Thursday, January 31, 2019

SPX S&P 500 Daily Chart; Overbot; Rising Wedge; Negative Divergence


The SPX 2-hour chart peaked out with neggie d and dropped on that hourly basis days ago but as was previously explained with charts, the daily chart still had indicators that were long and strong. Therefore, despite the weakness in the VST, you knew price would want to come back up for another high on the daily basis and it does. In fact there are three new highs over the last few days. Each time stocks drop, President Trump is quick to say the US-China trade talks are going well or one of the central bankers coo dovish tones. The central bankers are the market.

Stocks are typically bullish moving into and through the Fed meetings (over 80% of the time) so the buoyancy in stocks is not surprising yesterday afternoon.

The idea for this daily chart was to wait for the long and strong MACD line to flatten into negative divergence and roll over which signals the near-term top. Remember, the low CPC and CPCE put/call ratios continue to not be rectified as well as the elevated NYMO. These charts scream continued complacency and lack of fear so traders likely need to be slapped in the face again. The daily chart is finally setting up for the neggie d smackdown--as long as the MACD line rolls over now.

The price move forward depends on that MACD line. If you squint, it looks flat but then it may have a hair of upside momo. That would give price the last bit of fumes to make another high say, tomorrow but that should be all she wrote. Perhaps the bears can finally gather some downside momo with the daily chart moving into negative divergence. The put/call and NYMO mojo should kick in slapping the SPX lower.

For the bulls that are long that chased the upside yesterday, you want to see that MACD line to keep sloping higher. Also, the RSI never reached overbot territory so the bulls can hope for some type of good news that will pop it slightly and that will extend the market top another 2 or 3 days. The RSI may decide to seek that +70% overbot territory. The SPX also did not quite touch that upper standard deviation line so that must be left on the table for the bulls.

For the bears, the negative divergence with the indicators says price is running out of gas and will fall on this daily basis. The 20 and 50-day MA's at 2609-2611 are in play as support. The 100-day MA is at 2712. The 20-week MA is at 2692 and 50-week MA is 2730. The 6-month MA is 2747, the 10-mth MA is 2737, the critical 12-mth MA at 2727 (that dictates whether the stock market is in a cyclical bull or cyclical bear market) and the 20-mth MA at 2666.

Thus, with price at 2680-ish, if the upside resistance at 2692 gives way, the SPX will seek 2712. If that is achieved, the important 2727-2747 range is next; here the S&P 500 decides if the stock market remains in a cyclical bear, or not. Strong support is at 2666 then 2609-2611. In this near-term, bulls win above 2692 while bears win below 2666.

The rising wedge is ominous since these patterns usually result in a bloody mess and carnage. The new moon peaks for the month on Monday at 4 PM EST so the expectation would be for a soft stock market from Friday through Monday. The SPX is peaking out on the daily basis and ready to roll over barring any positive news event.

The weekly chart, however, remains long and strong. Thus, expect a sharp flush lower, perhaps to finally resolve the low put/calls and elevated NYMO, and then another V bottom with stocks shooting higher again for more new highs and for a test up into that SPX 2720-2750 area for a major decision say, in mid to late February or early March. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Note Added 10:22 AM EST: The stock market joy continues. President Trump is bragging that a trade deal will be reached and he plans to meet with President Xi in the near future. The MACD line on the daily chart squeezes higher on the news; ditto the RSI. This opens the door to the additional jog move described above. The daily chart may need two more days (down-up) to top out when the MACD line goes neggie d. The sneaky RSI may want to seek overbot territory which would also boost price. This is why you have to wait for things to set up completely. The near-term top remains in play, in this daily time frame, and the stock market should top out any day any time forward, today, Friday or Monday.

Note Added 10:30 AM EST: Look at price go. Stocks are rocketing higher on happy trade talk. The SPX is testing the 20-week MA at 2692. The S&P 500 moves up through 2692 like it is not even there. The S&P 500 will next seek the 100-day at 2712 and may want to test that key 2720-2750 area sooner rather than later.

Note Added 10:35 AM EST: Traders are singing, "Happy Days Are Here Again," buying stocks with both hands. The SPX is up 16 points, +0.6% to 2697. HOD 2698. The RSI and MACD lines are sloping higher so check them after the closing bell to see if they remain that way, or not. If not, and the lines are flat, the top is in. If one line is long and strong and the other flat, stocks will top out in 1 or 2 days. If both are long and strong, stocks will likely top out in 1 to 4 days in this daily basis. When the selling begins, it should not be only a day or two like the last couple weeks; this time the expectation would be for a much stronger multi-day drop in the stock market (followed by more upside on the weekly basis since the SPX weekly chart remains long and strong). For now, however, simply let those RSI and MACD lines tell you what will happen going forward.

Note Added 11:50 AM EST: Stocks rally with the SPX avove 2700 and the Dow turning positive recovering 175 points intraday. Bulls exclaim that the sight "is beautiful."

Note Added 12 Noon EST: Traders are drunk on the dovish Fed wine convinced that easy money will sends stocks higher. The SPX is up 28 big points, +1%, to 2709 the HOD testing the 100-day MA at 2712-2713. The VIX drops to a 16-handle at 16.92 a 2-month low providing bull fuel.

US 2-10 Yield Spread Versus Russell 3000 Index; Hook Pattern Forecasts Potential Recession


There is lots of talk about the potential yield curve inversion last year into this new year. The 2-3's and 2-5's have inverted but not the 2-10 which is shown in the chart above. The 2-10 spread did, however, get all the way down to 9 bips (0.09% difference between the 2-year and 10-year yields). Is that close enough for government work?

Television pundits are singing from the same hymn sheet saying that a recession will not occur until 2020 and many say 2021. On top of that, the Einstein's say the stock market will not sell off in any substantive way until a few months after the yield curve inversion occurs. As the above chart shows, they are correct in that a yield curve inversion occurs (the 2-10 spread crosses below zero as the 2-year yield moves above the 10-year yield) before a recession.

As a chart technician, patterns are important. One of the reasons traders prefer using technicals is that they see in a more visual and creative way than their analytical brothern that are better suited to study the minutia in the balance sheets (technical analysis versus fundamental analysis). What jumps out at you in the chart above is the red hook pattern.

It is correct to say that a yield curve inversion precedes a recession and stock market collapse, but you must decide if the red hook pattern is what better predicts a recession. The predictor of the recession is the action and pattern of the 2-10 spread where it bottoms and rises and not the idea that it must officially invert to zero. This concept makes sense since business conditions tighten in the rising rate environment starving off the economy.

The Federal Reserve and other global central bankers play a big role in this sick financial game. The Fed, ECB, BOJ and PBOC are starting the year with gun's blazing. China's central bank (People's Bank of China) cut the triple R's and Fed Chairman Powell is flapping his dovish wings. Former Fed Chair Yellen was Queen of the Doves that printed money and maintained ZIRP or near-zero interest rates to boost stocks and reward the wealthy class. Powell is now dubbed King of the Doves essentially taking rate hikes off the table going forward. The central bankers are one-trick ponies that only know how to print money and please their privileged-class masters.

