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The Texas Department of Public Safety this week caught a confirmed MS-13 gang member with a violent criminal history, including kidnapping and sexual violence, in the latest example of criminals attempting to enter the U.S. illegally.

Emerson Lopez Fugon, an MS-13 gang member from Honduras, was arrested by Texas DPS Rangers Special Operations after he was found hiding on a train near Eagle Pass, Texas.

Fugon is a registered sex offender.

MS-13, or Mara Salvatrucha, was established in Los Angeles by Central American immigrants and has expanded across the continent, particularly in Northern Triangle countries like El Salvador and Guatemala. 

It is known for its particularly horrific and gruesome crimes, and its motto is said to be ‘mata, viola, controls,’ which means ‘kill, rape, control.’

It’s the latest capture by Texas as part of Operation Lone Star, an effort launched by Gov. Greg Abbott in 2021 to boost resources and law enforcement at the border in response to the ongoing migrant crisis.

‘If not for @TxDPS & Gov. @GregAbbott_TX’s Operation Lone Star, Lopez Fugon, a confirmed MS-13 gang member w/ a violent criminal history, would have made it further into the interior,’ Texas DPS spokesperson Chris Olivarez said in a statement. 

‘It’s the men & women who proudly wear the Texas Tan that are on the front lines arresting criminals & protecting our state & country.’

It’s the latest threat identified at the southern border as law enforcement and Border Patrol tackle the thousands of migrants coming to the U.S. each day.

Fox News obtained images this week that showed suspected cartel gunmen coming across the border, clad in body armor and toting rifles.

That came after DPS drone operators in Eagle Pass spotted an armed smuggler carrying a long gun and guiding a group of illegal immigrants across the Rio Grande.

Border Patrol Chief Jason Owens announced this week that six sex offenders were nabbed by Border Patrol over the weekend, along with one gang member and one convicted felon.

‘All had extensive criminal histories as repeat offenders,’ he said.

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President Biden admitted Thursday that Democrats’ signature Inflation Reduction Act wasn’t as much about actually reducing the then-record-high inflation facing the nation as he originally touted to the American people.

I wish I hadn’t called it that. It has less to do with inflation than it does providing alternatives to economic growth,’ Biden said during an appearance at a campaign fundraiser in Pary City, Utah.

‘Even when there is inflation there is a way to provide breathing room,’ he added, citing negotiating medical prices as one example.

Biden’s comments are a sharp turn from what he said in July 2022 ahead of the Inflation Reduction Act’s passage through Congress on a party line vote.

‘The Inflation Reduction Act is the strongest bill you can pass. It will lower inflation, cut the deficit, reduce health care costs, tackle the climate crisis, and promote energy security,’ he said.

The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

At the time, as the country faced an inflation rate near the highest level in 40 years, multiple analyzes said the bill would not reduce inflation. The Congressional Budget Office said the bill will have ‘a negligible effect’ on inflation in 2022, and in 2023 its impact would range between reducing inflation by 0.1% and increasing it by 0.1%.

Fox News’ Kaitlin Sprague and Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

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In this week’s edition of Trading Simplified, Dave takes a break from his series on Jesse Livermore to discuss his methodology in action. He revisits his core methodology by showing the ultimate goal of catching longer-term trends and how money and position management can occasionally make that possible. Then, using live examples, he shows how discretion could be used to improve performance by allowing wiggle room (within reason) on the trailing protective stop, and also explains when to take partial profits slightly early.

This video was originally published on August 10, 2023. Click anywhere on the Trading Simplified logo above to watch on our dedicated show page, or at this link to watch on YouTube.

You can view all recorded episodes of the show at this link. Go to davelandry.com/stockcharts to access the slides for this episode and more. Dave can be contacted at davelandry.com/contact for any comments and questions.

Bummed that you didn’t ride Apple’s rally? Now that the stock price has pulled back and is hovering around its 100-day simple moving average, you may have a second chance of picking it up at a lower price.

But let’s say you think the stock price might fall slightly lower in the short term.

CHART 1: APPLE’S PULLBACK MAY BE A SETUP FOR A CONTINUATION OF THE PREVIOUS UPTREND. Although its relative strength against the S&P 500 has weakened and the Money Flow Index (MFI) indicated money flowing out of the stock, there’s a chance the stock could bounce from its 100-day simple moving average and reverse back up.Chart source: StockCharts.com (click on chart for live version). For educational purposes.

