The Nifty was well on the way to our expected target levels of 4300 and below but was then interrupted by a quick and sharp upmove. These temporary corrections are expected on the way and in no circumstances do we expect the Nifty to go to 4300 and below in a unidirectional manner. Our job is not only to make a prediction on the direction of the market but also to trade on it. And while our predictions will help our trades to be more profitable but at the same time we have to be prepared for times when our predictions may go wrong. It is at times like those when we have to listen to what the market is trying to tell us. We just need to listen to the markets, they too have a language, and, believe me, it is not difficult to do that. Anyone can do that, all you have to do is to learn Technical Analysis.
This website contains discussion and analysis of securities trading in NSE, BSE, MCX and NCDEX. All securities are analysed on Technical charts and an effort has been made to predict the future movement of these securities.
Showing posts with label Elliott Waves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elliott Waves. Show all posts
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Nifty Going Down, Maintain Shorts
Today the Nifty opened on a stronger note but soon started falling and within minutes it was in the red and from thereon, it was a unidirectional fall for the Nifty, except in the last hour and a half when it made a strong recovery, but not enough to bring it in the green. In the process, just after opening it made a high of 5996, in the mid-afternoon it touched a low of 5917, recovered to 5951 and then ended the day 46 points in the red at 5939. Well, the Nifty made it clear today that it is going down and going down a long way. But the small recovery towards the end could be a signal that a small bounceback could come.
Monday, May 27, 2013
Retake on Elliott Wave Analysis of Nifty: Target 3305
This is in continuation to my earlier analysis of the Nifty based on the Elliott Waves. I have already written two posts regarding this, one in January, just a few days before Nifty made the memorable high of 6111.80. In that post I had given a minimum target of Nifty to be 4300 but since the top had not been made as yet I assumed that the minimum target could be close to 4500 levels. Just days after that, the Nifty made a high of 6111.80 and started falling down heavily and came down to make a low of 5477, more than 10% down in a matter of days. That made us assume that the wave B was over and that we were now in the wave C and that the Nifty would move down to our perceived target levels. The second post's target of 5528 was given during this fall when the Nifty was still trading at around 5870 levels. The Nifty then did come down to 5477 and almost unexpectedly, started moving up and went up to 6230 and then started falling again.
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Nifty Weakness Continuing, Next Target 5528
As I have been saying since over two months that the Nifty looks weak, the Nifty, as if listening to my analysis is doing exactly as I am predicting. This is not a good sign, at least not good for me. And the reason for that is that the market does not listen to any analyst and moves in a fashion known only to itself. And since there are a limited number of movements that the market can show, a few analysts may have their good days till the market decides to bring them back to Mother Earth. Not a good sign for me, because I'm having good days these days and only the market knows, how many days to prove me right. But, never mind that, my job is to analyse the markets and take trades in the direction of the trend and not try to fight and change the trend when the markets decide so.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
An Elliott Wave Analysis of the Markets
Some of my readers, sure, would be waiting for this post. I can say this because I had done an Elliott Wave Analysis of the markets once before and that post was a massive hit with my readers. A similar attempt is being made now on the current chart of Nifty. But a disclaimer goes with this post and that is that I'm not an expert on the Elliott Wave Principle. I have a little knowledge about it and I'm taking a risk of trying and numbering the waves with this little knowledge, a process which can even prove the best in the field wrong (at times). I would also advise my readers not to give too much of weightage to this post as the market may prove me wrong. But it still might turn out to be useful to read, in case my numbering turns out to be correct.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Nifty Falls To Support, May Bounceback
The Nifty kept falling and finally, according to our forecast since September, went down to touch that trendline yesterday and then again, today. It opened today at a high at 5605, kept falling throughout the day till it made a low of 5548 and then posted a smart recovery towards the end of the session to close at 5571.
Friday, September 28, 2012
A Correction on the Cards
The Nifty closed a quarter of a percent down today losing about 14 points from its previous value. After a reasonably decent opening at 5673, it continued to move up in the morning trades to make a high of 5693 before noon. It remained in the positive till about 2 in the afternoon when the bears took over and pushed it into the negative territory. A last ditch effort to remain in the positive came in the late afternoon trades but could not sustain and the Nifty closed at 5649.50, 14 points in the red.