As this message is typed, Treasury yields are; 2-year 2.49%, 5-year 2.47%, 10-year 2.666% and 10-year 3.02%. The 2-5 spread is inverted by -2 bips. The 2-10 spread is 18 basis points. The yield curve is steepening in relation to its flattening behavior down to 9 bips late last year.

Thus, do you believe the Wall Street line that a recession is at least a year or two away and a serious market downturn will not occur until months after that thus 2 to 3 years in the future? Are you drinking the Fed Kool-aid, ECB champagne, BOJ sake and PBOC rice wine, with a lampshade on your head, chasing the stock market rally buying stocks at the ask? Or, are you wondering if the red hook indicates that the recession is far closer than anyone expects and set to begin in a few weeks or a few short months? What camp are you sitting in?

The global central banker game continues as long as investors and traders have confidence in the easy money policies. Yesterday's big US stock market rally proves that traders still believe in the Fed and the dovish talk creates the upside joy. When confidence in the central bankers is lost, all is lost. Powell has performed a sharp turnaround in a short couple-months from hawk to dove. One would think confidence would be lost in such leadership. The Fed is steering the ship but they have no idea where they are going.

A short time ago, across the wires, the BOJ pledges to maintain its easy money policies going forward. Of course they do. The central bankers are sick. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Keybot the Quant Turns Bullish

Keybot the Quant flips to the bull side this morning at SPX 2649. The sideways choppiness, however, hints that the stock market remains a coin-flip. Stay alert for a potential whipsaw back to the short side. Copper and retail stocks are the two parameters most impacting market direction. As always, Keybot's site has more information,

Keybot the Quant

Monday, January 28, 2019

NYXBT Bitcoin Weekly Chart


The crash in bitcoin is epic. At the end of 2017 and start of 2018, the wine was flowing like water. Bitcoin was approaching 20K with analysts guaranteeing 30K, 40K and higher. Of course the excessive optimism, joy and euphoria leads to a punch in the face. A drop from 20K to 3K is a -85% crash. Last spring, bitcoin holds the 50-week MA support so the bulls thought the worst was over. Nope. Bitcoin comes down again last May to look at the 50 and collapses through. Price comes up for the back kiss of the 50 in July for the bounce or die decision, and the bitcoin bears win with price choosing to fail.

Bitcoin moves through the ominious red descending triangle so you were waiting for the next shoe to drop if bitcoin chooses to lose the 6000-6200 level. It does. The tight standard deviation bands (pink arrows) predicted a huge move but cannot predict direction. The bands squeeze price lower in November as the US stock market crashed.

The low prints inside the triangle back in February and April did not provide real touches to the base line so you would have to say the vertical side is more in the summer time frame at about 3000 points in height. Thus, the rupture of 6K should lead to 3K; and it does or is at least in the neighborhood so the descending triangle is satisfied generally.

The chart indicators are positively-sloped but not positively-diverged. Bitcoin price needs to make a lower low on the weekly basis then, if the indicators remain sloping higher, they will be in positive divergence forecasting a strong multi-week recovery. The green circle area is generally a buy. Bitcoin is currently trading down -3% to 3.4K.

Bitcoin is filling that juicy gap from July 2017. The expectation is for bitcoin to print 3.2K to 3.4K over coming days and this is a buy. Bitcoin will rally a few weeks targeting the middle band, also the 20-week MA, now at 5036 and falling. In a month or two, say February-March, do not be surprised if bitcoin is above 5K.

It is all not wine and roses for bitcoin, however. On the monthly chart, the MACD line is weak and bleak wanting another low on the monthly basis. Thus, bitcoin will not print a multi-month and perhaps multi-year bottom until the March-June time frame of this year. From mid-year forward, into 2020, bitcoin should move sideways to sideways higher and likely be at 6000 at the end of this year or early 2020.

Thus, taking the above analysis and sprinkling on some of Keystone's magical voodoo powder, bitcoin will likely bottom over the coming days at 3200-3400, then a big multi-week rally above 5000 say in February-March. Then down again, perhaps as the US stock market crashes again, after March, dropping down to 2800-3200 which will be a more firm bottom mid-year. Then bitcoin should travel sideways to sideways higher into the end of the year and early 2020 back up to 6000-plus.

Keystone does not hold any positions in the bitcoin arena. KODK was played for a quick trade this year. GBTC, RIOT, BLOK, KODK and OSTK are potential long plays. BLOK has rallied for the last month and the weekly chart indicators are long and strong wanting more highs on the weekly basis ahead. Thus, in this highly dangerous and speculative arena, BLOK is a safer bet buying it on weakness going forward. Keystone will likely buy GBTC but wants to get an entry price at 3.6-3.9; perhaps that will appear today or this week. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

CPC CBOE Put/Call Ratio Daily Chart; Near-Term Stock Market Top At Hand



The stock market rallies on the the happy US-China trade talk and central banker dovishness this year. Traders are drunk as skunks on Fed wine, PBOC baijiu, ECB champagne and BOJ sake, donning lampshades on their heads, dancing on tabletops, and buying stocks at the ask with reckless abandon.

Uber driver Jayesh took his entire life savings and placed it in the stock market saying he was afraid that the train was leaving the station without him. Aunt Gloria,trying to find ways to stretch her fixed income, gave her entire life savings to Mr Snardley, the local broker in town, he has an office next to the doughnut shop, telling him to buy the stock market, especially tech stocks, like the pundits said on television. 2019 starts with five consecutive up weeks for the Dow Jones Industrials (INDU; DJI). The wine is flowing like water.

The CPC put/call above shows that the bullish euphoria and complacency is off the charts. Everyone is convinced that there is nothing but blue skies and rainbows ahead. Cats and dogs are living together. There is no fear that stocks can go down again. Investors say the carnage is over, the coast is clear, and all is fine. The bulls are buying stocks without any worry or fear. This complacency and fearless behavior sends the CPC lower.

Ditch any long positions and bring on shorts. The stock market will top this week and likely drop 40 to 150 SPX handlesJanuary was all up. Usually when a month moves nearly the whole time in one direction, the last couple-few days it will reverse to end the month. There are only four days remaining in January Monday through Thursday so this seasonality-type factor hints at a whiff of bearishness in the week ahead which jives with the uber low put/calls. Looking at the charts above, what do you think will happen? This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

The Keystone Speculator's Picks and Pans

The Keystone Speculator's 2019 Predictions are on a separate page with a link in the right margin. It's great bedtime reading--because its guaranteed to put you asleep! There is a lot of soothsaying verbage in that write-up so the market calls are pulled out into a Reader's Digest version of potential trading opportunities in 2019.

Potential plays on the long side this year are FCX, GDX, GDXJ, MUX, PLAT, SLCA, DBA, CHK, ALB after March, GE, IBM, BECN, NTNX, TTWO, KMB, VNM, EEM, EIDO, EWW, EWZ, AVAV, GPRO, AMBA.

Gene editing companies such as CRSP, EDIT, NTLA and SGMO may provide long opportunities if they can pull back. Perhaps in a major market selloff snag one of these on the long side during the mayhem.


