the 950 dollar mark, Platinum looks very capable of heading to 1,030 next. If exceeded, we expect some stutters around our secondary calculation of 1,060 dollars. The price needs reverse below 930 dollars to provoke hysterics against these calculations.

If Sylvania Platinum share price intends reflect the change in fortunes for the metal itself, price growth now above 39.5p suggests coming recovery to an initial 43.8p. If exceeded, our secondary calculates at a longer term (or later that day!) 49p.

Achieving 49p is liable to be almost game changing for the longer term. If the share price manages to close a session above 45.5p, it enters the hallowed lands of “the higher high”. To us, this means we require extrapolate price movement from 2013 to calculate the force driving it for the future. While this sounds like complex mumbo jumbo, it’s fairly simple logic which implies, essentially, positive market conditions allow a long term attempt at 61p before we run out of numbers.

At present, the share needs below 32p before we’d feel our optimism is about to be trashed.

FUTURES

Time Issued

Market

Price At Issue

Short Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Long Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Prior

10:07:03PM

BRENT

61.96

               

Success

10:08:51PM

GOLD

1510.43

1504

1499.5

1494

1512

1514

1516

1520

1504

10:11:18PM

FTSE

7373

               

Success

10:13:32PM

FRANCE

5826.5

               

Success

10:27:39PM

GERMANY

13132

               

Success

10:30:52PM

US500

3079.02

3073

3069.5

3064

3082

3086

3099.75

3135

3039

Success

10:34:04PM

DOW

27458

               

‘cess

10:36:15PM

NASDAQ

8216.37

               

Success

10:39:29PM

JAPAN

23137

               

Success

4/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7369 points. Change of 0.92%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,900,286,853 a change of -8.27%

1/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7302 points. Change of 0.75%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,342,127,869 a change of -12.99%

31/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7248 points. Change of -1.12%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,139,753,782 a change of 11.95%

30/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7330 points. Change of 0.33%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,484,235,986 a change of 6.15%

29/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7306 points. Change of -0.34%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,166,736,018 a change of 9.98%

28/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7331 points. Change of 0.1%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,697,887,789 a change of 4.65%

25/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7324 points. Change of -0.05%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,489,255,680 a change of -20.08%

Metro Bank for 4/11/2019

#BRENT #DAX Similar to UK politics, this is on the edge of becoming interesting. We last reviewed Metro in September (link) and we’d some pretty foul expectations for its future. Something seems to have changed and now, we’ve calculated a trigger level which appears capable of provoking a “sure thing” trade!

There’s no such thing as a “sure thing” and to be blunt, the best we’d describe the potential is one of movement with an enhanced expectations. Perhaps, a bit like saying some MP’s will be elected on December 12th, just we’re not sure whom nor where…

To cut to the chase, the situation appears to be fairly straightforward. If this lot now manage trades above 248p, we’re calculating an initial 301p as an initial target ambition. Visually, this makes a lot of sense, matching the plateau of prices until September 23rd. In fact, if 301p makes an appearance, the share can be expected to experience some hesitation thanks to folk trapped at the 3 quid level dumping their shares in exchange for cash, doubtless to be wasted on Xmas presents, frivolity, or any number of undeserving causes which appear at this time of year. (Guess who made the mistake of going Xmas shopping at the weekend!)

Longer term, closure above 301p is liable to prove interesting, calculating with a surge to a vague looking 432p. In fact, we’re supposed to believe 641p is exerting an influence, a price level we’re less than confident about. In this instance, the only movement which appears to have some confidence is from 248 up to 301p.

If it’s all going to go wrong, the price needs fail below 198p at present to give serious alarm as this appears capable of bringing 175p initially. If broken, secondary computes at 125p and hopefully a bottom capable of providing a rebound.

For now, it appears worth keeping an eye on for our trigger level making an appearance.

FUTURES

Time Issued

Market

Price At Issue

Short Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Long Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Prior

11:57:07AM

BRENT

61.65

59.16

58.49

57.4

60.85

60.88

62.08

62.58

60.4

Success

12:00:51PM

GOLD

1514.79

               

12:16:09PM

FTSE

7312.77

               

Success

12:17:25PM

FRANCE

5770.7

               

‘cess

12:19:19PM

GERMANY

12979

12895

12867.5

12826

12960

12992

13026

13104

12946

Success

12:27:50PM

US500

3065.92

               

‘cess

12:30:06PM

DOW

27334.9

               

‘cess

12:33:47PM

NASDAQ

8159.87

               

‘cess

12:35:35PM

JAPAN

22946

               

Success

 

