XME still mashed up against trendline

The miners have been among the leaders since the bottom a year ago, with everyone seemingly sure that hyperinflation is right around the corner. The thing about commodities is that when they break an uptrend, they can fall hard and never look back (witness oil’s drop from $147 to $35 in six months).

If XME is able to vault over this trendline and hold its ground, it will be bad news for the bears. Coming off extreme sentiment and a hard break, this is a very defensible short position with a tight stop.

Prophet.net

Some sector winners and losers so far

The winners are those groups that have fallen the least since mid-January, somewhat adjusted for their potential to decline. I view these as the least prone to violent snap-back rally right now, so this is where I am adding, conservatively, to my short portfolio:

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Losers

Materials are among the big losers so far. Commodities have a tendency to fall hard right from the peak and keep crashing for months. I’d like to short here, but will wait for a better entry (which may never come).

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It is also worth noting that among the world’s stock markets, the US has held up pretty well so far, along with Japan, and believe it or not, Russia. The worst markets, besides Greece (which has already given up the majority of its 2009 gains) are the “emerging markets.”

Key to chart below:

Green: Japan; Purple: Russia; Dark blue: S&P500; Orange: India; Light Green: various emerging markets; Light blue: Europe; Brown: Brazil; Red: China (Shanghai-listed stocks)

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I suspect I’m going to be shorting Russia soon. It was among the very worst in 2008.