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- Tuesday’s Exhaustion Bar Says Bull. Negative GEX Says Not Yet.
Tuesday’s Exhaustion Bar Says Bull. Negative GEX Says Not Yet.
GEX Increasingly Negative. ES Down 80 As I Type.
Today saw some interesting moves intraday – similar to what we looked at during Monday’s group calls. Rally – check. Sell-off – check. Only we did see a little follow through to the bear side, with almost a complete intraday recovery.
This in itself creates what most people may call an exhaustion bar or candle. The name of the candle doesn’t really matter. But we are once again looking at the move lower, to around 50% of yesterday’s high-to-low range, as the zone to start looking for the bull swings to take control.
From a timing point of view, we also looked at Wed/Thu as the potential timing start of any bull recovery movements.
SPX swings – same plan as Tuesday. The specific levels have just been adjusted.
GEX is all negative with increasing exposure, which could well accelerate moves again. As I’m typing, we are seeing ES futures down around 80 points – which could well jump the cash price through that huge negative cluster of GEX nodes and speed up the bear move. For the moment, I don’t see the sell-off over just yet.
RUT – slightly updated plan of action, in that the bear swing target has been reached, and now also looking for a V-entry before looking at the conservative bull swing entry.
CL crude oil – bear trigger and subsequent rally has started in earnest, with a rally to the anchored VWAP and a clear rejection. I’m now bearish below $88 and looking for a move lower to around the $70-$65 level.
BTC also looks like its next leg of a potential bear move has started. 60K is the first hurdle to jump. If we can clear that, then a move to $50K could well be on the table. A push above $65K and I’ll also start looking for a bullish recovery.
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Market Briefing:
Tuesday 9 June – Wall Street spent Monday deciding that Friday had been a misunderstanding. The 10% chip plunge that made it the worst day of the year was quietly reclassified as a buying opportunity. The same two names that led the crash, Marvell and Micron, led the bounce. Nobody asked what had changed.
Monday closed: SPX 7,405.73 +0.30% / Nasdaq lifted on chip rebound / Marvell led the bounce on S&P 500 inclusion (+9%) / Flex +4% / Friday’s losers became Monday’s winners
Brent round-tripped $4 in a single session – $98+ on weekend Iran/Israel strikes, slid to $94 on fresh truce talk / the barrel priced a war and its resolution before lunch
BTC under $65,000, down 12% on the week / spot ETFs bled $4.33B and 59,351 coins across 13 straight sessions (record streak) / Strategy’s first BTC sale in nearly four years retired the never-sell era
Capital fled crypto into AI stocks and IPOs – the exact trade that cratered Friday / SpaceX lists June 12 / CryptoQuant pegs BTC demand falling fastest since Terra in 2022
Today’s catalyst: May CPI lands tomorrow near 4.2% / 30-year holds above 5% / Warsh chairs his first FOMC June 16, hired to cut, holding inflation that politely refuses
Market Snapshot
ES: 7,434.50 / +22.25 (+0.30%) / NATHs 7,632.25 / off the Monday close but no follow-through yet
YM: 50,870 / +45 (+0.09%) / NATHs 51,849 / Uncle Dow flatlining
NQ: 29,602.25 / +167.00 (+0.57%) / NATHs 30,785 / Nazquack leading the small uptick
RTY: 2,872.10 / +13.90 (+0.49%) / NATHs 2,952.00 / Uncle Russ holding its consolidation
GC: 4,347.80 / -6.00 (-0.14%) / haven bid steady
CL: 89.71 / -1.57 (-1.72%) / below the punched bear trigger
VIX: 18.25 / -0.68 (-3.59%) / easing from Friday’s spike, still elevated vs the 13.38 year low
BTC: 63,057.38 / -5.60 (-0.01%) / sub-65K, the floor that wasn’t

Tag ‘n Turn
Friday’s 50-60% retracement done. Monday’s 50-60% retracement pending. Then, and only then, can we look for the start of the recovery – assuming there is one and there’s no follow-through. SPX each-way lines marked. RUT V-entry at the range low. BTC bear flag. CL bear trigger punched.
The framework set out on Monday’s group call is playing out exactly as drawn. Step one delivered. Step two pending. The system takes care of the specifics – the only job today is to hold the conservative stance and let the lines in the sand do the work.
SPX Analysis
SPX has the each-way lines in the sand marked off. Conservative stance held – not jumping in too soon for the bull TnT setups. Overnight moves not giving clues yet. Upper line 7,466.81. Lower line 7,380. NATHs 7,620.90. Monday close 7,421.12.
SPX has the each-way lines in the sand marked off.
I’m keeping my conservative stance and not jumping in too soon for the bull TnT setups, and the overnight moves are not suggesting anything to give us clues just yet.
Lines marked. Conservative stance. No clues yet.

Gamma Exposure
GEX is all negative. Fast popping moves like yesterday – hopefully a little smoother than the jump-pause-jump-pause. Gamma flip 7,478.11. Put wall 7,400. Call wall 7,500. IV 15.50%. IV Percentile 73%.
GEX is all negative – fast popping moves like yesterday. Hopefully a little more smoother than the jump-pause-jump-pause we saw.
Cash at 7,405.73 sits below the gamma flip at 7,478.11 – the negative-gamma regime continues. Put wall and call wall now spread again at 7,400 and 7,500 respectively, framing today’s likely intraday range absent a catalyst. IV at 15.50% vs historic 12.25%. IV Rank 30.88%, IV Percentile 73%.
All negative. Fast pops. Hopefully smoother today.