The Cash-Secured Put

So, instead of buying the 100 shares immediately, you could sell a put option on Apple (ticker symbol: AAPL). In options lingo, this is called selling a cash-secured put. Similar to covered calls, cash-secured puts are a good strategy that can help you get acclimated to trading options.

Say AAPL is trading for $180 per share. Maybe you think the stock will go down a little and could move back up from there. In other words, you have a short-term neutral outlook and a long-term bullish outlook for the stock.

Let’s pull up the options chain for AAPL.

CHART 2: OPTIONS CHAIN FOR AAPL. The Sept 15 175 puts are trading at around $2.81. If you sell the puts, you could collect $281 in premium.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

You want to select an expiration of around 30 to 45 days to give it some time. Remember, options have an expiration date.

From the options chain above, you see the following:

The Sept 15 contract has 36 days to expiration (DTE), which falls within the range. You can slide the Strike Range slider bar to only see the relevant options in the chain. The 175 Sep. 15 puts are trading at a mid-price of $2.81 per contract.

How Can You Benefit from Selling Puts?

A put option gives you the right to sell the underlying security at a specific price by a specific date. If you sell a put contract, you must buy the stock when the person you sold the put to wants to exercise the contract. That means you’ll need enough cash in your trading account to purchase the 100 shares of AAPL at the strike price of the options contract.

Say you sell one 175 Sept 15 put for $2.81. Remember that a put option contract controls 100 shares of AAPL. The following scenarios could play out:

AAPL stays above $175 through expiration. The put would expire worthless, and you keep the premium, which would be $281 ($2.81 x 100). AAPL is at or below $175 before expiration. The put is assigned, and you’ll have to buy 100 shares of AAPL at $175 per share, or $17,500, which was your objective. You collected $281 in premium, so your cash basis is reduced to $17,219.

Say your price target for AAPL is $190, and you exit the trade at that price. You would have made a profit on those shares. Of course, the opposite could happen. The stock price could fall, in which case you’d be holding on to a losing position. What you do with the stock depends on your trading objectives. Check out Master the Most Underutilized Options Income Strategy: Cash-Secured Puts to learn more about trading cash-secured puts.

Once you become familiar with trading options, you’ll discover many ways to adjust your options position. For example, you could buy back the short put. You could also roll the position to another with a further expiration date. The expiration and strike price you choose would be based on your directional bias when you roll the contract.

Options = Flexibility

With options, you have tons of, er, options. Strategies such as covered calls and cash-secured puts are just the tip of the iceberg, but once you start trading them, you’ll realize there are many ways to utilize them. There are several strategies you could apply which can work in tandem with assets you own or want to own.

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

In this episode of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, guest Mish Schneider of MarketGauge talks higher rates and why China may deserve a second look for investors. Host David Keller, CMT highlights one key industry group feeling the pain as TSLA heads toward trend line support.

This video originally premiered on August 10, 2023. Watch on our dedicated Final Bar page on StockCharts TV, or click this link to watch on YouTube.

New episodes of The Final Bar premiere every weekday afternoon. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

This is the third video in a multi-part educational series from Tyler Wood, CMT and Alex Cole, co-founders of GoNoGo Charts®.

Momentum is the next step for technical analysts after identifying trend. This video will help traders, analysts, and investors understand how momentum studies are calculated and what they seek to provide. Alex and Tyler discuss the concept of confirmation and divergence with respect to price action. Equally important, they describe how many of the traditional oscillators are designed to highlight overbought and oversold conditions in market activity but can leave a lot up to interpretation. Everyone should understand the concept of momentum indicators, but also how a blended approach to multiple oscillators can alleviate analysis paralysis and indicator overload.

This video originally premiered August 7, 2023. Click this link to watch on YouTube.

Learn more about the GoNoGo ACP plug-in with the FREE starter plug-in or the full featured plug-in pack.

In this edition of the GoNoGo Charts show, as US equities take a well deserved break from their strong rallies, Alex and Tyler quantify what investors can expect from both a trend and momentum perspective across the daily, weekly, and hourly timeframes.

This video originally premiered on August 10, 2023. Click this link to watch on YouTube.