Attached above is the daily chart of Nifty. Shown on the chart is a trendline sloping upwards connecting the early June, late July and early September lows. Also shown on the chart are two indicators, the MACD and the RSI. Another line is shown connecting the last two most recent highs and a corresponding highs made by the RSI in the same period. As can be seen from the charts, the Nifty made a higher high while the RSI failed to do so in the corresponding period, thus showing a bearish divergence. The RSI has turned downwards and has just penetrated its 9-period signal line, indicating a sell, albeit mild. In the last 20 days, the Nifty has gained almost 500 points without any major correction, a gain of almost 10%. At this stage, a correction is long overdue and signs of weakness are already visible on the charts. A downward correction may take the Nifty back to the upward sloping trendline which could provide support to the Nifty close to the 5400 levels. A steeper downward move could take the Nifty down to the dashed blue line which lies at 5360. This is the line which has provided support to the Nifty once and resistance to it 6 times in the last 9-10 months, a very significant support indeed. So, till we get to that point, it's just a sell on rise market and when we get to 5400 nearabouts it's going to be converted into a buy on dips market.
Seen above is the daily chart of Silver. Silver in the last 45 days itself has shown a rise of almost 12000 points, a rise of almost over 20%. By the looks of it, and using the Elliott Wave Principle, I think we have just entered wave 4 of this uptrend. And if this is a wave 4 then I would expect that the correction would not be very deep (maximum 38%). Secondly, according to the rules, wave 4 should not enter the price territory of wave 1 and the highest point of wave 1 was 56337 and we are a long way from there. A 38.2% retracement, as shown can bring Silver down to 60142. The 23.6% retracement level lies at 62255 and the last 3-4 days, even though have shown a spike below that level but never has Silver closed below it in this correction. This suggests that this 62255 may be a tough level to break. The two consecutive green candles in the last two days show that the price is ready to move up again. An upmove from this point may see Silver finding resistance near 64000 levels and if it crosses that, it can go right past the previous high of 65670 too and my next target for Silver then would be around 68000. But it all depends upon whether the wave 4 correction is complete yet or not. And believe me friends, only time and the markets can tell that, not mortals like you and me. All in all, by the evidence that we've got till now, I would be a seller in Nifty and a buyer in Silver.
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Labels:
Divergence,
Elliott Waves,
Fibonacci,
Nifty,
Relative Strength Index,
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Trendlines
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Capitulation Like Symptoms Visible
The Nifty yet again opened around the same levels as yesterday’s closing and started moving up. Yet again, at 11AM, it started coming down, and exactly like yesterday found support in the late afternoon session. But today the support was found 160 points below yesterday’s close of 4040 at 3878. The Nifty finally ended the day 144 points down at 3896. Our level of 3882 mentioned in yesterday’s post held very well today.
In the last few days I have been discussing Elliott Wave Counts on the Nifty and so far the counts appeared to be correct and working as per our expectations. To read what we had written in other posts discussing Elliott waves, one can go to the end of this post and under the section “Other Posts That May Interest You” read the posts listed under ‘Elliott Waves’. Or, simply click here to read all posts which have discussed Elliott Waves. Briefly, I had mentioned that we are, probably, in the 5th wave down of major corrective wave C. While writing yesterday’s post I got confused and had mentioned that wave 5 cannot be longer than 797.60 points which was the length of the 3rd wave down in the corrective wave C. As per the Elliott Wave principles, the 3rd wave is usually the longest but NEVER the shortest. And I got confused into thinking that if the length of the 5th wave is more than 797.60 then the 3rd wave would become the shortest. What I forgot was that even if wave 5 was longer than that, wave 1 would still be the shortest which measured only 385.05 points. And Sanjay rightly pointed out in the comments here that even if wave 5 exceeded 797.60 points, wave 3 would still not be the shortest. Thank you, Sanjay. Usually, if the 3rd wave is the longest, wave 5 is almost equal to wave 1. In some cases, it could even be 1.618 times, 2.618 times or 4.236 times of wave 1 (and in some of these cases wave 5 could then become the longest). This seems to be a case where wave 5 will be the longest. 1.618 times of 385.05 would be 623 points and the 5th wave is already longer than that. The next target for the end of wave 5 would be 2.618 times of wave 1 (385.05 points) which is 1008.05 points which works out to a target of 3671.70. God save us if it extends to 4.236 times of the first wave!