1/11/2019 FTSE Closed at 7302 points. Change of 0.75%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,342,127,869 a change of -12.99%

31/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7248 points. Change of -1.12%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,139,753,782 a change of 11.95%

30/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7330 points. Change of 0.33%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,484,235,986 a change of 6.15%

29/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7306 points. Change of -0.34%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,166,736,018 a change of 9.98%

28/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7331 points. Change of 0.1%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,697,887,789 a change of 4.65%

25/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7324 points. Change of -0.05%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,489,255,680 a change of -20.08%

24/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7328 points. Change of 0.94%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,617,068,603 a change of -3.47%

 

FTSE for FRIDAY for 1/11/2019

#FreeFirstFutures A week with a FTSE being underwhelmed by UK political decline appears to be finally responding in true Halloween fashion – scary but not really! It doesn’t even look like we shall find our hallowed leaders body in a ditch, despite his preferred method of exit in the absence of Brexit. Trump & Clinton once did a televised debate, managing avoid noticing viewers found both of them abhorrent. It looks like the UK’s political leaders are intending embrace similar levels of self delusion but it’s not supposed to be this way, is it? Voting papers should have a “None Of The Above” option to ensure career politicians do not win by default.

The market has spent the last 5 sessions flirting with the 7330 level for some reason. Now, it feels like some reversal is almost upon us and oddly, the key trigger level looks like 7,234 points. We cannot understand why this has happened but the situation presently appears to suggest only if the index moves more than 100 points from its previous parking level should we believe more reversal is upon us.

The market closed Thursday at 7,248 points. Now below 7,230 and we expect reversal to an initial 7,211 points. If broken, secondary calculates at 7,183 points. And if triggered, the tightest stop appears to be quite reasonable at 7,272 points.

The alternate scenario appears to be at 7,281 as movement above this trigger is supposed to be capable of a truly unimpressive 7,294 points. If bettered, our secondary calculation comes in at 7,317 points. If triggered, the tightest stop looks like 7,245 points.

For light relief, we’ve shown some bigger picture targets, suggesting target levels if “it all goes wrong – or right”. To be blunt, unless the FTSE experiences a miracle and starts trading above the aforementioned 7,330’s again, it’s now trading in a region with a bottom at 6,594 points eventually. If it were a share, we’d already assume that’s where the price intends head. Amazingly, it would suggest a return to the FTSE level the year started with, along with a strong hint we forget 2019 even happened.

Have a good weekend, it’s time for Austin, Texas & Formula 1, hopefully the UK driver Hamilton winning his 6th world title. (Though everyone knows it’s really his 7th)

FUTURES

Time Issued

Market

Price At Issue

Short Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Long Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Prior

10:10:39PM

BRENT

59.49

59.1

58.895

 

60.8

60.52

60.78

 

59.6

‘cess

10:12:40PM

GOLD

1512.31

1496

1490

 

1509

1514.1

1518.5

 

1499

Success

10:15:02PM

FTSE

7261.8

7238

7216

 

7272

7281

7289

 

7243

Success

10:18:04PM

FRANCE

5740.7

5717

5684

 

5757

5768

5777.5

 

5721

10:28:10PM

GERMANY

12889.28

12793

12768.5

 

12902

12923

12961

 

12851

Shambles

10:30:19PM

US500

3036

3021

3014

 

3040

3053

3060

 

3028

10:38:31PM

DOW

27034

26933

26868

 

27068

27235

27296.5

 

26951

Success

10:43:38PM

NASDAQ

8079

8015

7991

 

8092

8133

8146

 

8046

‘cess

10:46:09PM

JAPAN

22703

22650

22598.5

 

22813

22846

22894.5

 

22730

‘cess

 

31/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7248 points. Change of -1.12%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,139,753,782 a change of 11.95%

30/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7330 points. Change of 0.33%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,484,235,986 a change of 6.15%

29/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7306 points. Change of -0.34%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,166,736,018 a change of 9.98%

28/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7331 points. Change of 0.1%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,697,887,789 a change of 4.65%

25/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7324 points. Change of -0.05%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,489,255,680 a change of -20.08%

24/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7328 points. Change of 0.94%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,617,068,603 a change of -3.47%

23/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7260 points. Change of 0.67%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,818,863,244 a change of 3.71%

Eurasia (again) for 31/10/2019

#SP500 #Japan Eurasia rather neatly illustrated why timeframes are difficult. No-one realistically expected a 223% rise through ALL our targets (link) in just 3 days but #Eurasia managed. Today, assisting a chum with a pre-demolition survey gave a sharp reminder why care is needed, when things go volatile.