Learn more about the GoNoGo ACP plug-in with the FREE starter plug-in or the full featured plug-in pack.

On this week’s edition of Stock Talk with Joe Rabil, Joe explains how he uses the A-B-C corrective pattern on the lower timeframe to improve entry. He first describes what we want on the higher timeframe, then shows examples of the A-B-C pattern and how to compare it to indicators like the MACD and ADX. Joe then analyses the symbols requests that came through this week, including NVDA, TSLA, and more.

This video was originally published on August 10, 2023. Click this link to watch on YouTube.

Archived episodes of the show are available at this link. Send symbol requests to stocktalk@stockcharts.com; you can also submit a request in the comments section below the video on YouTube. Symbol Requests can be sent in throughout the week prior to the next show. (Please do not leave Symbol Requests on this page.)

When did everything get to be so expensive and will prices ever come down again?

The good news is that price increases have already drifted downward from the heights we experienced just last summer. At one point, year-over-year inflation had reached 9.1%, the highest rate of price increases for goods and services since the early 1980s.

On Thursday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release inflation data for July. Economic experts are forecasting a year-over-year increase of approximately 3% — about the same as June.

But overall, prices for some goods and services have steadily increased over the course of the pandemic years. The evidence was front and center, as seen in the price of eggs, ground beef, gasoline, used cars, electricity and rent.

And while economists say the prices of some goods and services have started to retreat from their post-pandemic highs, the U.S. is unlikely to return to pre-pandemic price levels — what some may think of as ‘normal’ prices — any time soon.

‘It’s a very long journey from the peak inflation rates we saw just a year ago,’ said Mike Pugliese, director and senior economist at Wells Fargo. ‘We are pretty unlikely to see outright deflation unless we get a very severe recession,’ he added.

That deflation Pugliese mentioned — a decrease in prices and an increase in consumer spending power — may sound like a good thing, but it can have a negative impact on the economy. As prices fall, people tend to hold off on purchases in the hopes they can get things even cheaper at a later time. But what tends to happen in that scenario is companies struggle with the slowdown in sales and workers can lose their jobs as a result.

How did we get here?

At the outset of the inflation surge, economists laid out what was at stake: The combined effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine were disrupting supply chains, reducing the ability of businesses to deliver goods in a timely manner and with sufficient volumes — thus, prices for many things went up.

Later, it became clear the impact of pandemic-related fiscal stimulus payments, pent-up spending, and low interest rates, had unleashed a wave of demand for goods and services that was also putting upward pressure on prices.

Finally, a worker shortage, which was the result of Covid effects that led to direct long-term illnesses for workers; departures from the labor force to care for loved ones; and outright retirements, has raised the cost of labor.

Indeed, the current share of the population participating in the labor force is lower than pre-pandemic levels — something that has continued to make the cost of hiring workers more expensive.

‘We still have a lot of vacancies to fill,’ said Julia Pollak, chief economist at the job search company, ZipRecruiter.

All this has led to unexpectedly strong economic growth — and thus inflation. When households can count on having steady earnings, Pollak said, ‘they’re happy to keep spending, buy clothes, book airfare, and go to restaurants.’

Expecting consumers to keep spending gives businesses the green light to keep raising prices. Or as Wells Fargo’s Pugliese puts it: ‘It’s a little bit circular.’

What can be done to stop the cycle?

By raising interest rates, the Federal Reserve, America’s central bank, is hoping to make things so expensive that businesses and consumers capitulate and reduce their spending.

Federal Reserve officials and other economists have given recent indications that the chances of cutting interest rates this year are not likely and that, if anything, more rate hikes may be necessary.

Remember that, as of right now, interest rates are already the highest they’ve been in 20 years.

“We should remain willing to raise the federal funds rate at a future meeting if the incoming data indicate that progress on inflation has stalled,” Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman said earlier this week.

‘A more inflationary economy could end up necessitating higher real and nominal policy rates,’ economists with Citibank wrote in a note to clients this week.

But as a result of that initial burst of federal stimulus and ultra-low interest rates back in the early months of the pandemic, the economy has become much less sensitive to interest rate hikes, said Jeremy Schwartz, an economist at the financial services group Nomura.

Compare that with the global financial crisis, when products like adjustable-rate mortgages were more widespread and many households were far less financially secure.

