Markets never move in a straight line. I find Elliot waves useful. The rate hikes are a bandaid over a flesh wound. Dedollarization is moving right along with the latest development being the rollout of Sepam an alternative system to Swift to wire funds outside the dollar. If we think of the structural shift away from 40 years of low interest rate policy ending shortly after the March 2020 crash being the beginning of steep CPI increases and Elliot wave one. Then the current reprieve we are seeing in cpi is wave 2. I will be waiting for confirmation in the topping out of the DXY before entering new longs in commodities in anticipation of wave 3. In wave 3 we could see oil go to $200+ in the next few years. If we see a march 2020 style crash, back the truck up. The goal after all is to buy low and sell high.
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Even with the mass of immigrants pouring into Canada, not sure how the current housing bubble is sustainable given the departure from real incomes. Sounds like housing prices are beginning to tank in places like Ontario. Like a pendulums swing when markets get stretched far from the mean markets often overshoot in the other direction.
Last edited by biglentil; Feb 10, 2023, 08:10.
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Can we short the Ontario and Vancouver housing market? The chart for Saskatchewan farm land and cash rent since 1980 would look much like the housing market - just saying.
Those low interest rates were just dandy for baby boomers with paid city property - next generation be damned. Our monetary policy sure put the screws to them.
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Originally posted by sumdumguy View PostCan we short the Ontario and Vancouver housing market? The chart for Saskatchewan farm land and cash rent since 1980 would look much like the housing market - just saying.
Those low interest rates were just dandy for baby boomers with paid city property - next generation be damned. Our monetary policy sure put the screws to them.
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Originally posted by errolandersonNobody want to talk about weakening diesel prices on this energy thread? Reply With QuoteLast edited by biglentil; Feb 10, 2023, 08:59.
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Full taxed price in Calgary, filled yesterday @ $1.59. Diesel at pump here off about 15% since mid-Jan. This is about the same as the futures pullback.
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Originally posted by biglentil View PostErrol I don't remember you calling for a buy when oil was <$40. Infact wasn't that around the time you started the "Inflation is Dead" thread? Oil was due for a correction after a massive +%300 run, the drop in commodities is inversely correlated to the recent strength we see in the DXY. The long term trend however is not broken. Waiting for the entry point in the breakdown of the DXY before going long commodities once again. Though seeing that very rare tristar hammer doji print on the monthly wti crude is tempting me to start entering now. Could be signalling a very bullish reversal higher. [ATTACH]11967[/ATTACH]
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Originally posted by errolandersonNobody want to talk about weakening diesel prices on this energy thread? Reply With Quote
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CRUDE OIL 1/2 PRICE SALE ON-NOW . . . .
One year ago, WTI oil prices approached $130 per barrel. This week, the WTI price plunged toward $65 per barrel.
Good news for those wanting lower diesel prices. Bio-diesel price declines. Corn prices appear vulnerable to lower lows (under normal growing conditions) as ethanol prices also under pressure.Last edited by errolanderson; Mar 16, 2023, 17:02.
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