5 Things to Watch in the Next 2 WeeksCME: E-Mini S&P 500 Put Options ( CME_MINI:ES1! )
Important data releases in the coming weeks would shed light on the health of the US economy and could have significant impacts on global financial markets. We will focus on a number of critical datasets, mainly the following, in the upcoming weeks:
• Federal tax revenue (Tax filing deadline: April 18)
• Existing home sales (April 20)
• Personal income and outlay (April 28)
• Fed rate hike, or the lack of it (May 3)
• Gasoline price trend (before peak summer driving season)
Federal Tax Revenue
According to the US Treasury Department, the sources of tax revenue for US federal government in 2021 were:
• Individual taxes: 42.1%
• Social insurance taxes: 23.8%
• Consumption taxes: 16.6%
• Property taxes: 11.4%
• Corporate taxes: 6.0%
The annual tax filing deadline for individual and corporation is April 18th. In practice, income tax, social security and Medicare are withheld from each paycheck for employees. Corporations pay estimated tax on a monthly basis. Property taxes are assessed annually. Sales tax is paid whenever you buy products or services.
Tax filing is a process where taxpayers calculate tax liability and claim tax credit. If you’ve paid too much, ask for a refund. If you didn’t pay enough, send Uncle Sam a check.
We could track government tax revenue and expenditure using the Monthly Treasury Statement (MTS) data published by the Treasury Department. Here are what I found:
• In the first three months of 2023, gross tax revenue is $2.268 trillion, while tax refund amounts to $219.8 billion; The resulting net tax receipts are $2.048 trillion;
• Comparing to Q1 2022, gross tax revenue is down 0.2%, but tax refunds are up big time by 45.8%. Net tax receipts are down 3.5% year-over-year;
• Q1 individual income taxes $1.22 trillion, tax refunds $192.4 billion and net tax receipts $1.03 trillion; Y/Y changes are -1.9%, +59% and -8.5%, respectively;
• Q1 corporate income taxes (in billions) $159.0, refunds $19.0, and net tax receipts $140.0; Y/Y changes are +5.1%, -20.7% and +10.0%, respectively;
Individual taxes are the most important revenue source for the United States. A declining tax receipt would push the federal budget deeper in the red. But with unemployment at record low and wages on the rise, why is income tax revenue going down?
In 2020, the top 1% of income earners earned 22% of all income and paid 42% of all federal income taxes – more than the bottom 90% combined (37%). For the top earners, most of their income taxes come from capital gain, not from wages.
In 2021, Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 18.7% while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 had annual returns of approximately 27%. I examine the MTS data for April 2022, which covered the tax filing period for year 2021. Net income tax receipt was $1.72 trillion, up 68.5% y/y. This shows positive correlation between stock market gains and growth in individual income tax revenue.
In 2022, the Dow declined 8.8%, while S&P and Nasdaq were down 19.4% and 33.0%, respectively. The individual income tax in Q1 2023 was down 1.9%, but tax refund was up 59%. This again shows positive correlation – stock market losses and decline in income tax revenue.
March MTS data strongly indicates that investors are writing off big capital losses from last year. When the tax season is over, I expect to see bigger tax refund and widening net receipt shortfall in the April MTS data vs same period in 2022.
Implications: Urgency for Debt Ceiling Negotiation
In January, in a letter addressed to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned the US has once again reached its debt limit.
The Treasury Department started taking extraordinary measures to keep paying the federal government’s bills, but it would suspend new investments until June 5, 2023. Yellen warned both moves are subject to “considerable uncertainty” if Congress does not pass the bill to increase the debt ceiling.
US financials have deteriorated since. According to USDebtClock.org:
• US National Debt: $31.69 trillion
• US Federal Spending: $6.03 trillion
• US Federal Tax Revenue: $4.61 trillion
• US Federal Budget Deficit: $1.42 trillion
We now expect tax revenue to decline by at least tens of billions of dollars, while spendings on Defense, Medicare, Social Security, and Debt Interest are all going up. As a result, federal budget deficit could be underestimated by well over one hundred billion dollars.
Would the federal government have enough money to keep the light on until early June? I suspect the insolvency time bomb is ticking closer and closer.
