Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Short Sell Oppotunities on Oil and Gas ETFs USO and UNG

Aug 27th, 2008 | By Jim Stanton | Category: Gold Market

1-2-3 Trader editor Jim Stanton says commodity ETFs are riding the three-point waves of a downturn. After the first trough, the stock stages a small rally, before heading back down. This pattern provides good buy and sell signals for resource investors. Jim says ETFs United States Oil Fund (AMEX: USO) and United States Natural Gas Fund (AMEX: UNG) have further short-term corrections ahead, meaning an opportunity to go short.

In my last column, I pointed out that the United States Oil Fund ETF and natural gas ETF United States Natural Gas Fund were in the process of tracing out at least an A-B-C correction to the downside.

Click this link to check out the chart from two weeks ago. Since then, USO has rallied enough to qualify for the “B” wave rally. From here, there are basically two scenarios…

1. If the “C” decline has already begun, the stock should trade down to at least the $86.50 area.

2. If the “B” wave rally is not yet complete, and USO trades above last week’s highs, the next resistance level is around $100.95.

    Either way, USO should make new correction lows before a sustainable rally could unfold.

    Gas Still in the “A” Wave

    The natural gas market has performed weaker than crude oil and made new lows again last Friday. This means that UNG is still in the “A” wave decline and alert investors could have an opportunity to short the stock on the first decent rally, which would be the “B” wave.

    Aside from that, most commodities have endured heavy selling pressure since topping out in early July. We’ve seen oil trade below $112 a barrel and gold dip below $800 an ounce before both rebounded last week.

    Part of the rebound came as a result of a pullback for the U.S. dollar. So since commodities are strongly correlated to the dollar – and that appeared to be the focus of many traders last week – I’m going to take a look at a couple of the most active and interesting-looking charts this week…

    This PowerShares ETF Is Powering Down

    The chart below shows the daily performance of the PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund (AMEX: DBC). As you can see, it looks very similar to the USO chart.

    In mid July, DBC triggered a sell signal – and based on the chart pattern, it appears to be in the “B” wave of at least an A-B-C decline.

    If DBC and all of the ETFs mentioned above have put in major, long-term tops, these three wave (A-B-C) declines could actually turn out to be longer-term, five-wave declines. However, it’s too early to determine if that’s the case yet, so we’ll stick with what we know for now.

    So if the “B” wave on DBC is complete, the stock should trade down to the $35 area before a sustainable rally could get underway.

    When Three Waves Becomes Five Waves

    This next chart caught my eye because it traded down to its long-term trendline last week and has so far held above it.

    Because the commodity futures create more accurate charts, while the ETFs just follow their lead, I’m going to break with tradition a little bit and use a weekly chart of the December Gold futures (GCZ8) for analysis here, rather than the SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD) chart.

    The trendline on this chart goes all the way back to July 2005 and you can see that it was tested when the futures price traded down to $778 on August 15. Since that low, gold has rallied by about $55, but we still haven’t seen any significant buy signals get triggered so far – something that would tell us that the correction is complete.

    However, this development spilled into GLD, as the stock posted an equivalent low of $76.61 on August 15. This was also around the same time that the dollar peaked.

    The sharp dollar rally was a mirror image of the drop in GLD and usually after this type of action, the odds are that these markets could consolidate before making their next major move.

    The Next Moves

    The price action over the next week or so should be a good indicator of where GLD is headed next. If GLD begins to consolidate in the $80-86 area for a while, there’s a good chance that once the consolidation is complete, the next move will be down – especially since DBC still looks bearish.

    If GLD and the December Gold futures make new correction lows, the selling could intensify, as we’re not the only folks watching the long-term trendline. However, if GLD begins to rally strongly on heavier volume, and closes above $88.50, the correction may be over.

    According to the trading model used in my 1-2-3 Trader service, we could see buy signals triggered on GLD prior to reaching the $88.50 area, so I’ll keep you posted on the situation right here.

    Source: Let the ‘Waves’ Guide You Towards Profits on Oil, Natural Gas, & Gold

    Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    By Jim Stanton

    Related Articles



    About the Author

    Jim Stanton has worked in the financial markets since 1980 as a stock and bond broker, trader, and management consultant and his impressive quantitative and technical systems have generated outstanding gains for private investors and hedge funds. He contributes to Mt Vernon Research and the Smart Profits Report.

    See All Posts by This Author

    The Smart Profits Report

    Smart Profits Report is a comprehensive investment tool that brings you top chart analysis and cutting-edge trading techniques. Smart Profits Report's market-beating technical analysts reveal how to use highly effective charting tools that mainstream analysts know little about or nothing about.

    See All Posts from This Publication

    Leave Comment