‘Households and businesses have proven resilient,’ Schwartz said.

A surefire cure to all this is higher unemployment: Fewer earners means less spending means less upward pressure on prices.

Andrew Patterson, senior international economist at Vanguard financial services group, says the unemployment rate may have to rise a full percentage point, from its current level of 3.5% to 4.5% — to get there.

‘It’s not something we’re hoping for’ Patterson said. ‘But we need to see the labor market softening.’

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President Biden on Thursday is expected to ask Congress for billions of dollars of additional funding for Ukraine’s defense, a move that will lead to drama in the fall given heavy GOP opposition to the unchecked war funding seen under Biden over the last 18 months.

‘It’s definitely a very big point of contention,’ a senior House GOP aide told Fox News Digital.

While there’s broad support for supplemental Ukraine aid in the Senate, it will be an uphill battle in the House, where Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., promised his narrow majority that he would not bring a supplemental Ukraine funding bill to the floor. Many conservatives, still bristling from McCarthy’s debt limit deal with President Biden, have been vocally opposed to giving Kyiv more money without more accountability.

‘He can go with Democrats, but then the speaker puts himself in a tough spot if he chooses to do that,’ the aide said.

Last month, 70 House Republicans voted for an amendment in the annual defense bill that would cut off all funding to Ukraine, which has been defending itself against a Russian invasion for a year and a half.

The senior aide said they expect the supplemental request to be tied to a request for U.S. disaster relief funding, which could draw out some hesitant GOP votes. They also anticipated the likely funding for Ukraine to be between $13 billion and $18 billion, a smaller sum compared to the roughly $43 billion given by the U.S. so far. The White House did not respond to an inquiry confirming those details on Wednesday.

‘It won’t be $40 billion [in total]. If it is, I think that that is definitely [dead on arrival]. But they might be able to squeak through to a smaller one,’ the senior GOP aide said.

But wary conservatives who have wielded outsized power in the House GOP conference are already coming out against the expected announcement.

‘We can’t continue shoveling money out the door to support this conflict with no accountability or transparency,’ Rep. Dan Bishop, R-N.C., a member of the House Freedom Caucus, told Fox News Digital. ‘There are no strings attached and no plans to even define what victory looks like. Americans have had enough of Washington running headlong into endless wars.’

Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., accused Biden of having misaligned priorities and indicated he would not support additional funding.

‘Americans are struggling under ‘Bidenomics,’ watching a border invasion bring crime … and witnessing a corrupt two-tiered justice system, and this President wants billions more [funds] for Ukraine. Put Americans first,’ Good said in a statement online.

A second House GOP aide told Fox News Digital, ‘I don’t think there’s a lot of appetite for additional Ukraine funding right now.’

Even Republicans who have supported Ukraine aid in the past are cautious. Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., told Fox News Digital on Wednesday night, ‘I want the details of any supplemental funding request before I make a decision … Ukraine’s independence is in our national security interest, and I want to do what we feasibly can do, but I have no idea what the president is requesting.’

The House returns from its six-week August recess on Sept. 12, at which point McCarthy will have less than a month to pass the remaining 11 of his 12 promised spending bills before Sept. 30. If Congress fails to act on spending before the fiscal year ends, the government could risk a partial shutdown.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., told reporters this week that attaching supplemental Ukraine aide to a continuing resolution for federal spending is a possibility.

A continuing resolution would simply extend the current spending priorities for a certain amount of time. Republicans across the spectrum have opposed that option, calling it an extension of the Democrat policies of the last Congress.

‘I think people were mad enough at him about the deal that he cut with the White House on the spending,’ the senior GOP aide said of McCarthy. ‘Like, those conference meetings were intense after that – on both sides, you had the folks that were supportive of McCarthy angry at the people that weren’t and vice versa. I think it just gets worse if he decides to wrap it up into a [continuing resolution].’

‘The only way that happens and it’s not DOA is if McCarthy is like, ‘Look, I’m just going to pass it with Dems. And then I think you have a motion to vacate the chair pretty quick, personally,’ they said, referring to the option of calling up a vote to kick McCarthy out of the job and find a new speaker.

Fox News Digital reached out to McCarthy’s office for his reaction to Biden’s expected request but did not hear back.

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