Short-term Trading Strategies
Although we had two rate hikes and a banking crisis in the first 100 days of 2023, major stock market indexes are all in the positive territory. The Dow gained 2.2%, S&P 500 rebounded 7.8%, and the Nasdaq pushed up 19.6% YTD.
While investors managed to brush off bad news so far, balance sheet deterioration in government, corporation and household would eventually catch up. I am seeing a 5-10% correction in the S&P 500, if some of the following conditions materialize:
• Federal tax revenue comes in significantly lower than expected. April MTS report would be released around May 12th;
• May 3rd FOMC: If the Fed raises rates and does not signal an end of the tightening cycle, both corporate earnings and household spending would suffer;
• US banks could tighten lending standards in the wake of banking crisis. This would add to higher borrowing cost on top of the rising interest rates;
• Debt ceiling negotiation: if the White House and the Congress could not reach a deal quickly, we may be heading for the technical default of US government debt. Right now, they are not even sitting at the negotiating table.
Options on CME E-Mini S&P 500 may be a way to express a bearish view. The E-mini S&P 500 Index Futures June contract (ESM3) is quoted 4171.75 last Friday. With a notional value of HKEX:50 x S&P 500 Index point, each contract is worth $208,587.5. Put option with a 4070 strike, which is about 100 points below market value, is quoted 76.25. To acquire one option requires an upfront premium of HKEX:3 ,812.50 (=76.25 X HKEX:50 ).
Put option carries a nonlinear payoff diagram. Your loss is limited to the premium you paid, but potential gain is unlimited.
Hypothetically, if the S&P futures price falls to 3900, put option will be 170 points in the money (=4070-3900). The gain on the account would be HKEX:8 ,500 for each contract.
If our view proves to be incorrect and the S&P goes up instead, put premium could decline in value, resulting in a loss. The worst-case scenario is that options would expire worthless.
Happy Trading.
(To be continued)
Disclaimers
*Trade ideas cited above are for illustration only, as an integral part of a case study to demonstrate the fundamental concepts in risk management under the market scenarios being discussed. They shall not be construed as investment recommendations or advice. Nor are they used to promote any specific products, or services.
CME Real-time Market Data help identify trading set-ups and express my market views. If you have futures in your trading portfolio, you can check out on CME Group data plans available that suit your trading needs www.tradingview.com
TAX
Soon everyone will know that you are one of the besthi dear traders
With regard to the debts of the US government. They put a lot of pressure on crypto, but the only thing they have always been fighting with and always losing is Monero
According to Biden's tax, soon all the money will go to Monroe
see this price action S level
good luck
COMPOSITE INDEX Electric Vehicle Stocks TRENDING BEARISH In this daily chart, I made a composite index of electric vehicle stocks using
an approximate formula weighed by stock prices but not market cap.
( ( $NIO + $LCID + $RIDE + $NKLA +$WKHS) x 50 ) + $TSLA
This serves as an approximate normalization adjustment of the varying
stock prices in the collection of stocks.
I did this to later check to see if there is any effect of new legislation
impacting federal tax credits for electric vehicle adoption as a catalyst
for price action.
So far YTD, the composite at large has fallen 18.5% varying from
TSLA is down 6% and LCID as an example of others is down 36%
The composite will be a quick and easy way to see if the composite
and so the market cap of the underlying stocks inflects its downtrend
responsive to the federal legislation catalyst.
Daily close above those 2 lines means yeah, means Millionarrrs!!
We have 6, 8 and 16 as resistance but pirate is big enough!
daily close and hop on it!
buying opportunitycrab harmonic pattern:
1.6 BC=$0.00001394
2 BC=$0.00002218
2.24 BC=$0.00002969
2.6 BC=$0.00004701
3.6 BC=$0.000158
Bitcoin and US Tax Day Historical DataThe 17th of May is Tax Day in the US. I was curious how the market reacted to this event historically for BTC.
In 2016, the market was going sideways before and after.
In 2017, there was a dump before the tax date, however, it pumped before the Tax day.
In 2018, BTC was in a bear market, but there was a dump following by a short pump after Tax Day.