Sensor companies such as SNE, APH, CTS, DYSL, ELSE, LFUS, ST, TEL, TDY, VPG and INTC may provide opportunities on pull backs.


Entertainment and media companies such as MGM, AMC, FUN, CNK, ISCA, FOXA, DIS, CMCSA, MSGN and SEAS may benefit as the Middle East Westernizes.


Marijuana plays such as SMG, TLRY, CRON, MJ, IIPR, GWPH, GWPRF, CARA, CBIS, INSY, ZYNE, APHA and ACB may provide long opportunities although many have already rallied strongly.


Bitcoin has been ridden hard over the last year and put away wet. The cybercurrency arena is ugly. Many proponents have thrown in the towel--that is when your interest should perk-up. GBTC, RIOT, LFIN, BLOK, KODK and OSTK are all speculative plays on digital currencies and blockchain but will likely provide long opportunities during the year ahead.


Graphene penny stocks such as MGPHF, NSRCF, SYAAF, CBT, NGPHF, GRPEF, REPYY, GPHBF, GPHOF, LMRMF, NMKEF and TLGRF are dangerous speculative tickers but perhaps the technology will reap rewards as the years play out.


Potential plays on the short side this year are PG, MRK, KO, XLRE, SBUX, ULTA, MCD, DNKN, WEN, YUM, QSR, TSLA, VRTX, AMT, CCI, TRIP, CTRP, EXPE, MAR, H, XAL, DAL, UAL, AAL, LUV, DG after March, VMW after March and PALL after March.

Keystone is in MUX, FCX, GDX, MGPHF, NSRCF, and opened a short position in YUM. Also holding/adding index short ETF's such as SDS and DXD for short-term trades (a few days or week or so). Trades have already occurred this year in AAPL, GG, FCX, GDX and KODK. Keystone is prone to cycle in and out of positions quickly and day trade so these holdings can be much different a day or week from now. Keystone is holding the graphene plays MGPHF and NSRCF allowing them to sit on the back burner indefinitely.

Keystone will likely open a short position in VRTX and add more shorts on any move higher from here. AAPL earnings are on tap this week and they will likely beat the much-lowered expectations. The Apple weekly chart is setting up for a multi-week rally but the monthly chart remains weak and bleak. Keystone will likely buy AAPL on the long side and hold it into mid-February.

The above list provides some long and short opportunities for this year. Of course, perform your own due diligence, study the fundies, study the technicals and talk to your financial advisor before placing any trade. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Friday, January 25, 2019

SPX S&P 500 Monthly Chart; Battle for the 20-Month MA


Thwack. Slap. Whack. Slap. The S&P 500 continues fighting at the 20-month MA at 2666 an easy number to remember due to the trip 6's. Price played around here last week. If the bears win and price cannot hold the 20, the SPX will trend lower down to the 50-month MA at 2341 on this monthly basis.

If the bulls win and price overtakes the 20 heading higher, there are two key tests ahead. First, price must overtake the 12-month MA at 2725, this is the "cliff," the most important metric in the stock market that separates a cyclical (weeks and months) bull market from a cyclical bear market. The SPX is below the 12 so the stock market is in a cyclical bear market pattern going forward.

The bulls win big time if they can move price above the 12-month MA at 2725. This guarantees more upside joy ahead and the Wall Street Einstein's that are calling out SPX targets over 3K for this year may not be so nuts after all. The 10-month MA at 2735 would represent the last chance for bears to hold the line if price is rallying.

If the SPX breaks up through the 12, the bulls will be singing and throwing confetti but if price hits the 10, and falls back, another test of the 12 will occur with a bounce or die decision on tap. Of course the bounce off the 12 will then shoot price up through the 10 and on to happy bull times. A failure at the 12 and it would be ovah, as they say in Brooklyn, for the stock market. This battle at the 20-month MA at 2666 sets the tone for the stock market for the days and few weeks ahead. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Note Added 10:37 AM EST: The SPX is at 2666 with a devil on the left shoulder telling it to collapse and an angel on the right shoulder telling it to rally.

Note Added 3:20 PM EST: The SPX is at 2666.

Note Added Saturday, 1/26/19: The SPX finishes the week at 2664.76. The 20-month MA is at 2665.33 so the S&P 500 cannot hold the 20. Bears cheer but it is only a tiny 57-cents victory, for now. The battle continues next week.

YUM Yum! Brands Monthly Chart; Overbot; Rising Wedge; Negative Divergence; Upper Band Violation


Yum! Brands shareholders are about to start puking from some late-night Taco Bell. Other YUM investors experience indigestion from their pizza at Pizza Hut. The fried chicken at KFC is no longer tasty. YUM is a remarkable story at 15 when the Federal Reserve decided to implement QE1 March 2009 to save the stock market and protect America's wealthy class. A move from 15 to 93 is a big 520% gain over the last decade; a six-bagger.

Well, all good things come to an end. In a few months, YUM shareholders will be drowning their troubles with liquor and then pass-out on the restaurant's dirty linoleum floor. Investors will be drowning their sorrows as the stock price languishes all year long. YUM is about to have a religious experience. The monthly and weekly charts are in negative divergence across all indicators. In the monthly above, the RSI and stochastics are overbot agreeable to a pullback in this time frame. The rising red wedge is bearish.

Price violated the upper band so the middle band at 82 and rising is on the table for starters. Do not be surprised if YUM is at the 60-75 range at the end of the year. Keystone does not have a position right now but has been ready to open a short on YUM this year. Keystone will open a short today and add to that short position going forward. Ideally, shorting above 93.25 should work out very well but Keystone will not wait for this price if it does not come. A short position will be opened in YUM today regardless of the price action. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

SPX S&P 500 Daily Chart; Expansion (Megaphone) Pattern; Overbot; Rising Wedge; Negative Divergence Developing


The SPX 2-hour chart receives the neggie d spankdown for that hourly time frame. The pullback over the last couple days is also created by the negative divergence with the histogram, stochastics and money flow indicators on the daily chart above. However, the RSI, MACD line and CCI are long and strong wanting to see another higher high with price in the daily time frame. S&P 500 futures are up +19 about four hours before the opening bell for the regular Friday trading session. That would place the SPX at 2661 after the opening bell.

When/if price comes up for the matching high of four days ago, you can confirm the near-term top on this daily chart when the RSI, MACD line and CCI turn neggie d. It is likely over the next 1 to 3 days. The low CPC and CPCE put/calls did not move excessively higher as yet so there is plenty of room for more stock market selling. Ditto the NYMO that only comes slightly down off its record highs.