In the last few days I have been discussing Elliott Wave Counts on the Nifty and so far the counts appeared to be correct and working as per our expectations. To read what we had written in other posts discussing Elliott waves, one can go to the end of this post and under the section “Other Posts That May Interest You” read the posts listed under ‘Elliott Waves’. Or, simply click here to read all posts which have discussed Elliott Waves. Briefly, I had mentioned that we are, probably, in the 5th wave down of major corrective wave C. While writing yesterday’s post I got confused and had mentioned that wave 5 cannot be longer than 797.60 points which was the length of the 3rd wave down in the corrective wave C. As per the Elliott Wave principles, the 3rd wave is usually the longest but NEVER the shortest. And I got confused into thinking that if the length of the 5th wave is more than 797.60 then the 3rd wave would become the shortest. What I forgot was that even if wave 5 was longer than that, wave 1 would still be the shortest which measured only 385.05 points. And Sanjay rightly pointed out in the comments here that even if wave 5 exceeded 797.60 points, wave 3 would still not be the shortest. Thank you, Sanjay. Usually, if the 3rd wave is the longest, wave 5 is almost equal to wave 1. In some cases, it could even be 1.618 times, 2.618 times or 4.236 times of wave 1 (and in some of these cases wave 5 could then become the longest). This seems to be a case where wave 5 will be the longest. 1.618 times of 385.05 would be 623 points and the 5th wave is already longer than that. The next target for the end of wave 5 would be 2.618 times of wave 1 (385.05 points) which is 1008.05 points which works out to a target of 3671.70. God save us if it extends to 4.236 times of the first wave!

Udayan Mukherjee, the senior stocks analyst for CNBC TV18 said today, that the holdings of the retail segment are mostly in the mid cap and small cap segment and only a small quantity of the retail investors would be invested in the large caps. So, if at all a capitulation by the retail investors were to be seen, it would be mostly in the mid cap and small cap segment and very little in the large cap segment. I, somehow, tend to agree with him. I took a look at the chart of the CNX Midcap 200 Index also today and the picture looks grim, to say the least.

One very important thing to be noticed and kept in mind is the sentiment indicator. All analysts on TV, Radio and the newspapers are now extremely bearish about the markets. More and more analysts have started giving targets below 10000 on the Sensex. The media (both visual and print), besides business newspapers and business news channels, have started reporting about the massive fall in the markets and the amount of money that the investors have lost. Even knowledgeable people like mutual fund managers and FIIs have turned negative and have started selling. There is pessimism all around. All these factors indicate that we are somewhere very close to a bottom. Long term investments could now be made in small quantities (I’m not saying this as a technical analyst but only as a contrarion investor). Maybe this should cheer some of you out there in all this pessimism.
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Labels:
Bollinger Bands,
Elliott Waves,
Head and Shoulders,
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Monday, June 30, 2008
Below 4000, More Downside Possible
Surprisingly, the markets did not open with a negative bias today and in fact started gaining ground in the beginning of the day. But the good times didn’t last long, in fact, not even a full hour and by 11AM, the markets began their southward journey, and finally found a little bit of support near 4020 at 3PM which held till the closing bell. The break of the support at 4093 (most recent pivot low) was a big negative for the Nifty. The Nifty eventually closed at 4040.55, which happens to be the lowest close since 20th April 2007.