In 2019, the following weeks to the Tax Day, BTC went sideways, few days before the Tax Day, it pumped but it went sideways before another pump.
Last year, it was going sideways before the Tax Day and then pumped after.
Bubble? What bubble? Ah this bubble! nah...You see how manipulative the markets have been with 1 twitt, forget about elections outcome. 2 key events:
1. 20% tax period starting towards end of March
2. FED to keep rates to 0% till 2023, what else do you need?
Although valuations are to the sky short is out of the table at the moment, maybe towards end of 21-22,with rates at 0% where do you think all these trillions sitting at 0% will go?
Get ready to see some crazy stuff happening, TSLA 1 trillion, Zoom 300billion , Apple to 3 trillion etc etc etc... can you stay on the sidelines for a year or more????
The Secrets to Forex & Seasons GreedingsThis section is on seasonality and follows the prior section on carry trading conditions. I strongly recommend reading the prior parts for full value. This is (pt. 5) in chronological order.
And yes, this will be on the test.
-----------------------
You probably have someone in the immediate or extended family that considers herself (let's be honest) an expert shopper. The coupons, the early trips, the economy size containers, the 2 for 1 dealerinos, etc. Gets the seasonal produce or vegetables because they're cheap. Skips Black Friday, shops Cyber Monday. Didn't run out of toilet paper during the pandemic, etc. Gets all the Christmas gifts shortly after Thanksgiving, or in early December. And this expert shopper will repeat many of these decisions each year around similar times or with similar products. Doesn't matter what holiday, culture, or country involved, the behavior is parallel. I'll cut the music and get to the important stuff: Shopping is where the average normie experiences the pricing influences of seasonality.
Not everything is 'worth' the same price all year round, not everything can be produced on any given day of the year, and not everything is consumed on any given day of the year. There are private and public laws and behavioral standards tied in as well. Everyone knows this as they experience it in their general robotic lives. But retail traders tend to forget this when it comes to trading and investing.
So what's the difference between seasonality and similar-sounding concepts like cyclical trading or using historical models?
Part 1: Solar Calendars
Seasonality is a kind of factor (like in factor investing), it's a more rigid concept derived from historical data. It tends to be cyclical, but the timing is not arbitrary, it's formatted into the gregorian calendar . This calendar is based on solar timings and their effects. Solar timings were once one of the great wisdoms coveted by our ancient ancestors, building incredible structures to predict these seasonal events. They didn't do this for fun. In our current era of surplus, we can tik tok our way to prosperity, but in earlier eras, maximizing food and shelter was a life or death strategy.
The solar calendar predicts these events with relatively decent scientific accuracy. It offers certain outcomes. Think about trading and its challenges. Uncertainty is the norm, so anything certain is inherently valuable. Now, how does that fit into currency exchange?
Businesses, major exchanges, and governments all rely on this calendar for their standard operating procedures and for risk management. What do those three things have in common? They involve people, and they involve lots and lots of money. They all share the same green destiny.
Part 2: Are These Titles Useful?
I said this a million different ways in the first 2 parts. Look, there are certain psychological biases that greedy people at the top share, due to their upbringing, income bracket, and nationality, among things. Those biases help make seasonality matter, largely due to vacation timing, consumption season, and tax events these wealthy people will into relevance out of thin air, like a magician. This is why seasonality can still generate an edge for you, the pitiful retail trader. Now, as mentioned in pt. 3, we are still focused on long-term trades, traders that hold for many days, weeks, or months.
Does seasonality have big changes for intra-day traders (who play on nightmare difficulty)? I'm not going to write a book here and detail every answer, you need to do your own research. Or you can just wait for me to write the section on intra-day trading. Or you could spend your whole life serving coffee.
Please remember to follow me so I don't have to see your awful latte art.
Part 3: Dead Presidents
Okay, here are some secrets from the money magicians:
There are seasons for all securities.
It's important to understand that seasons for stocks and commodities affect currencies.