Price may want to tag the upper trend line of that expansion, or megaphone pattern, again. The megaphone eventually leads down to the ominous 2100-ish level should it decide to play out. Investors will be screaming bloody murder. The purple box shows the pink 150-day MA sloping negatively which indicates that the stock market remains in a cyclical bear market pattern. The daily chart will top out over the coming days as soon as the indicators all show negative divergence. The collapses from rising wedges (red) can be quite dramatic. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

SPX S&P 500 2-Hour Chart


Keystone described the negative divergence forming on the 2-hour chart a few days ago. You see the price topping out with all indicators negatively sloping (red lines). The RSI, stochastics and money flow were overbot. The rising wedge pattern is bearish. All three parameters conspire to smack price lower, which occurs. Alas, the bears do not make much headway lower since the happy talk about US-China trade negotiations continues. Price is stumbling sideways and S&P futures are up +15 six hours before Friday morning's opening bell for the regular session. That pop, if it holds up, would send the SPX to 2657 after the opening bell.

The pullback off the top is about 60 handles and about half of that already recovered. The bears did not have oomph. This is partially due to the daily chart that still has upside juice available with the long and strong MACD line. The daily chart should top out in a day or few. The low CPC and CPCE put/call ratios and record highs in the NYMO hinted that a pullback in the stock market was needed in the near-term, and it occurs, but it is a pittance of what would be expected. The put/calls have plenty of room to move higher before signaling a tradeable bottom in stocks. The NYMO has a long way to move lower which will correspond with lower stocks.

After tagging the upper standard deviation band, the bears pull back to the middle band at 2640 but then could not take price to the lower band at 2608. Note that the lower band has not been touched for a month. This 2608 is a firm lower target for the days ahead.

The blue circle shows where the central banks intervened to save the day as usual. The global central bankers were likely concerned about the roll over and knew price wanted to go down to retest 2350. They did not want to let that happen because if 2350 fails, the door is going to open to an eventual print of a 1-handle (sub 2000) for the S&P 500 in the months ahead. Thus, central bankers start speaking dovishly and begin printing money like madmen to save the day. The Fed, ECB, BOJ and PBOC flap dovish wings in a coordinated fashion to begin 2019 reassuring markets that they will always save the day forever. The central bankers are the market. Look at the powerful rally on the central banker dovishness.

The 2-hour chart is stumbling sideways likely hesitating at further downside since the daily chart still wants another high before topping out, in that daily time frame. Despite the positive futures and perhaps happy ending to the week, the SPX will likely seek another near-term top over the next day or three and then roll over lower in the daily time frame. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

GLD Gold ETF Daily Chart; Golden Cross


GLD, the gold ETF, prints a golden cross on 1/23/19 to begin the new year. The 50-day MA pierces up through the 200-day MA (by 3 pennies). Gold enthusiasts are singing songs and throwing confetti.

Typically, after a golden cross occurs for any ticker or index, price will retreat. This is because it takes a long time, many days and weeks, for price to work higher to cause the 50-day MA to curl higher and eventually pierce up through the 200. After price spends all that time ramping skyward, in the chart above price has been moving higher since August, it needs a rest. GLD price edges down off the top right now which is the expectation after the golden cross.

After price has a few days to relax downwards due to all its hard work to create the golden cross, GLD will continue higher going forward as long as the golden cross remains.


GLDM is a new gold ETF that has been trading for a few months. This is a cheaper version of GLD, humorously, the poorman's gold ETF, or perhaps GLD's 'Mini-Me', if you will. GLDM is at 12.81 versus GLD at 121.28 a ten times difference price-wise. GLD traded at 5.2 million shares yesterday while GLDM was at 500K shares so obviously GLD has far superior liquidity. GLDM is close to having enough data to start printing a 200-day MA and the expectation would be for a golden cross to appear as soon as the 200-day MA appears on its chart. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

GOLD Daily Chart; Golden Cross


Gold prints a golden cross on Tuesday, 1/22/19 to begin the new year. The 50-day MA pierces up through the 200-day MA (by 9 pennies). Gold bugs are performing jigs of joy.

Now that a golden cross has occurred, television pundits will announce blue skies ahead for the yellow metal, but, as/if price pulls back, they will scorn technical analysis and call it voodoo science. It comically happens every time.

Typically, after a golden cross occurs for any ticker or index, price will retreat. This is because it takes a long time, many days and weeks, for price to work higher to cause the 50-day MA to curl higher and eventually pierce through the 200. After price spends all that time ramping skyward, in the chart above price has been moving higher since August, it needs a rest. Gold price edges down off the top right now which is the expectation after the golden cross.

After price has a few days to relax downwards due to all its hard work to create the golden cross, gold will continue higher going forward as long as the golden cross remains. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Keybot the Quant Turns Bearish

The Keystone Speculator's proprietary trading algorithm, Keybot the Quant, flips to the bear side yesterday afternoon at SPX 2629. Bears need to smack the retail stocks and banks lower to create more downside carnage. Bulls need higher utilities and chips and lower volatility to restart the upside stock market rally. More information is found at Keybot's site,

Keybot the Quant

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

FCX Freeport-McMoran Weekly Chart


Freeport rocket launches higher for the last month off the oversold conditions, falling wedge pattern and positive divergence. Keystone forecasted the pop at the end of November. Scroll back to look at those FCX charts or type 'FCX' in the search block to bring the charts up and see how Keystone called the bottom. Keystone exited the long trade taking profits but FCX still should have plenty of upside juice going forward on the weekly basis.

The indicators are long and strong. The stoch's cross up into bull territory above 50%. The RSI is about to pop up into bull territory. The lower band was violated so price seeks the middle band at 11.95 which was achieved. The upper band at 14.37 is on the table. Price is in the neighborhood, so it will likely want to kiss the 200-week at 13.29 and make a first attempt at piercing up through.

The daily chart is topping out and will likely peak this week. Then several days of down will occur. Copper is trading lower and FCX moves in sync with copper so Freeport will likely retreat today. Therefore, if a more patient intermediate trader, you can likely ride out the short-term pullback coming since the chart above indicates more highs coming on a weekly basis. It will not be surprising to see FCX at 14-15, say, in February. Keystone will likely reenter FCX on the long side, say, next week. This information is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Do not invest based on anything you read or view here. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Monday, January 21, 2019

Clueless Millennials Must Prepare Financially, Mentally and Emotionally for the Coming Recession; A PSA (Public Service Announcement) for Millennials Explaining the Ugly Realities of Economic Recession

By K E Stone

(The Keystone Speculator, Keybot the Quant and Keystone the Scribe Blogs)

Most of you clueless young folks under 30 years old are about to have your world rocked, and not in a good way, when the recession hits. The ‘clueless’ word is not meant in a derogatory way so please do not take offense; it succeeds at getting your attention. The clueless word simply emphasizes that millennials have never experienced a recession (a serious economic and market collapse and malaise). Your life is about to change dramatically. This article will help you prepare.

The United States is in a record-breaking economic expansion and stock market rally since March 2009 created by the easy money policies of the Federal Reserve and other global central bankers. A recession is long overdue. America has not seen troubled times since the Great Recession in 2008-2009 one decade ago.

Back then, many of you were hoping pretty Emily or handsome Zach would say hello in the hallway before the homeroom bell. Few of you understood what was going on during the 2008-2009 financial crisis, market crash and recession. Your attention was focused on soccer practice, homework, the developing smartphone and social internet trends and listening to the latest songs by Nickelback, Linkin Park, Rihanna, Justin Timberlake, Beyonce, Taylor Swift and Carrie Underwood.