This also means that our Elliott Wave counts of 1,2,3,4,5 of corrective wave C, as mentioned in one of the previous posts has gone wrong. It also means that the fifth wave has not ended as yet. This means that the fifth wave is also an extended wave. We don’t know how long it will be. What we know is that it cannot be longer than the third wave. The third wave started at 5167.40 on May 16, 2008 and ended at 4369.80 (assuming that to be the end of wave 3) on June 10, 2008, thus measuring 797.60 points. The fifth wave started on June 18, 2008 at 4679.75. This means that the wave five cannot go below 3882.15 in any case. If it does then it means that our wave counting is wrong again and that we may still be in wave 3 of major corrective wave C.
This also means that our Elliott Wave counts of 1,2,3,4,5 of corrective wave C, as mentioned in one of the previous posts has gone wrong. It also means that the fifth wave has not ended as yet. This means that the fifth wave is also an extended wave. We don’t know how long it will be. What we know is that it cannot be longer than the third wave. The third wave started at 5167.40 on May 16, 2008 and ended at 4369.80 (assuming that to be the end of wave 3) on June 10, 2008, thus measuring 797.60 points. The fifth wave started on June 18, 2008 at 4679.75. This means that the wave five cannot go below 3882.15 in any case. If it does then it means that our wave counting is wrong again and that we may still be in wave 3 of major corrective wave C.

The political situation also worsened (or improved??) today. The Prime Minister has decided to go and attend the G8 summit. The Left has taken it as a signal that the Government has decided to go ahead with the nuclear deal and reiterated, once again, that it would withdraw support if it did so. To make matters worse, the Prime Minister said that “there has been nothing new with the Left’s stand”. The political analysts view his confidence as a confirmation that the Government is confident of getting the support of the Samajwadi Party (SP) in case the Left withdraws support. With the UPA tally at 225 and adding 39 as the SP support the UPA still falls 8 short of the magic number of 272 to get a majority. However, getting the support of 8 more may not be too difficult a problem for the government. In case it does get the support, it would mean that the nuclear deal would go through and the government also will not fall. With the Left out of the way, the Government actually may be able to take some positive decisions (not saying that it has too much of time to do that since elections are due in May next year). That would be an ideal situation for the markets to begin a new bull market.
But inflation would still remain a concern and the market may probably be looking at a stabilization in the inflation rates before starting to go up again. With the world commodity prices still increasing and crude on the rise again, and the effect of the petrol price hike last month trickling down to other industries, the inflation figures are likely to become worse at least for another month or two, before stabilizing.
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Labels:
Bollinger Bands,
Elliott Waves,
Inflation,
Nifty,
Politics
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Birth of a New Bull Market?
The resignation didn’t come today. Maybe it will come a few days later. Speculation is ripe that in a week’s time the UPA will meet the Left and inform them (rather than reaching a decision) that they are going to the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) to get an approval on the safeguards text. The Left has categorically stated that it ‘will not allow them to go to the IAEA’. And the moment the Government goes, support would be withdrawn. The Government may not be able to garner enough votes to save itself in the event of a no-confidence motion.

A comment was posted by Sanjay in yesterday’s post asking whether we are in corrective wave C of major wave 4 or otherwise. Well, Elliott Waves Analysis is a very specialized topic and while I have a working knowledge of Elliott Waves, I wouldn’t call myself a specialist. But, as far as my knowledge goes I have tried to do an analysis of the wave counts in the cycle/super cycle degree. I would request specialists of EWs to post a comment (if they happen to chance by this post) to tell us all if our analysis seems to be correct or not.

From hereon, if our wave counts are correct, then our previous low of 4093.20 made yesterday should not be broken. However, there is only two things that are worrying me and the first one is the fall of the government. While the market has already discounted the fact that the government would fall, yet a sharp knee jerk reaction could come which, probably, could take us below the previous low. The other thing that is worrying me is the fact that we are only 25 weeks or 6 months into the bear market. Usually, Fibonacci numbers hold a lot of importance in the markets and one of my previous posts mentions how the market made important highs/lows after a specific number of weeks and how that number always turned out to be a Fibonacci number. Going by that logic we should see the end of the bull market in 34 weeks which should not happen earlier than the last week of August.