I had to check google to make sure this is up to date but it appears you still need cash to buy or own things. And we're in the cash game. Ever wonder why dead presidents or national heros are always on the faces of fiat currency? As described in the last part, they are country-level assets, created for tax and liquidity purposes. Those faces are reminders of your most sacred civic duty: paying taxes. Did you know that all people have to pay taxes? Including wealthy people? The most powerful person on earth (probably) pays taxes. And, based on nationality, have to pay taxes at the same time each year? That is a rare form of certainty related to markets.
Part 4: The Spice Must Flow
Tax season, especially the US tax season, is big because lots of cash (usually over 80%) flows through forex as USD. Most of the wealthiest people in the world hold a lot of USD. And a majority of them live in the US, as tax residents or as citizens. As a result, it has an effect on USD rates towards the end of the year, when investment portfolios are rebalanced to try and take advantage of the tax system with whatever strategy is legally available. Indeed, it can be complicated, and I recommend doing your own research, something you will have to be competent at if you want to make a living for decades into the future. The net assessment is that if you are trading towards the end of the year, you need to be mindful of how the US tax season will affect your potential positions, and fit that into your risk management evaluation.
Variables like earnings seasons, and other business or industry dependent factors serve as strong influences. After all, they are the ones using most of the money... currency isn't just there to collect for rent and spend on groceries, it's to create and capture value, the mission of all corpos. The money must flow.
JUST THE TIP: When looking at seasonality, or any other global macro like news or fundamentals, it's important to think in terms of DEMAND. Does xyz increase demand for a currency (relative to the pair)? The supply does matter, but where many retail traders (and especially cryptocoinies) tend to get pink in the face, is when they focus almost entirely on supply in the evaluation of a currency. Demand is principally important to currency, and is the primary reason why consensual pegging agreements and the gold standard failed last century. Instead of reading a book on it, just read this: the demand for the currency of a few key nations is consistently strong due to loosening international finance standards that allow the newly minted wealth of developing world investors to gravitate towards developed country assets to hedge against local economic turbulence. Oh yeah and the petrodollar.
Part 5: Commodifying Seasons
Looking at commodities as futures contracts, because they deserve special attention. Especially useful in recent months.
A lot of bag holders suffered big time in the oil contract bogmarket. The Bogdanoff's made a call, and prices on a few different oil contracts fell below zero. The behavior is so significant it is having effects on USD and global economic sentiment. Thank god we smart kids trade forex right? No zeros in forex, just infinities.
There are plenty of articles online explaining how that happened, but let me tie in FNDs and explain the intersect with currency. The First Notice Day on futures products usually represents the peak of a trend if a trend was recently present. For example, the trend would occur over the prior 2 weeks or more to the FND date. You would want to look for positive open interest changes to support that trend. The FND could represent a definitive exhaustion point and signal a reversal or retracement. For risk management, these can be useful to look at if you trade a safe haven currency against a commodity or emerging currency. That means JPY & CHF (and now USD & EUR) against AUD, CAD, and sometimes NZD. Overall, most non-safe havens will have commodity performance attached to their currency performance. A quantitative or qualitative (ya eyeball it) composite of the performance of these commodities can help identify your center of price gravity (and its shift, is it being pulled up or down). I will come back to commodity futures and how they affect commodity currencies in the next part, so don't panic. In sum, I suggest googling the first notice days for commodity contracts (and you should also make note of currency contracts as well), taking a look at their chart development, and being mindful of a likely reversal occurring on those dates. This is an excellent way of finding extremes on the related pairs and can serve as 'risk mindful' price levels for entering into a long term trade.
For example, not to get too far ahead of my risk management articles here, but let me briefly spoil with a more intermediate level trade: Relevant commodity futures contracts are rising in confluence with seasonal data and your currency (AUD/JPY) is rising in tandem. Your center of price gravity is accurately reflected as the current price of AUD/JPY at market, and you bought at the start of the month based on prior research, so you are in profit. Shortly before FND, interest rates on AUD are cut and the AUD/JPY trend flatlines. However, at the FND, the contracts make an extreme bullish move, and price action on AUD/JPY jumps as well (but in a smaller %). You have found an extreme, and can now close your long position or open a reversal position and wait for PA to retrace.
Now, I could write a Chinese novel on all the specific things that should also happen with that trade, but that example is a framework you should familiarize yourself with.