This PSA (Public Service Announcement) is a warning to the millennials. You must prepare yourself financially, mentally and emotionally for the hard times approaching fast. The world and society you think you know today, that you are using as a basis for decisions impacting your future, is about to change dramatically. The coming recession will make you question everything you know about yourself, your significant other, your family, friends, relatives, society, the country and what you think and believe is important in life.

Recent surveys indicate that 65% of millennials believe they will reach a seven-figure (millions) salary by age 45. More than one-half of millennials believe they will be millionaires in their lifetime and most by 50 years old. Idiots. This is fatally flawed thinking. Do not be a dolt. If you are a millennial, this is not going to happen to you. Sorry to burst your bubble.

Keystone (K E Stone) has survived the recessionary periods of 1981, 1990, 2000 and 2009 so his skin is as thick and hard as rhinoceros hide from the experiences. He lost his job in all four of those recessions even as a highly-paid consultant in the Great Recession. Keystone walked in your young millennial shoes in the early 1980’s, wide-eyed and positive about a career and life ahead. The world was the cliché oyster and everyday filled with optimism, positive thinking and a willingness to learn and excel at work.

In 1981, Keystone, in his early 20’s, fell victim to a recession just when life should have offered all the rewards for many years of hard work. Keystone’s world crashed into oblivion when the recession hit. President Ronald Reagan came to power crushing the unions and accelerating the offshoring of middle-class jobs from the United States to China and other foreign countries.

The 1980-1981 recession was the worst economic downturn since WW II. Keystone’s perception of society and the world changed forever. For the millennials, the pending recession on tap this year or next is going to impact your lives in the same way. Keystone did not have anyone around to warn him of the impending doom. Consider yourself lucky to receive this PSA and learn ahead of time about the hardship you will face over the coming months, perhaps couple years, hopefully not longer.

When the soft spot in the economy hits over the coming months, company layoffs will increase exponentially. Gloom takes over the break room. Company moral dips as unemployment claims rise dramatically. Consumers tighten their spending habits because they are afraid of losing their jobs. This human behavior creates a negative feedback loop. Companies then layoff more employees since business keeps slowing. America then sinks into the recession quagmire and perhaps a tragic deflationary spiral.

When the down cycle hits, many young people will be crushed like ants. If you are under 30 years old, you do not understand how fast and dramatic the economy and markets can turn south. Servicing debt (such as auto, car and student loans) will become extremely difficult when you lose your job and the economy falls into recession. Pay off debt now to the greatest extent possible while at the same time squirreling money away into a savings account.

Now is not the time for large purchases or risky investments. Decrease any stock holdings going forward sine the stock market will be in a sick malaise during the recession. By following these and other guidelines below, you will be one of the smart millennials that weathers the pending recessionary storm. Do not be envious of friends boasting about their new cars, clothes and electronic gadgets; they are going to be wiped out like a bug on a windshield when they get laid off. Anyone that has committed to large monthly payments will be crushed.

A recession is guaranteed for the United States in the months and year or two ahead just as it is assured that the UPS (United Parcel Service) man will be delivering Amazon packages in your neighborhood today. Usually a recession occurs every four to seven years but the Federal Reserve and other global central bankers are artificially manipulating markets and economies since early 2009 pushing the recession into the future.

Humans have short memories and the misery from the 2008-2009 recession is long forgotten replaced by Fed wine and song each day. President Trump brags, or at least he used to, about the all-time highs in the stock market. The employment rate is sporting a 3% handle. GDP is running at +3% and +4% a healthy rate. Consumer confidence is running high. As the famous and influential Alfred E Neuman quips, “What! Me Worry?”

Millennials confidently proclaim that the economy is robust and healthy. The optimism is infectious. Why is this Keystone dude throwing a wet blanket on the economic party? Because recessions actually begin when economies are looking great, like now. You will be blindsided and surprised at how fast manufacturing activity and GDP can quickly fall off a cliff.

To begin the journey through this PSA, let’s first discuss the generational separations. Different sources skew the years slightly one way or the other;

Greatest Generation is born between 1910 and 1944 (75 to 109 years old)
Baby Boomers are born between 1945 and 1964 (55 to 74 years old)
Generation X 1965 to 1980 (39 to 54 years old)
Millennials/Generation Y are born between 1981 and 1996 (23 to 38 years old)
Generation Z is born from 1997 to present (22 years old and younger)

This PSA targets the Millennials/Generation Y and some of the Generation Z. To keep things simple, the term millennial is used to reference young folks from 20 to 30 years old since you are the ones that have not yet felt the wrath of a recession.

Like it or not, the majority of millennials do not possess the life experiences of older folks. Keystone remembers what it is like to be young thinking that you have all the answers. As you age, you realize that not only do you not have the answers, you do not even know all the questions to ask.

Many millennials have received poor advice from their misguided Generation X or Baby Boomer parents. Most millennials have not yet learned the hard lessons of life especially since a recession has not occurred for a decade. Some parents lack maturity for their ages and are lousy teachers and role models for their millennial offspring. This PSA will set you straight.

The best way to understand a recession and how it changes your life is to live through one. In the paragraphs below, millennials will experience a recession through Keystone’s eyes. You will feel the pain and loss of a job and the financial, mental and emotional hardship that follows. The recession freight train is coming down the tracks planning to derail your life.

Keystone graduated at the top of the engineering class out of Pennsylvania State University. Unfortunately, the US was slipping into recession in 1980 as President Ronald Reagan was taking office. The timing was very bad since Keystone’s engineering career was just beginning. Keystone is sympathetic to the college seniors, and especially juniors and sophomores, since you will be screwed by the timing of the pending economic recession.

Data shows that employees entering the work force during recessionary periods go on to make less during their career than others that graduate during boom times. Do not let this fact discourage you, however. Keystone went on to enjoy a long and successful career despite the rocky recessionary start.

Before the 1981 recession, Keystone was, like many of you now, wide-eyed and optimistic, entertaining multiple job offers, and figuring that being a success in life was a piece of cake. A brilliant chemical engineering career was ahead and the sky was the limit with future investments and opportunities. Keystone looked forward to tomorrow because it will be even better than today. What could possibly go wrong?

Keystone joined the multi-national company Dravo Corporation in 1980 and was being groomed for a top management position in the future. Dravo hired 12 of the top engineering graduates in the US that year and we all had dinner at the CEO’s mansion in Pittsburgh during out first week on the job. We were told that we were the future of Dravo Corporation. Keystone’s head expanded in size as the CEO piled on flowery praise.

The dinner group toured the vast mansion including the vintage car collection, billiards room and theater room (back then no one had a media or entertainment room). The CEO and his wife were gracious hosts dressed in the finest clothes. Tiffany lamps lit the room. Us young folks were beaming with pride all evening long since we were the chosen ones and one day we would live a luxurious life style as well. What could possibly go wrong?

