AEX, Amsterdam, update, MIB

aex m jan25 2015aex s jan 25 2015

The AEX , being the oldest,  should be the wisest, and tell us where we are.  Most of the others, as for instance the CAC, DAX etc. have similar patterns except for the FTSE and MIB. We do not think that with all the ups and downs anybody can claim to be able to count this chart in a serious way, but with the benefit of hindsight it is possible to come up with something plausible. In this particular case a rather ugly looking expanding diagonal (read wedge) seems to fit the bill. It is a 5-wave structure with each and every leg consisting of 3 waves, whether up or down, and having an increasing amplitude (see beige lines). This one is really ugly.

     If that is the case than the triangles we have seen just about everywhere may be b-waves rather than waves 4. Assuming equality between waves a and c of this last leg up 465 looks to be a reasonable target, not including the always possible “throw-over”. That, by the way, would constitute a 30% increase , more or less, in three months. Paradoxically, Draghi who should get full credit for making this possible was less successful in his own country, see chart below of the Milan index.  Looking at the RSI and MACD the overall conclusion must be that we are awfully close to a top.

MIB jan 25 2015

MIB Milan, DAX and EWG

mib sept 15 2011

History has a tendency to repeat itself. Years ago Mr. Leeson managed to single-handedly (not quite), bankrupt his employer Barrons, perhaps the most venerable institution in the UK. Then we had a 7 bln. loss at a French bank and now 2 bln. at UBS. Having myself been in charge of  dealing operations at two separate US banks in Canada, I cannot for the life of me understand how these guys can get away with it except is there is gross neglect on the part of these guys’ employer.

When treasury secretary Rubin decided to use the treasury’s funds to bail out Mexico, it was properly viewed as an unlawful use of his powers. Recently the constitutional court in Karlsruhe deemed the actions of  the German government to shore up the ECB’s bail-out fund as  perfectly legal despite the fact that one does not need to be a legal scholar to know that without any doubt at all it is presently unconstitutional.

So things do repeat or at least rhyme and looking at the exchange in Milan, Italy we are now back at the lows of March 2009. The preferred count would be the standard A-B-C rally that failed to make a new high (an alternative would be a triangle). Here the drop from the Feb. highs seems to be incomplete, needing at least one (if not more) 4 and 5 legs to make it the 5 wave sequence that it should become. This may well become an example for others to follow.

Mr. Geithner who three years ago impressed nobody by his boyish display of inexperience is know back on his white horse galloping to the rescue of Europe’s economy. Just to prove that history does repeat they are again looking primarily at the liquidity problem, not the solvability. All this heart-warming stuff may give that pause that we need. Below is the EWG, another proxy for the DAX. I bring this up constantly and repeatedly as I do not think anyone is actually paying attention.

ewg sept 15 2011 ewg sept 15 2011 l

The EWG is sitting right at the level of the B-leg of the rally (the DAX was a little lower). There is no way that the 5 wave large C down is complete. I would not suggest that the German index needs to follow Milan down the 71% it already has lost (it comes from 45000), but I would nevertheless expect the direction to be the same. As can be seen on the larger scale chart the EWG comes from about 37 and should it get to 8 (where wave 4 of previous degree resides, a very normal event ), the EWG could conceivable go down 78%. That, by the way, would erase all gains over the previous ten years, which , relatively speaking, is not all that dramatic. Athens is, of course ahead of everyone and may actually soon become a buy, if for no other reason than that there is so little room to the downside.

athens sept 2011

DAX , MIB Milan

DAX aug 19 2007

The DAX  moved up about 4000 from the lows, at today’s lows of 5345 we are very close to having given back 61.8% of that (another 150 points). Furthermore , stylized we are at the level of the B-wave and also have completed 5-wave move down from 7500, the July high. From the April high of 7600 that is not yet the case. However given the position of the RSI and MACD chances are that a solid rally will be the next big move. The MIB, Milan is also very close to a critical point having given back almost all of the gains over the last 2+ years.

mib aug 19 2011

The wave count here more closely resembles a 5-wave move for the entire drop from February , one more bad day and you are there.

Longer term we should go lower but the intervening rally could be rather violent.