We were at a mid 1800’s villa, a completely overgrown structure destined for landfill. My “job”, ensuring my chum didn’t find himself trapped in a remote location in Argyll, such was the dodgy nature of the building. More importantly, it was an excuse to bring a big chainsaw to create access to the property. Ivy had grown quite energetically with the result we simply could not see the roofline of the derelict house. Worse, Larch and Hawthorne trees had claimed ownership of the gardens, some of the hawthorns growing against the outer walls of the building. A particular tree gave concern, vanishing into the mass of Ivy with the result an initial chainsaw cut ended in blissful silence, using a handsaw. If things are going to go wrong, generally alarming sounds will come from a tree. If using a chainsaw, the noise of the machine plus ear protection can catch the unwary.

In this instance, the tree trunk suddenly shattered, along with interesting groans from overhead. We’d already planned escape routes and fled. The tree had been holding an immense mass of ivy, all of which discovered gravity. This was the start of a lively process, the roof collapsing inward and the exterior wall following. Essentially, the building was held up by vegetation alone and our pre-demo survey turned into an accidental demolition, one we’d thankfully prepped for.

To be honest, it was all great fun and a sharp reminder things which go up can also come down, fast! Which finally brings us to Eurasia for the 2nd time this week.

To give a perspective against this, we’re showing two charts. The upper chart shows minute by minute movements since the market opened on Monday morning, following our report on Sunday evening. It’s always interesting and useful to see how a price reacts when a target level is achieved.

Often, we will say something like, “if exceeded, our secondary calculates at …” but sometimes we remember to write; “if exceeded on the initial surge, secondary calculates at…”. Showing Eurasia in detail mode tends highlight the logic behind this. When the price hit Target 1, it exceeded it. When the price hit Target 2, it exceeded it. When the price hit Target 3, it exceeded it.

And when the price hit Target 4, yes, it did exceed target but as the ZigZag shows, the share was manipulated upward at the open. So, even though the target level we’d mooted on Sunday evening was actually dramatically exceeded by 0.5p, the price had been gapped up by 0.4p to ensure this happened. The ensuing reversal thereafter to 2p wasn’t exactly a surprise. As the chart shows, the price attempted further breaks above 3.5 but eventually it failed and the inevitable occurred.

So what now. Is the price about to disappear into a hole in the Ural Mountains, faster than Spanish riot policemen chasing tourists in Barcelona?

Certainly, we’ll be quite concerned if it trades (as opposed to forced down in the opening second) below 2p. Such a movement risks quite nasty reversal with 1.7 calculating as possible and secondary, if broken, comes along at 1.10p. We’d certainly hope for a bounce around the 1.10p mark but thanks to that gap, the price risks 0.9 before a rebound.

However, we’ve a sneaking suspicion the share will probably mess around a while, ideally with 2p as the bottom of a trading range. We’re not ignoring the salient detail of our 3.56p ambition being exceeded, even when we factor in the 0.4p gap. As a result, anything now above 4.03p should prove capable of a lift to 5.25 with secondary, if exceeded on the initial surge, calculating at 7.25p.

Visually, it appears the 10p level is the longer term thing to watch. Only if this lot find an excuse to trade above such a level shall we anticipate further fireworks, rather than a horror story.

FUTURES

Time Issued

Market

Price At Issue

Short Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Long Entry

Fast Exit

Slow Exit

Stop

Prior

10:40:04PM

BRENT

60.24

               

‘cess

10:45:10PM

GOLD

1495.42

               

Shambles

10:47:30PM

FTSE

7336.33

               

‘cess

10:49:20PM

FRANCE

5774.7

               

Success

10:58:26PM

GERMANY

12937

               

‘cess

10:59:44PM

US500

3050.72

3024

3010.5

2995

3045

3054

3060

3072

3026

11:02:35PM

DOW

27217.4

               

Shambles

11:04:22PM

NASDAQ

8113.25

               

‘cess

11:06:20PM

JAPAN

22934

22792

22752

22675

22918

22956

22967

23035

22838

Success

 

 

30/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7330 points. Change of 0.33%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,484,235,986 a change of 6.15%

29/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7306 points. Change of -0.34%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,166,736,018 a change of 9.98%

28/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7331 points. Change of 0.1%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,697,887,789 a change of 4.65%

25/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7324 points. Change of -0.05%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 4,489,255,680 a change of -20.08%

24/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7328 points. Change of 0.94%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,617,068,603 a change of -3.47%

23/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7260 points. Change of 0.67%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,818,863,244 a change of 3.71%

22/10/2019 FTSE Closed at 7212 points. Change of 0.68%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,610,839,707 a change of -3.73%