At the time, Dravo was a highly successful engineering and construction company, one of the largest in the world, headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. The Dravo Tower skyscraper (now the BNY Mellon Center) was under construction in Pittsburgh next to the US Steel Tower and we were already assigned window offices on the 19th floor. Keystone’s chest was puffed out each day due to his perceived importance and his head grew so big he could barely fit through doorways. That all came crashing down a few short months later.

During 1980 and 1981, the US economy was on shaky ground and US employers began axing workers. At Dravo, the steady drum beat of negatively grew louder each day. Lunch room rumors increased that a major worldwide layoff was coming for the corporation. How could this be? The economy is doing great. One thing that you must understand is that recessions begin when times are good. Most people never see them coming until they hit you over the head with a 2x4 (a stick of lumber).

At Christmastime, the Dravo CEO walks around the building shaking everyone’s hands. Keystone looked forward to this day since the negative talk of pending layoffs was clearly hurting company moral. He wanted to understand if the rumors were true or false. After all, he would be a regional manager in a few quick years and it is important to understand business cycles and the way the corporation operates.

A couple days before Christmas the CEO knocks on the side of the cubicle. Keystone leaps to his feet standing at attention as if he was under the direction of a drill sergeant. It was great to shake hands with the CEO again and the two exchanged pleasantries about the great dinner and evening at the mansion a few months earlier.

Keystone, a brash and confident up and comer, asks the CEO directly, looking squarely into his eyes, “Is there any truth about the rumors that people are going to be laid off?” Without missing a beat, after all the executives are highly-skilled liars, the CEO said, “Absolutely none.” The CEO then tells Keystone that those rumors of layoffs are completely false and that he should enjoy the holidays without any worry or concern. The CEO told Keystone that he was the future of Dravo Corporation reinforcing and repeating the prior rhetoric.

Keystone grins from ear to ear. He knew the rumors were false and over the next few days told all the coworkers about his discussion with the CEO. There was nothing to worry about. Dravo was fine and the talk of layoffs was false. Many of the employees were skeptical of Keystone’s happy news but the holiday parties and after work gatherings were in full swing at the end of the year. All was fine.

During the first week of January, Keystone was called to the manager’s office. The somber manager told Keystone to take a seat and the door closed behind him. The manager delivered the crushing layoff news to Keystone. The manager said 12,000 jobs were eliminated at the company on this bloody Tuesday. Keystone’s head was lopped off by the manager’s guillotine.

The rumors were correct and the CEO had lied to Keystone. There was no top management position in the future. It was over. The news left Keystone speechless. Keystone’s legs felt like rubber as he walked back to the cubicle collapsing into the chair. After regaining some leg strength, Keystone retrieves a cardboard box from the copy room and packs a few books, a calculator, some candy, a dish of change from the top desk drawer, a couple of family pictures and a small potted plant. Keystone cannot believe that everything that seemed so important yesterday does not matter today. The office was stone-cold silent that bloody Tuesday except for the periodic telephone rings that summoned another employee to the manager’s gallows.

Losing a job in a recession is emotionally devastating. Feelings of self-doubt and worthlessness immediately infect the mind. Keystone wondered if he should ask what he did wrong since he could correct it immediately and perhaps keep his job but deep down he knew the ballgame was over. Keystone wondered why he got laid off rather than other co-workers? Is there something wrong with me? Did I do something that made someone mad? Wasn’t I working hard enough? I will work harder if they want me to. What was wrong with me? The mind’s thoughts race faster and faster. The pulse and heart rate increase.

There is a feeling of guilt that occurs when you are laid off which is misplaced. You must realize that you simply lost your job because the economy is falling apart and not because of your job performance. The mind will conger up feelings of inadequacy and melancholy. Maybe I was not a good enough employee? Maybe I did not work hard enough? Maybe I made someone mad? Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. The economy is simply falling apart.

Millennials will feel the shame of a layoff (again, misplaced shame). You have to tell people about losing your job including your wife or husband, or significant other, the family, parents, relatives, friends and neighbors. It is going to come up in conversations and you have to get used to saying, “I’m laid off.”

If laid off, you worry that people will think you are lazy or perhaps a trouble-maker. These feelings linger on for months and typically only go away when you finally land a comparable job to what you did pre-recession. Some millennials will lose their jobs and never work in their chosen field again.

Every day is a new day of dealing with the stress of losing one’s job in a recession especially if it is difficult in finding new employment (which it will be in a recession). Self-esteem and confidence are destroyed. You ask yourself daily why can’t I find a job? Why won’t anyone hire me? What is wrong with me? You will realize years later that there is nothing wrong with you. You are simply one of the victims of a recession and economic downturn.

When Keystone was laid off in January 1982, ironically when millennials were just starting to be born, it was a devastating life-changing event. Keystone went from being a future bigshot at a major corporation to standing in line at the unemployment office (back then we did stand in line; nowadays you can file for unemployment on the internet).

At the time I was living with (which back then was frowned down upon by society) a blond-haired blue-eyed darling of a girl Laura. We were madly in love as young people tend to be at that age. We would take the bus into Pittsburgh together each day. She worked as a clerk for one of the top law firms. We had big plans for our life together. Everyday was blue skies and rainbows.

On the bus ride home after the layoff, I could not even talk. The few words I spoke were stuttered nonsense. The lump in my throat was as big as a softball. I was unable to swallow. I did not want to talk about getting laid off on the bus with strangers within ear shot. Laura knew something was wrong; it is easy to tell when a loved one is in distress. She kept quiet during the bus ride back to the park and ride lot. I told her in the car that I lost my job. She was immediately supportive but both of us knew our lives had just changed forever. From a man’s perspective, you are expected to be the bread-winner and if you do not have a job it creates a feeling of worthlessness and despair. In the 1980’s, any man without a job was viewed by society as a loser and a filthy bum.

A layoff can be embarrassing since a lot of bragging may have occurred over many months. Boss’s will tell you that the company cannot survive without you but then they will flush you down the toilet like a soiled tissue. How do you explain a layoff to family and friends? Negative thoughts permeate the mind. What will the parents think? They bragged to everyone about how successful their child was but now they have to keep quiet and hope no one asks. The feelings of failure are devastating and you can begin to see how a layoff of one person can ripple through and impact many other people.

The boss tells you the company cannot survive without you to make you happy. I bet he told you this last week. Happy workers are more productive workers. When the recession hits, however, many of you will be drop-kicked across the parking lot into the dumpster like a greasy bag of McDonalds trash. You told Uncle Frank that the company cannot function without you but you will come to realize that was never true. You will hand in your electronic ID card that allows you to enter the building. You are no longer wanted or needed.

How often at work do you hear, “We are a family here.” Management also says that to make you happy and productive. When the recession hits, your so-called happy corporate family will stab you in the back and disown you faster than Joey Chestnut eating a hot dog at Coney Island.

If you are the main provider for your family, you are hit especially hard by a layoff. The stress will be compounded. Men have trouble dealing with layoffs since most think of themselves as the provider. In the 1970’s and 1980’s this was definitely the case in society. A man without a job was viewed as a piece of garbage. If you saw a man in a department store such as K-Mart or Sears (Wal-Mart was in its infancy back then) during the morning or early afternoon, women would stare some shaking their heads in disgust (they wonder what is wrong with that man, why isn’t he working?). The glares were more hits to self-esteem.