Let us assume that our above logic is wrong and that our wave counts are correct. In that case a new bull market should start now. But do we expect new highs soon? No. A new bull market will always take time to build up. A long period of base-building will happen in the beginning of a bull market. There is a lot of pessimism when the first wave up of the bull wave is seen and people view it as a bear market rally rather than a bull market. The second wave down reinforces the fear that the bear market is continuing. It is only when this wave fails to go below the previous lows and another rally is seen that people realize that it is a new bull market. That is when the volumes come in and people come and buy in large numbers. Exactly the reason why the third wave is the longest wave. Then a correction comes about and the fourth wave down just cools down the overheated market and makes valuations appear a little more reasonable and the fifth wave starts. Now the people again come out in hordes to buy and think that since this is a bull market nothing could go wrong and conditions become euphoric and one knows that it is all about to end soon. Sir John Templeton, a famous stock investor, has rightly said that “Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism, and die on euphoria.”
Right now the conditions are pessimistic, there are rumours of a government fall, I am expecting the markets to stay low till end of August and there are analysts predicting the Sensex to come down to 12000 levels and there are a few analysts who are pessimistic enough to expect 9000 on the Sensex and some like me who once predicted the target of Nifty to be 2600. There is a lot of pessimism around and I am wondering if this is the birth of a new bull market?
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Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Will the Prime Minister Resign Today?
Yesterday the RBI increased the CRR to 8.75% up 50 basis points and increased the repo rate also by 50 basis points to bring it to 8.5% as against the 8% that it was at currently. This was largely expected by the market, but a small and immediate reaction was to be expected, as our column had predicted yesterday. And that is what happened at the opening bell. The Nifty opened a 100 points down and immediately started recovering from there. It recovered for a couple of hours before it went into a small 30 points range for over 3 hours. Finally, it showed a brief and small spurt in prices in the last 30 minutes.
The UPA-Left meet was expected today on the nuclear deal issue and since that did not happen till the market closed, there was no reaction. It is surprising that the government has yet again managed to buy more time. This time the members of the meeting decided to meet again to ‘finalise the findings’ on the deal. While it was announced that the meeting would take place ‘in due course’, it is not expected to take place before a couple of weeks. Meanwhile, there were rumours (as reported by a news channel) that the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, may tender his resignation before the G8 summit which is to start on July 8, 2008. There is a report of a cabinet meeting being held at 11AM tomorrow. I wonder if Dr. Manmohan Singh will submit his resignation to the cabinet then.
The UPA-Left meet was expected today on the nuclear deal issue and since that did not happen till the market closed, there was no reaction. It is surprising that the government has yet again managed to buy more time. This time the members of the meeting decided to meet again to ‘finalise the findings’ on the deal. While it was announced that the meeting would take place ‘in due course’, it is not expected to take place before a couple of weeks. Meanwhile, there were rumours (as reported by a news channel) that the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, may tender his resignation before the G8 summit which is to start on July 8, 2008. There is a report of a cabinet meeting being held at 11AM tomorrow. I wonder if Dr. Manmohan Singh will submit his resignation to the cabinet then.

The Nifty opened about 100 points down today but I wouldn’t go as far as to say that it was capitulation, mainly because there was no selling climax. In the absence of a capitulation and a selling climax, it will be very difficult (and risky) to say that a final low has been made. What options are we left with? A short term uptrend shall be signified above 4328 while an intermediate term uptrend, as already mentioned, shall be confirmed above 4680. I’m afraid, at the moment we do not have too many options but to wait and let the market tell us what it wants to do. I would be much more confident about predicting the markets after the government falls. Let us see if that does happen.
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Labels:
Divergence,
Elliott Waves,
Fibonacci,
Nifty,
Politics
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
4th Wave of Corrective Wave C Seems to have Ended
Finally, I’m back after a long break but can’t say for how long! I’ve had a pretty bad case of an infection which is just refusing to leave. After 4 days of antibiotics being injected into me, the high fever ranging between 103-104 degrees Fahrenheit seems to have relented. But I’ve also been having this real bad pain in the back (which, according to the doctors is related to the infection) which gives in only to painkillers and that too for only 4-5 hours. The bad part is that I can take the next doze of the painkiller only 8 hours after the previous doze and the last 3 hours are just unbearable. Today, I have taken the painkiller about 3 hours ago and I have about another hour or so to finish before I start getting the pains again. Hope I can finish what I have to say in that much time otherwise I’ll have to just upload it midway. So please excuse an abrupt ending to this edition, if there is any.


