RY, Royal Bank of Canada.

On previous occasions I have pointed out the dangers of double tops and also emphasized the only rule that has to be followed at all times – buy low, sell high. Therefore I assume you do not own the Royal Bank or did you fall for the myth that somehow the Canadian banks and the government are better? Here are the charts.

RY June 2010 ry june 2010 2

As is clear from the long-term chart , the Royal essentially double topped recently, one of the few to do so and quite an accomplishment. But since then it has lost ,give or take, 20% of its value and has done so , perhaps, in 5 waves the last of which is not yet complete. This is not a particularly good sign, in fact it is quite POSSIBLE  that the stock will revisit its lows of a year and a half ago. Why, if this is the cream of the crop, the best of the Canadians that are the best in the world ?

    Glass-Steagall was formally taken off the books in 2004 (by Rubin among others) to accommodate the otherwise illegal creation of Citigroup. In Canada we began to dismantle the “four pillar” concept a lot earlier (1987) allowing the (reverse)takeover of our investment dealers by the banks fulfilling a long time dream of combining pure capitalism with the socialist backstop of government deposit insurance. Not to mention the million different ways that competition was effectively killed and the banks themselves given exceptional powers under the Bank Act (which is why a homeowner cannot simple give the bank the house keys and walk). So not much difference there.    Back in ‘98 when the banks wanted to merge our government disallowed it to happen not because they did not agree with the banks’ position that they needed to grow in order to compete in the big world, but because they feared job losses. Now , of course, the word is that they presciently avoided the too big to fail situation. By the way, we have our own Fannies by way of the CMHC, a crown corporation that guarantees all non regular mortgages, it does not have reserves worth mentioning so it is entirely dependent on the Federal government.

   Our banks did not receive the bailouts that were made available in the States, according to our minister of finance, conveniently forgetting that 75bln worth of mortgages were shifted to the Bank of Canada (proportional to the US situation). Furthermore the biggest bailout provided by the government comes from the artificially low rates and the steepness of our yield-curve, all this courtesy of pension funds and retirees that have seen their returns decimated. This transfer of income is comparable to that in the US.

   I can go on and on but the point really is that the myth of the Canadian banks being sort of impervious to what is happening in the world is simple wrong. Once the rules with regard to proprietary trading and all sorts of other issues revert back to the good old days the Canadian banks will be just as vulnerable.

CM Jan 11. 2011.

Last year the target for CM was slightly above where we are now, say around $78 or so. This is where a 5th wave diagonal started its trip down and that is a normal retracement level . Also it is in the 50 to 60% normal rebound level. We have done this so I would be a seller, especially since the much better run Royal has already almost retraced its entire drop.

CM Jan 11 2010

RY Jan 11, 2011

The successful long CM short RY trades simple may not work anymore.

TSE Update June 6

tse

The TSE index, despite 400 point down days alternating with 300 point updays, has in the main stayed roughly at the same or slightly higher level where it has been for a few weeks now. This range of 10250 to 10750 corresponds well with a fourth wave of previous degree. Furthermore we are at the 38.2+ % retracement level which is a reasonable first target. The actual count is more elusive but could be a 5-wave c, in which case just one more minor upmove would be required to complete the pattern. Again looking at certain stocks such as RY and the insurers, we are at such a high level that it is not unreasonable to expect a sizable pullback from these levels.

CM May 18

cmMay 18

The Commerce Bank CIBC has a nice chart that provides a good insight into what may happen in the Canadian market. The drop from 105 to 35 would certainly qualify as a “bear market” by anyone’s standards, moreover it is pretty well what one would have initially expected given that the “box” of 50 to 62 % down has a lower boundary of about $40 (which under one count might actually be the “orthodox” low , as opposed to the actual low at about $35). It has a nice 5-wave down structure, no overlap and perhaps a 5th wave that is a wedge or diagonal clearly defining the imminent end to the move. Waves 5 and 3 are about the same size but 3 is definitely not the shortest!

   There is one little problem, 5-waves never stand alone, meaning they either attach to an A-B- preceding it (not the case here , presumable , given the 40 or so dollar difference in the value of the preceding  tops), or there is at least ANOTHER 5-wave move following, albeit after a reasonable intermission. The down-trend prevailed for about 17 months, very roughly, so a reasonable intermission could consume the better part of 6 to 10 months. Under one count 6 months have already gone by, under another only 2; either way another 3/6 months of corrective action is not an unreasonable expectation. All this suggests that we may be in a B wave of a larger corrective structure, the point to buy again is at about a 50% retracement or roughly $50 (even a new low at , or marginally beyond the old one is possible but in our present bullish environment not all that likely!The B-wave can develop as a triangle, usually for the simple purpose of consuming more time

   As to how high the correction could ultimately go?; if the wedge is indeed a wedge $78 ( alternatively, if the wedge is smaller, $67) is your target; if the $40 is the orthodox low  $40 + 61.8x (105-40)= $80 would be the upper boundary of the new “box”. Wave 4 of previous degree, a common retracement level is also at $78. Time wise it could be done by Sept. give or take a month. Interestingly the Royal does NOT have this potential, its best level would be around $51/52 so this opens the opportunity to put on the long CM/short RY trade again, for a potential gain of about $15 or so, nothing to sneeze at.

   Once all is said and done the end of the bear market would be when this B wave is complete and followed by a C to make the whole experience an A-B-C. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that wave C has the same percentage drop as wave A, that is about 62%, and also suppose we do go to the cluster at about $78 in B, than ultimately we would end at about $29. This compares to the low in ‘98 of $24  which low might be considered a 4th wave of previous degree in this larger context and a common retracement target. Notice that this outlook does not rhyme with the TSE overall, but the the banks as a group never did.