Part 6: That Time of the Month
Your eyes are probably glazing over at this point. That's alright, everyone has a limit to what they can read and learn. Just like everyone has a limit to their net worth. Wonder if there is a relationship between the two.
Let me make this a little easier by explaining just how complicated seasonality can be.
As mentioned earlier, seasonality tends to work simply because there is an underlying calendar structure within highly regulated wealthy markets. These structures are created by the rules and standard practices of individuals and institutions, and more. These are effectively factors (factor investing) that shape price mechanics. Money moves in and out based on these regulations or standards (controlled timing), IE: tax obligations (end of year), holiday spending (consumer nations benefit), commodity contracts (exchange rules), and vacation months (volatility dynamics), and more. Global weather patterns influence shipping and availability of ports, temperatures and Ninos influence the price of agribusiness commodities normally tied to season... But it doesn't have to be that complicated for you, my small headed friend. I wanted to highlight the harder route first if you so choose to follow it, but the easy route is also available.
Most of the forex market is USD, the remaining minority is EUR and JPY, and the rest is just a twinkle in some greedy fatcats eye. Why not just look at the seasonal or monthly performance of those currencies? Review the conditions from the peak, instead of the ground floor?
Part 7: Started at the Top
Firstly, if you prefer averages, you can average past 3 years, past 5 years, past 25 years, etc. You can find these indicators on TV by searching 'seasonality.' You can find them as free or paid indicators on the mt4 marketplace. You can also find them in various forms on other sites, some of them premium. Now, it gets even easier. Some pairs tend to close higher on some months versus others, this can be a useful unit of analysis when you attempt to fit seasonality into any overall model. If a pair like the USDJPY has 65% of closing higher in October but a sub 35% of closing higher in August, then you can evaluate risk by aligning yourself with history. You will know based on the MoM shift of probabilities. If you don't know this, then you need to return to the zoo, they are probably looking for you. Likewise, anything between 45-55% is likely noise, and not subject to the psychological intersect present in seasonality that I find significant. Again, we're still operating under a long-term trade frame of reference; intra-day traders will have their own sections in the future. To stay on target, long term traders with limited time to do additional research will want to focus on monthly seasonality performance at minimum.
You don't necessarily need to be going through futures contracts, seasonal consumer spending, tax season dynamics, or weather patterns for perfect market timing opportunities; but know that the institutions do, and they have the money, they make the markets, and they intimately follow (or create) business and client trends. As I explained in part 1, what they think is the only thing that matters, even if it seems overly complicated or stupidly simple. Spending a little less time with your gann wave analysis and more time mimicking their research efforts will improve your survivability and your probability of accurately finding that center of price gravity.
What about carry conditions?
So let's return to the carry condition question. How can you use seasonality to find the center of price gravity, the resilient value, for long term positions? Alone, it is not sufficient, but it necessary to consider, especially in months where seasonality dictates a 65% or higher chance of a positive or negative month. For instance, you decide to plan a 3-month trade on the USDJPY, from August through October. You will know based on seasonal monthly performance, that the center of price gravity is moving from a lower to a higher price point. UJ has a 32% of closing HIGHER than it opened in August, a coinflip 53% in September, and 68% of closing higher than it opened in October. This instructs your risk management approach. You take additional risk holding a 3 month short in that period. And adding carry conditions, you pay a daily fee to make that trade as well. Personally, I feel sick just thinking about that trade. I had coronavirus last month, but that trade is worse. Now, that doesn't give you much guidance on when to open your position, which further sections will help elucidate.
If you got this far, congratulations. Your mom and I are very impressed.
More on fundamentals, commodities, and global macro in general next time. If you're someone that obsesses over the medieval metals or boomer rocks, then you will really enjoy the next section. Still lost and confused? Don't worry, it's already priced in.
LONGTERM BULLISH ON FITBITStrong resistance & support wedging at next ER 28 Feb 2019. Until then Neutral, but holding for bullish trend.