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Monday, June 9, 2008
Nifty Technical Analysis: A Mixed Perspective
The Nifty, as expected, opened deep in the red and a little bit of support was found near 4465, which didn’t last too long, and the Nifty continued to go deeper in the red till it found support at 4412, much lower than the January and March lows. From there a recovery came about but with regular corrections every 50 points or so. Finally, the Nifty ended the day much lower than Friday’s close, but luckily above the three supports we talked about in yesterday’s post.

I’ve also drawn the Fibonacci retracements for the decline from the top made on 16th May till the bottom made today. In one of my previous posts titled “Another Attempt at Elliott Wave Counts”, I had mentioned that we may be currently in the 3rd down wave of the C wave correction of the bull market. Now, read carefully because there are a lot of assumptions here. Assuming our wave counts of the C wave to be so far correct, we can conclude that the 2nd wave corrected the first wave by 61.8% (not visible in the chart above). And, assuming that we have seen the end of the 3rd wave today, we may expect the 4th wave to correct the 3rd wave by 38.2% or maximum upto 50% but less than 61.8%. This gives us a target of 4700 if it corrects by 38.2% and 4790 if it corrects by 50%, as can be seen in the above chart. But it could also be very well a correction of only 23.6%, in which case 4590 will provide resistance. And assuming that the 5th wave is as large (or as small) as wave 1 then we get a target of 4205 or 4315 depending on where the 4th wave ends. Hopefully, that should be the end of the bear market.

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Labels:
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Saturday, June 7, 2008
Inflation and Crude Oil Technical Analysis
The topic of my discussion today is crude oil. But because of the increasing oil prices we saw a hike in the prices of petrol. That will increase the inflation, so let me talk about inflation. With increasing inflation, the markets will come down, so let’s change the discussion to the markets. But this oil price increase may be because of the weakening dollar. Shall we talk about the dollar then? There are so many things to talk about, why limit ourselves to one topic. I’ll just write type whatever comes to mind.
Let us take a very simple example. Let us assume that milk and cows are not easily available commodity/animal. Let us assume that you have 5 cows with you (lucky you) and that you get about 50 litres of milk a day. Since milk is not easily available you don’t want to sell it all and would like to keep some for your future use, so you freeze it. And since your neighbours are buying from you, you sell about 28-30 litres in a day, consume 2 and freeze the rest. Now, your cows are getting old and their milk giving capacity is going down. You know that in a few months time you will be left with no milk. Your neighbours are requesting you to start selling 40-45 litres a day. Obviously, you won’t do it because when the cows stop giving milk, you could charge a fortune for a litre of milk.
Now let us say that the cows will give milk only for 6 months more, which is 180 days. At your current rate of 20 litres a day, when the cows stop giving milk you would have 3600 litres of frozen milk with you. The neighbours have been paying you with a kilo of rice for each litre of milk. But rice is easily available and its value is going down. And because of the value of rice going down, you have started asking for 1.2 kg of rice for every litre of milk. And because you are selling less your neighbours are even willing to pay 1.5 kg of rice for a litre of milk. You know that your 3600 litres of milk which was worth 3600 kg of rice, will now get you 5400 kg of rice. So, in effect you are richer by 1800 kg of rice without doing a thing. Would you sell more milk or just keep building up your wealth which is now increasing without even selling?
This is exactly what is happening in the world today. Just substitute crude oil for milk, the oil rigs for the cows, the Arabian countries owning the oil rigs for yourself, the rest of the world for the neighbours and the US dollar for rice. It is all so simple. Why would they sell more oil when their net worth is increasing every day because of the depreciating dollar? Why would they sell more when they know that 20-30 years down the line when the production is zero, the crude will be worth much more? Why would they sell more when they could get a fortune for a barrel of oil 30 years down the line?