RUT Analysis
RUT a little clearer to read. Very well-defined consolidation. V-entry coinciding with the range low (approximately) – trading that for the bull setup. Waiting to see if bear swing target will be reached. NATHs 2,942.41. BO Target 2,810 below.
RUT is a little clearer to read.
With the very well-defined consolidation, I can look at the V-entry coinciding with the range low (approximately) and trade that for the bull setup, while I’m waiting to see if the bear swing target will be reached.
Cleanest read. V-entry at range low. Trade it.

BTC Analysis
BTC looking very much like it did prior to the last leg down – slow and lazy rising range, AKA a bear flag. 60K retest most likely. Then 50K after that if it blows through. Current 62,906.
BTC is looking very much like it did prior to the last leg down – slow and lazy rising range, AKA a bear flag.
A retest of 60K seems most likely for the moment, and then we can see if that holds or blows through to the 50K level we spoke about last week.
The 4hr chart shows the bear flag forming through last week – the slow climb from the post-breakout lows back toward 65k without conviction in the move. Bear Entry annotation at 76,385 with Stop Loss 77,834.55 well above. Larger Range Breakout Target zone (60k) already reached on the daily; 50K is the next structural level.
Bear flag forming. 60k retest. 50k below.

CL (Oil) Analysis
Oil has punched through the bear trigger at 89.68. Looking for the pullback elements and selling rallies. Could well see a $25 move lower should the bear move come good. Daily current 89.32. Bull trigger 97.00 well above.
CL crude oil has punched through my bear trigger and now we’re simply looking for the pullback elements and selling rallies.
We could well see a $25 move lower should the bear move come good.
Bear trigger punched. Selling rallies. $25 lower possible.

Rounding Off
Everyone Bought The Version They Liked Best. Markets spent Monday deciding that Friday had been a misunderstanding. The 10% chip plunge that made it Wall Street’s worst day of the year was quietly reclassified as a buying opportunity. The same two names that led the crash – Marvell and Micron – led the bounce.
Nobody asked what had changed, because nothing had. Oil ran the identical trick at higher volume, ripping above $98 as Iran and Israel traded missiles over the weekend, then sliding to $94 the moment Trump declared a new truce close.
The barrel priced a war and its resolution inside one session, confident about both. Crypto, asked to provide shelter, declined – Bitcoin sub-$65K, down 12% on the week, with spot ETFs bleeding for 13 straight days.
The money leaving crypto sprinted into AI stocks, the one trade that had just cratered. Holding all of it up is a bond market that has stopped pretending – 30-year above 5%, May CPI tomorrow near 4.2%, Warsh chairing his first FOMC next week. The calm is rented, and the lease is short.
What’s In Front Of Me Today. Monday’s group call framework is doing the work. Friday’s 50-60% retracement – check. Monday’s 50-60% retracement – pending. Then, and only then, can we look for what could be the start of the recovery, assuming there is one and there is no follow-through.
The lines in the sand are drawn and the system takes care of the specifics. SPX each-way lines marked, conservative stance held. RUT cleanest read with the V-entry at the range low. BTC bear flag forming for the 60K retest. CL bear trigger punched, selling rallies for a $25 lower target.
Everything between now and then is the system collecting on a prediction that was made out loud on Monday and is now unfolding in real time.
Expert Insights
“You don’t need to know what is going to happen next in order to make money.”
– Mark Douglas, Trading in the Zone (2000), public
Monday’s group call laid out a framework. Step one delivered on Monday’s bounce. Step two is pending today or tomorrow – the 50-60% retracement of the rally. Step three is conditional on step two and whether there’s follow-through. None of those steps require knowing what happens next. They require the lines being marked, the conservative stance being held, and the system taking care of the specifics when each level is reached.
Douglas’s Trading in the Zone spent two decades teaching exactly this: the edge is in the framework and the discipline to act when the levels arrive, not in being right about the direction. Today’s job: hold the conservative stance, wait for the SPX lines, watch the RUT V-entry, let the BTC bear flag print, sell the CL rallies. The opinion is unfolding in real time. The system is collecting.
[Source: Mark Douglas,
Trading in the Zone: Master the Market with Confidence,
Discipline, and a Winning Attitude,
Prentice Hall Press, 2000, public]
Fun Fact:
The “exhaustion bar” on this morning’s chart – whose name, as I noted, doesn’t really matter – sits inside a candlestick analysis tradition with a much longer history than most people realize.
Candlestick charting was developed in Japan in the early 1700s by Munehisa Homma, a rice merchant from Sakata who traded on the Dōjima Rice Exchange in Osaka – one of the earliest organized commodity markets in the world.
Homma reportedly amassed a fortune by analyzing the open, high, low, and close of daily rice prices and noticed that the relationship between those four numbers contained reliable information about supply, demand, and the psychology of the other traders in the pit.
He recorded his observations in a treatise, Sakata’s Five Methods, which described patterns that today’s chartists would recognize as the building blocks of modern candle pattern analysis.
The Western world did not encounter candlestick analysis seriously until 1991, when Steve Nison published Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques. Nison’s book introduced the formal English-language names for the patterns – doji, hammer, shooting star, hanging man, evening star, exhaustion bar and many others. Each is, in Homma’s terms, a slightly different shape of the same four-number relationship at a particular point in a price series.
The names matter less than the shape. The shape matters less than where it appears. And where it appears matters less than what gets traded at the level when it does. Munehisa Homma was, in this sense, two and a quarter centuries ahead of Twitter chartists arguing about whether Tuesday’s print was a hammer, an exhaustion bar, or a hanging man with bullish implications.
[Sources: Munehisa Homma, Sakata’s Five Methods (c.1755),
historical Japanese commodity trading literature;
Steve Nison, Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques
(New York Institute of Finance, 1991); public]
Trade well,
T2 Markets
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