Tax-cut Euphoria Bubble causes turbulence There was a statistically significant bump-up in the stock market following Trump's presidential victory. (*) In 2017, the positive slope of support clearly increased from long-term under Obama (2009 to 2015) forming the shaded area I'm calling a 'bubble' (not to mention the parabolic slope above it). I expect this was due to anticipation that tax cuts would stimulate the economy. However, the exuberance was excessive, an overestimation, and long-term support is more realistic wrt GDP. I expect the turbulence we've seen since early 2018 reflects the tenuous value of the overestimation and the weight of the long-term trend keeps the bull tethered.
The red star isn't so much a prediction as pointing to the 'attractor' that's pulling the market forward along a turbulent 'flat' trend, trying to guiding it toward on a more realistic track. Tax cuts and deregulation may produce real increased GDP growth, causing the trend will rise higher than the red star. Let's hope! And let's hope things don't fall lower than the star!
(*) archive.is
www.washingtonpost.com
Cup-&-Handle in the TBT- Interest Rates Going Higher, Tax Probs?Hold tight for this ride, there's a variety of reasons why bond prices will stagnate or fall.
Interest rates should rise and be higher than they are now; "should" certainly isn't a reason for something to happen, but there are scant monetary policy maneuverings available for the Fed to keep interest rates low and by extension, prop the stock market up much longer.
The TBT - ProShares' 2x Short 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF - is an exchange-traded fund that seeks to double the inverse of the U.S. Treasury Bond index on the daily. When bonds do poorly from falling prices and/or higher yields, TBT rises and seeks to double the fall of long-term treasuries.
There's a lot of reasons treasury bonds don't look so hot in the foreseeable future.
Let's first be honest about the state of the economy - it's not doing as well as the Fed and economic experts might lead us to believe.
1. Data continues to show GDP is not as strong as predicted.
GDP estimates are coming out crazy high. It's alarming to watch as the real numbers are revised lower and lower.
2. Input costs of all types are rising.
Trade concerns and commodity shortages are leading to higher input costs in sectors across the board.
3. Unemployment numbers don't reflect reality.
The unemployment numbers themselves might be valid, but the way they are calculated today is misleading. Experts claim that unemployment for college degree holders is below 2%. If the assessment is based on simply whether or not degree holders have a job, that might be true - but the numbers are false with regard to the reality of America's employment situation; an engineering graduate who is cooking pizzas for $8.50 an hour might have a job, but their pay grade is a fraction of what it would be if they could find employment in their field. Record-low unemployment numbers are no good when it means law school graduates are working as office receptionists and scientists are waiting tables, etc., and that's a more prevalent situation than what experts might lead us to believe.
4. The tax cuts aren't - and won't - help the middle- and working class as intended.
The stated goals of Trump's tax cuts were to repatriate offshore money and bring corporate tax rates to competitive levels with countries like China. Those goals may be becoming realized, but the end result is not beneficial for the little guys. We've heard feel-good stories of employers tossing out $1,000 bonuses to employees, etc., but the reality is companies are using the favorable tax situation for stock buyback and M&A (merger and acquisitions) - and as a whole that benefits people at the top much more than professionals in the middle or workers at the bottom.
So, the overarching situation is this: tax cuts aren't helping the everyday worker as much as experts might expect, and workers may be finding employment but they are underemployed and underpaid.
Bottom line? Lower tax receipts with unfettered government spending will mean the U.S. Treasury will need to issue bonds.
Bond prices will flounder and yields will rise - just as the Fed will presumably need to start printing money (QE 4?) - begging a couple questions:
How are bondholders going to get paid?
How is the strength of the dollar going to be maintained?
Simply put, there are fundamental reasons for the price of the TBT ETF to climb higher. Similarly, there are technical reasons for the TBT to rise too - a cup-and-handle has printed in TBT's chart. This indicates higher prices in the future.
A TBT trade is a little more involved than most, but could pay off with big returns on investment as the story plays out.
Please like, follow, and share, and maybe we can have fun and do great things together.
Thanks again!