Inflation jumped to 8.24% for the week ended May 24, 2008. On Wednesday, the government hiked the price of petrol by Rs.5/- per litre, diesel by Rs.3/- per litre and LPG by Rs.50/- per cylinder. The government says this hike could increase the inflation by 50 or 60 basis points. But inflation is not only affected by fuel price hike. This fuel price hike will have a cascading impact on all sectors from industries to agriculture and even services. The worst hit, as is easy to understand, will be the transportation sector. It will also mean increased house rents because the cost of construction material will be pushed up by the cost of transportation. And since almost everything needs to be transported before and after production, this hike would affect everything. In time, the food will also becoming dearer, and now with the LPG hike even cooking the food is going to become costlier.
The Economic Times says that historically a Rs.2/- per litre hike in petrol and Rs.1/- per litre hike in oil pushes up the wholesale price index by more than a point in the subsequent two weeks. The LPG price had not been increased since 2004 and this time with a Rs.50/- per cylinder hike in LPG and Rs.5/- and Rs.3/- hike in petrol and diesel respectively, the wholesale price index could move up about 4 points (though the Economic Times says only a point and a half) in the week ended 7th June, the figures for which will be released on 20th June, 2008. This would push the wholesale price index to about 234.5 to 235. A figure of 235 would translate into an inflation of over 10.48% since last year in June the Wholesale Price Index was 211.8.
Coming back to crude, the crude price jumped by more than $10 a barrel on Friday to a record high of $138.54. Did the government do something wrong in increasing the petrol, diesel and LPG prices? Absolutely not, but it came too late. This was a decision which should have been taken months ago. With the reformist finance minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh heading the government, we didn’t expect such a good economic decision to come so late in the day. But maybe the government was just waiting for the Karnataka assembly elections to get over. But the decision took more than 10 days after the elections to be announced. Every single day was adding up several crores of rupees of losses for the oil companies. But in the end such a drastic hike was a bold decision by the government. But despite that, Petrol sold in India is still about Rs.10/- per litre cheaper than what price it commands in the rest of the world. But where is it headed? $150 a barrel is not too far away and there even have been predictions of $200 by the end of the year. Let us do some technical analysis.
Let us take a very simple example. Let us assume that milk and cows are not easily available commodity/animal. Let us assume that you have 5 cows with you (lucky you) and that you get about 50 litres of milk a day. Since milk is not easily available you don’t want to sell it all and would like to keep some for your future use, so you freeze it. And since your neighbours are buying from you, you sell about 28-30 litres in a day, consume 2 and freeze the rest. Now, your cows are getting old and their milk giving capacity is going down. You know that in a few months time you will be left with no milk. Your neighbours are requesting you to start selling 40-45 litres a day. Obviously, you won’t do it because when the cows stop giving milk, you could charge a fortune for a litre of milk.
Now let us say that the cows will give milk only for 6 months more, which is 180 days. At your current rate of 20 litres a day, when the cows stop giving milk you would have 3600 litres of frozen milk with you. The neighbours have been paying you with a kilo of rice for each litre of milk. But rice is easily available and its value is going down. And because of the value of rice going down, you have started asking for 1.2 kg of rice for every litre of milk. And because you are selling less your neighbours are even willing to pay 1.5 kg of rice for a litre of milk. You know that your 3600 litres of milk which was worth 3600 kg of rice, will now get you 5400 kg of rice. So, in effect you are richer by 1800 kg of rice without doing a thing. Would you sell more milk or just keep building up your wealth which is now increasing without even selling?
This is exactly what is happening in the world today. Just substitute crude oil for milk, the oil rigs for the cows, the Arabian countries owning the oil rigs for yourself, the rest of the world for the neighbours and the US dollar for rice. It is all so simple. Why would they sell more oil when their net worth is increasing every day because of the depreciating dollar? Why would they sell more when they know that 20-30 years down the line when the production is zero, the crude will be worth much more? Why would they sell more when they could get a fortune for a barrel of oil 30 years down the line?
