We retired our "Five Bull Market Barometers" in 2020 to make room for a new weekly post that's focused on the three most important charts for the week ahead.
This is that post, so let's jump into this week's edition.
Rates continue to rise along with concerns of an impending recession.
The narrative is quickly shifting back to tighter monetary policy following last week’s higher-than-anticipated CPI and strong economic data. I don’t pay too much attention to this gossip. But I do keep a pulse on the latest discourse surrounding markets.
With these newfound recessionary fears circulating, I want to share a chart I like to avoid… The 2s10s treasury spread.
I can’t remember the last time I wrote about the yield curve. It’s been so inverted (deepest inversion since the early 80s) for so long that I honestly don’t know what to think.
Nevertheless, the overlay chart of the Staples sector $XLP relative to the S&P 500 $SPY with the 2s10s spread conveys an important piece of information:
If there are no profits taken, there is no winning. And if there is no winning, then what am I even doing here?
Subscribers to the various options education services we provide at All Star Charts know that I’m usually very clear about where I’ll take profits in the various trades I put on. Most trades have a profit target and I set the GTC limit orders out in the market and let them get hit. I’m hands-off. Unemotional.
So it would seem that I’m pretty automatic about this practice of profit-taking in all realms of the market in which I engage.
You might be surprised that this hasn’t been true in my personal index options trading.