See it on the site: holsturr.com/category/markets/charts/
** For speculative and research purposes - good luck! **
SHORT Bitcoin reversal imminant? well wait until 15th April So after my last chart and roadmap for bitcoin 2018 spring to summer:
we gotta get a good close idea of what may happen in the days leading up to this....
some of you might just wanna take a break or do something else but i know there is bucket loads of puppers and cats all tuned in to this market right now, i mean we love seeing things fall as much as we do building them, its just natural
anyhow its only 5 days away, was meant to do this a week ago, many apologies for that but everyday has been confirming what i first starting thinking about the tax returns and the cashouts since the last layer of the bubble popped
we seem to be inside a triangle on the 60m chart and looks like if it breaks that support we will see a test of 600/5800
next on the list of bounce areas are $5800-600, 4200 and then if it does get panic sold extremes of $3600
$4k and $5k might come into play as psychological levels
all these levels are backed up by the trusted gann fans and fibs, lets see if it plays out and this is what im following......
if you DO have any questions about this or anything else please leave a comment or join our chat in telegram link below
REMEMBER all these can play out in next five days or maybe longer, also someone like George Soros can come along and buy tens of thousands of bitcoins at once etc etc list go on
everything is possible, its just whether its probable, bitcoin has taught us, never say never and i have been in BTC since it was a few $$
this looks like a good time to get in, if buying on bounces keep stop loss under the last low, or hodl for all hell!
bless up and bring on the cheap bitcoins!
JOIN US ON THE LINKS BELOW for 24/7 FREE crypto coin analysis and ZERO pump and dump spam :)
Will the "Tax Day" cause a BTC price surge?This is my first article here. I hope everyone will like it and I am very much looking forward for comments from people who could give a data driven prove to support or deny my scenarios.
Recently there has been more and more conversations in regards "Will Tax Day cause a surge". Thomas Lee with similar articles articles state that there will be a huge price surge up.
My technical analysis shows that at the moment we are at the peak of bull-ish cycle and there should be another shoulder of price rising up and then the cycle should reverse into bear-ish cycle with price pushing down. However if "experts" are correct, there will be a major disruption to current cycles and new cycles will take time to establish.
Therefore, the question remains - will the price surge up or drop down? Leave your thoughts and models in the comments bellow.
Happy Tax Day!
BTC TAX SEASON CRASHThese are guidelines of what may or may not happen in the market.
04/12/18
BTC DUMP 10 DAYS | 29.45%
BTC PUMP 19 DAYS | 37.45%
BTC DUMP 4 DAYS | 6.9%
BTC PUMP 8 HOURS |3.6%
BTC TAX DUMP 4 HOUR DAY 5 (April 15th) | 24.45%
Currently BTC pumped from 6K to 7800K that is a full 30%
According to percentage analysis BTC should see another pump of up to 4-7% until the 4 day dump.. 8381 USD
However I believe that to be unlikely unless we are behind schedule by 8 days.
Playing it safe.
Today is the 12th of April and on the 12th of April last year BTC dumped 6.9%
Then pumped same 3.6% for 8 hours
After the 8 hour pump we saw 3 days of bear traps...
Finally on the 15th from 5 AM in the morning to 9 AM in the morning BTC DUMPED
BTC then pumped right back up to 1190 that same day April 15th at 9 AM
There are two market psychologies here..
1. BTC will rise 7% more even though we are right on track for the crash.
2. BTC will fall and we are already in the bull trap.
Conclusion:
I believe 2. BTC will fall.
The market follows time trends, percentages over time can help us quantify the amount of profit possible.
Deduct 24% of 7800 we get 5928
I believe whatever happens this is a safe value to buy back in.
Sell price 7800
Buy price 5950
Other thoughts:
BTC may drop lower due to the current market missing 7%
Instead of 24% maybe a full 30% dump making up for the lost 7%
Trade War Affecting TeslaEvery day I drive by a car shipping port in Richmond, California. When I look by I see whole lots of Tesla's getting ready to be shipped to Asia. Tesla has a big market selling products to Asia and owning a Tesla in Asia is a big status symbol. Yes, the trade war is mostly FUD, but if trump does follow through with the tariffs, Tesla could get hit hard. With the selloff, the market is obviously worried, and they have a right to be. But i don't think the tariff will be enough to put Tesla under. we will really just have to wait and see. If this is FUD, I think we will get a rebound on previous price levels.