Inflation jumped to 8.24% for the week ended May 24, 2008. On Wednesday, the government hiked the price of petrol by Rs.5/- per litre, diesel by Rs.3/- per litre and LPG by Rs.50/- per cylinder. The government says this hike could increase the inflation by 50 or 60 basis points. But inflation is not only affected by fuel price hike. This fuel price hike will have a cascading impact on all sectors from industries to agriculture and even services. The worst hit, as is easy to understand, will be the transportation sector. It will also mean increased house rents because the cost of construction material will be pushed up by the cost of transportation. And since almost everything needs to be transported before and after production, this hike would affect everything. In time, the food will also becoming dearer, and now with the LPG hike even cooking the food is going to become costlier.
The Economic Times says that historically a Rs.2/- per litre hike in petrol and Rs.1/- per litre hike in oil pushes up the wholesale price index by more than a point in the subsequent two weeks. The LPG price had not been increased since 2004 and this time with a Rs.50/- per cylinder hike in LPG and Rs.5/- and Rs.3/- hike in petrol and diesel respectively, the wholesale price index could move up about 4 points (though the Economic Times says only a point and a half) in the week ended 7th June, the figures for which will be released on 20th June, 2008. This would push the wholesale price index to about 234.5 to 235. A figure of 235 would translate into an inflation of over 10.48% since last year in June the Wholesale Price Index was 211.8.
Coming back to crude, the crude price jumped by more than $10 a barrel on Friday to a record high of $138.54. Did the government do something wrong in increasing the petrol, diesel and LPG prices? Absolutely not, but it came too late. This was a decision which should have been taken months ago. With the reformist finance minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh heading the government, we didn’t expect such a good economic decision to come so late in the day. But maybe the government was just waiting for the Karnataka assembly elections to get over. But the decision took more than 10 days after the elections to be announced. Every single day was adding up several crores of rupees of losses for the oil companies. But in the end such a drastic hike was a bold decision by the government. But despite that, Petrol sold in India is still about Rs.10/- per litre cheaper than what price it commands in the rest of the world. But where is it headed? $150 a barrel is not too far away and there even have been predictions of $200 by the end of the year. Let us do some technical analysis.

More tomorrow. Happy Investing!!!
Labels:
Crude Oil,
Elliott Waves,
Global Economy,
Inflation
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Another Attempt At Elliott Wave Counts
The Nifty, taking the cue from red global markets, opened weak and within minutes of opening reached 4634, very close to the support of 4630, as was mentioned in the post dated 25th May titled “Nifty Breaks Important Support”. And from there it staged a magnificient recovery. Unfortunately, the recovery wasn’t enough to take it into the green but it was enough to end the day to form a doji candle (open and close at or very close to each other), as can be seen in the chart below.

I had written a post on April 21st titled "Are we in wave 3 of Nifty?" in which I had mentioned the basics about Elliott Waves. You can read that post before you continue ahead so that you can recall what I had written that time.
In response to that post, I received an email from a subscriber of mine who wrote the following:
“Dear Sir,
I want to ask you that are we in bullish phase, after the corrective phase of A,B,C? Previously you have written an article "Are we in wave 3?". In the same line I want to add that, now we are in WAVE 2, shortly will enter in to WAVE 3. Below I have given the image for right understanding.
Want to know your comment on it.”
He has been very kind to attach a chart also which is self explanatory and needs no commentary. It is attached below.


According to a1samud, there is a very famous saying by Mahatma Gandhi, which I quote below:
"A customer is the most important visitor on our premises. he is not dependent on us. We are dependent on him. He is not an interruption in our work. He is the purpose of it. He is not an outsider in our business. He is part of it. We are not doing him a favor by serving him. He is doing us a favor by giving us an opportunity to do so.”
I would like to twist it a little to fit the relationship of analysts and the markets. Here is my version of it:
"The markets are the most important element of our lives. They are not dependent on us. We are dependent on them. They are not an interruption in our work. They are the purpose of it. They are not an outsider in our business. They are a part of it. We are not doing them a favor by analysing them. They are doing us a favor by giving us an opportunity to do so.”
Please do subscribe to my posts, so that all posts are delivered free to your inbox and you don't miss any useful analysis of the markets in the future.
Happy Investing!!!
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