Of course, nowadays times are different than the 1980’s. You will see numerous men in a Wal-Mart in the middle of the day and many women are the larger bread-winners for the family. Nonetheless, neighbors will see you home during the day and be anxious to yell across the fence, “why aren’t you working?”

For a man in the 1980’s, without a job, you could not support a family. There was no future; only darkness, shame and despair. Sad to say, Laura and I split up, mostly due to the toll the recession took on myself and our relationship. I had to work jobs for lesser pay and then got a job in an engineering start-up but was only paid minimum wage about $6 per hour at the time. I was using my engineering knowledge to help the company but was not compensated fairly.

In a recession, employers will take advantage of employees. If you lip-off to the boss, he will be quick to tell you that he has 10 people beating on his door to take your job. Wages are low in recessions. You keep your mouth shut and do the job. You learn that life is a lot different than what you thought a year before. You are surviving a recession.

As a recession deepens and the collective population begins talking daily about the hard times and people losing jobs, a melancholy gloom envelopes the country. People lose the bounce in their step. Smiles are hard to come by. Fear increases as those unemployed are having trouble finding jobs and the people working are concerned about losing their jobs. Consumers pull in spending which only exacerbates the recession creating more layoffs.

Things become ugly in a recession. People that were friends at work turn to enemies as employees study each other’s faults wondering who is next on the layoff list. The back-stabbing begins in earnest. Employees sneak into the manager’s office tattling on coworkers saying anything that will preserve their job even if it means someone else will lose theirs. Company layoffs typically occur in rounds which only serves to further sink company moral. The first round of layoffs is shocking news but everyone justifies the firings saying most of those axed are deadwood anyways.

Typically, a month or two goes by, and if the recession deepens, a company will announce a second round of layoffs. This one cuts to the bone. Then, after a few weeks, another round of layoffs will occur depending on how the recession proceeds. A recession is coming anytime in 2019 or 2020. It will likely be a doozy so if you are not the boss’s son or daughter, or married to them, it is very likely you are going to lose your job.

During a recession, in an office environment, the married people team up against single folks. You will hear the refrain, “well, I am married and have a family to support, you are single, so it would be easier on you if you were laid off before me.” The married people will do anything to keep their jobs even spending time under the boss’s desk providing special services. Many of you millennials are single and will likely be laid off more quickly than your married coworkers when the economic downturn hits.

Boss’s know they can hang the welfare of the family over an employee’s head and make them work harder and even stay late without receiving pay. Boss’s do not have as much leverage over an employee that is unmarried without any children.

Employees will stop taking vacations when the recession hits even if it means losing their entitled days. Workers become fearful that they will come back from vacation and the boss will say they are no longer needed because everything operated smoothly without you. This is already showing up at businesses in 2018 and 2019. Workers are delaying vacations. Perhaps they are subliminally and unconsciously sniffing out the recessionary odor ahead.

In the 1980’s, when Keystone was laid off for the first time, 60% of US employees worked for large companies; now, 80% of the people work for large companies. The coming recession will be more devastating. The Federal Reserve has destroyed the expected business and economic cycles with their obscene one-decade-long Keynesian money-printing experiment that is only designed to enrich the privileged wealthy class.

20 million Americans (about 6% to 8% of the country) make up the privileged wealthy class. This group represents the new Gilded Age, like the 1920’s, that control the rigged financial markets and guarantee that the faux free market and crony capitalism structure in America endures forever. 300 million Americans (about 92% to 94% of the population) are the huddled masses, the pathetic serfs, the minions that toil daily for their meager bread and water.

Shaky auto loans and student debt will exacerbate the coming recession. Millennials need to pay down debt as fast as possible and develop a plan for making monthly payments if you lose your job (which is likely) in the months ahead. Delay any major purchases including the expensive sports car, boat, Ski-Doo snowmobile, snowblower, motorcycle, bells and whistles lawn tractor, high-tech refrigerator and smart washer and dryer. Only buy what you absolutely need and be stingy going forward. As most older people will tell you, “Save your money.” The recession is going to punch you squarely in the face and you do not need to be making payments on expensive junk. You may have to liquidate items if the recession is long and deep.

The US is overstored by a factor of 4 to 1 compared to other Western nations. In the recession, strip malls will turn into ghost towns with boarded-up windows. The excessive number of stores in the US will not be supported in a recession. There will be many empty buildings. Bank loans will be called. People will rein in spending becoming tight wads which only exacerbates the recession. Vacant storefronts add the gloom.

In a recession, companies are not going to keep you around on overhead. On your weekly timesheet, if you are charging so much as one hour of your time on company overhead, you will be one of the first workers laid off when the recession begins. Overhead is the kiss of death in a recession. If this is you, march into the boss’s office tomorrow morning and tell him that you have other skills that can be put to work and you are fully willing to learn other duties at the company that will enable you to charge billable hours to clients. If you are charging time to overhead, you are a liability for the company not an asset.

Tell your boss that you want to contribute to the bottom line of the company in a more useful way. Even if the boss tells you there is nothing else to do, he will remember you butt-kissing when he decides who he is going to be laid off first in the weeks and months ahead.

In a recession, there are thousands of other people looking for the same job as you. Right now, you have a false sense of security because you see plenty of job opportunities in your field. Many millennials think it will be a piece of cake finding another job if they are laid off or quit. This thinking is very wrong and dangerous.

When the recession hits, the jobs that you thought were available immediately disappear since the economy is turning south. In addition, people are getting laid off left and right so the competition for the small number of jobs is fierce. It will be an employer’s market where they can pick and choose the best people that were laid off from other companies and pay them peanuts.

As the recession bites the economy hard, your company may conduct an employee luncheon. If the main boss tells everyone not to worry, that is when you should worry. Update your resume and look for another job before the ax falls. If the CEO is honest, leveling with employees that tough times are ahead, this is a better place to work and management will likely do what they can to keep people employed.

Do not let a layoff get you down if you find yourself without a job a few months from now. It happens to everyone sooner or later in life. In fact, more often than not, the workers that are laid off first have the best chance at landing another job. Since the recession is just beginning when the first round of layoffs occurs in the economy, the hard downturn is still ahead. Companies with a hot product or in a growing industry will typically grab the initial workers that are laid off.

Humorously, co-workers at your prior job, some that may have stabbed you in the back telling the boss that you were lazy, will then be laid off as the recession deepens but the job opportunities will have vanished. Sometimes the workers laid off first land new jobs and weather the entire recession while employees axed in a second or third round of layoffs remain unemployed for many months or a year or two.

Life is funny how it works out so do not become disparaged if you are laid off. The only time you lose is if you give up trying to find another job. As long as you work hard at finding another job each day you will be successful. In the recession, do not expect your phone calls to be returned. Rejection letters will fill your mailbox and doors will be slammed in your face. You will make several trips to the local copy shop to print your resume. As the recession continues, you will develop rhinoceros skin from all the rejection.

Your perception of society, the country and those around you will change during the recession. You will find out who your true friends are that stick by you and offer encouragement and you will find out those that shun you as if you have leprosy. Your social life will disappear since you are unable and unwilling to spend the money on fun times like your employed friends. Instead, you will be hoping the government plans to extend unemployment benefits since jobs are as rare as hen’s teeth.

The upcoming recession will be the first in the new age of social internet, Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, Snap, Google and Twitter. If you are canned by your employer, will you announce the sad news on Facebook? Will you try to hide the news embarrassed that you lost your job? Did you brag on social internet that the company cannot survive without you? How do you now tell all your so-called digital friends that the company did not need you after all?

It will be interesting to watch the role of social internet when the recession begins this year or next. After you are laid off, instead of posting a pic of your special dinner at a French restaurant on Facebook, perhaps you will post a pic showing franks and beans on a chipped dinner plate.

If you are laid off, take any job no matter how menial and beneath-you it may seem. Be grateful that you have a job even if it pays minimum wage. Sometimes a little humility is good for the human soul. While working that low-skilled job, continue to seek a position in your field of study. Nothing comes easy in a recession. That is the whole idea behind this PSA.

Are you beginning to understand how your life will be much different a couple years from now? Even if you are the lucky ones and do not get laid off, your friends and family will, and the country will be in an economic funk, so it will not be joyous times. Recessions are gloom.

A big mistake young and inexperienced executives and business owners are making is projecting future sales based on the recent past. What is not realized by many is that the 2016 through 2018 period is unprecedented in the amount of goosing the economy and markets received from central banker stimulus, reduced regulations and tax cuts. Earnings are at record levels due to the world awash in central banker liquidity.

The sales and earnings over the last couple years will not be seen again for a long time perhaps decades. Any company basing future growth on this data are in for a rude awakening. When the recession hits, sales projections are going to look like a joke. Plan ahead. What will you do it you are a manager or business owner and over 50% of your sales disappear over a six-month period? You had better figure it out now so you can be ready when this bloodbath occurs this year or next.

People that lose their jobs in the recession will be slashing their cable, internet, smartphone, and other monthly bills. This behavior will create more layoffs in tech industries which in turn feeds the recession. Those millennials working in the tech industries are about to have a religious experience. The trendy industries such as electric cars, autonomous vehicles and computer wearables will experience massive budget cuts. Employees in these industries think their job is safe but many will find themselves filing for unemployment in the months ahead.

 If you have done nothing but press computer keyboards the last few years, you may have to embrace blisters on your fingers, as Ringo would say, when the recession hits. Manual labor may be in your future rather than a cubicle. If you are a highly-paid Silicon Valley tech worker, you may have to permanently retire your fleece vest when you are axed in the months ahead.

Meal delivery services such as Grubhub and Uber will see business slip away in a recession. Blue Apron will be a bloody apron. Food delivery services will suffer since many laid off folks will choose to cook simple meals themselves to save money. Roman noodles, cheese sandwiches and the always popular franks and beans will be staple meals for many millennial’s in the months ahead.

Amazon Prime users will cancel subscriptions. Laid off workers will buy less from Amazon since now they have the time to do their own shopping. In a recession, you have plenty of time on your hands but not much money. Perhaps eating healthy organic foods is important to you but if you lose your job in the upcoming recession, you will revert back to basic food choices to save money. You will scrutinize all your bills and payments pinching pennies until Lincoln screams.

Laid off workers will rethink the monthly bills and fees for Netflix, Comcast, Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Hulu, Roku and many other services. Less sales and earnings will necessitate more layoffs by these and other tech and communications companies extending the recession.

Back when Keystone was first laid off in the early 1980’s, Bruce Springsteen had written a song called “The River” that captures the emotion and feelings around hard economic times and recession. I am sure that the pending recession will have its own theme song as well. Give it a listen on YouTube. Imagine how you will feel in the hard times that are coming. The recession will change your life forever.

["The River" by Bruce Springsteen]

'The Boss' sings, “I got a job working construction for the Johnstown Company, but lately there ain’t been much work on account of the economy, now all them things that seemed so important, well Mister they vanish right into the air, now I just act like I don’t remember, and Mary acts like she don’t care…those memories come back to haunt me, they haunt me like a curse, is a dream a lie if it don’t come true, or is it something worse....the river is dry.” If you are a young person between 20 and 30 years old, get ready, your life is going to change forever in the months ahead.

Millennials that lose jobs in the coming recession will not be able to get a loan. If money gets tight, you may be wiped out. If you are concerned about covering several months of expenses if you get laid off, do your homework now and line up commitments ahead of time to fend off this dire outcome. Ask family if they could help. If you are fortunate enough to have equity built up in a home, get a home equity line immediately. You do not want to use the line but it will be there if you are out of work for many months, a year, or longer. Bear in mind that if you lose your job in the recession, it may take one to three years, and even more, to get back to where you are today. Obviously, the recession is going to change your current plans and goals whether you are laid off or not.

Do not be discouraged if you are laid off in the months ahead. It has nothing to do with your work ethic, ability, loyalty or any of that self-doubt stuff. Keep working hard at finding a new job and do not give up. The only time where you fail is if you give up. Prepare yourself now. Keystone was blindsided when first laid off in the 1980’s. The anecdotes above are offered to help you millennials understand the trouble that will be knocking at your doorstep soon.

In recessions, employees are canned continuously until the economy improves. Interestingly, however, most companies will tend to not lay off workers during the holidays. So if you make it to say the first week of November, you will likely have your job until the first week of January.

Sit down at the kitchen table and run through scenarios. Do the math if you lose your job, if your significant other loses their job, and if both of you lose your jobs. Chances are that at least one of you will likely be laid off in the months and year or two ahead. Chart out a plan for weathering the pending recession. Do not take this PSA warning lightly. It has been a decade since the last recession and few remember the hard times. Everyone will remember in a few months.

Get yourself out of debt as much as possible. Delay all major purchases. Save money. In a few months or year or so, you will be dealing with an ongoing recession and economic tumult that will likely be as bad if not worse than the early 1980’s recession, the 2000-2002 dotcom bubble recession, the 2008-2009 Great Recession and the Great Depression of the 1930’s.

Do not live beyond your means. Tighten your wallet now before the recession hits. Sharpen any skills you have that can supplement income if you fall on hard times when the recession hits be it music, gardening, painting, childcare, pets, etc… Don’t brag about how the company cannot survive without you because you are about to realize that they easily can.

If you are in the Millennial/Generation Y or Generation Z group and finishing college hoping for a good job, you had better get busy now ahead of the recession. Get an internship so you have experience which will place you ahead of other candidates upon graduation. Be willing to relocate out of state for a job especially as a young person. Think of it as a few-year adventure.

Many millennials are ill-prepared for the recessionary freight train coming down the tracks and simply have not received proper direction, advice and knowledge from their ‘clueless’ parents. Brace yourself. The United States will look a lot different in a year or two. The recession will change your life forever. Millennials are intelligent and hard-working and must prepare themselves for the approaching recession.