Monday, October 4, 2010

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SgtWs

Monday, October 4, 2010

Post by SgtWs »

I’m on the road this week traveling through San Diego. This week’s technical analysis summary provided by Joey Fundora of courtesy of http://www.stockcharts.com and http://www.ChartAdvisor.com. I love hear Joey’s perspective and think you can learn a lot from it too.

The Weekly Report For October 4th - October 8th, 2010

Despite an ominous looking reversal candle that formed on Thursday, the markets basically took a rest break this week. They spent the beginning of the week trading in a fairly narrow range before gapping up and hitting new highs on Thursday, which also happened to be the end of the month and third quarter. After hitting new highs, the markets reversed and traded down for the day on an increase in volume.

This reversal has many traders worried of a possible top, and while this reversal may certainly mark a short-term high, the markets remain in a holding pattern above some support levels.

IN PICTURES: The S&P500 as represented by the S&P 500 SPDRS

(NYSE:SPY) ETF cleared its base a couple of weeks ago and has held above prior resistance near $113 for virtually the entire time. Despite a few blips, the overall action is constructive as the bulls have given up very little ground since setting a higher high earlier in September. The $112-$113 area is starting to firm up as support and should be an important level to watch moving forward. Despite the overall strength, the possibility does exist for a steeper pullback and the $110.50 level may be another area to watch on weakness. This is approximately where the 50-day moving average is and also a level that has seen much trading volume.

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The small caps as represented by the iShares Russell 2000 Index (NYSE:IWM) finally followed its market peers in setting a higher high this week, as IWM finally got above these highs on Tuesday. The $67.50 level was proving to be quite stubborn, but IWM managed to hold above it on the weekly close, which was an important development. This level held on a few pullbacks during the week, and will be an important area to monitor next week. A failure to hold this level could end up leading to IWM trading back towards the middle of its base near $64-65.

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Bottom Line
Despite some sign of weakness, the markets remain above prior resistance levels and have given up very little ground over the past couple of weeks. The tech stocks are the area showing the most weakness, but this should be expected as this group led the way higher and is the most tired. The next couple of weeks will be very important as a light volume pullback could set the stage for a powerful end-of-year rally.

However, October has certainly accounted for some scary market pullbacks in the past, and the recent stalling of the markets has many traders worried. Traders should monitor the recent breakout areas as any weakness that drives the major index ETFs below these levels would be a clear warning signal. If these levels hold, the benefit of the doubt would continue to lie with the bulls.

Have a Great Day!

By Joey Fundora


Joey Fundora is an independent trader located in South Florida. Joey focuses on using technical analysis techniques to uncover supply and demand imbalances in equities. To see more of his work, visit his site on Stock Chart Analysis.

At the time of writing Joey Fundora did not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this article.


Here is another perspective from Richard Rhodes and the Rhodes Report and Thomas J. Bowley (http://www.stockcharts.com ‘s weekly newsletter)……..

Richard Rhodes | The Rhodes Report

CLOUDS ON THE HORIZON

The S&P 500 rally off the late-August lows continues apace, although it would appear that it is stalling and a correction at a minimum is warranted. There are many who point to the 200-day moving average breakout and the "head & shoulders" neckline being pierced to the upside as being sufficient to call for higher and higher targets - a new bull market in full bloom. However, while these are major technical pattern breakouts to be sure, but they come under less-than-ideal circumstances as they haven't been confirmed by the OBV "on-balance-volume". We would look to this indicator for confirmation of the breakout, for OBV did indeed lead the S&P higher with its early-March breakout. It has not thus far, and we find this troubling.

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Given this non-confirmation, then we would turn to the developing bearish consolidation from May-to-Present as the overarching technical pattern, then point out the recent key reversal pattern to the downside that denotes exhaustion of the current uptrend. If we are right, then we'll get a minimum correction towards rising trendline support at 1060. However, we would further view this as doing excessive technical damage given the invalidation of the 200-day moving average and "head & shoulder" neckline breakouts. This would increase the probability of the bearish consolidation projecting lower lows towards 950. Moreover, were weakness were to develop from current as expected; it would turn the 40-day stochastic lower...further confirming weakness.

Therefore, while others look at sunshine ahead - we see clouds on the horizon, which has pushed us to the sidelines and a modest short position. We'll look to build upon it as prices invalidate the aforementioned breakouts. One should consider battening down the hatches at this juncture.


Thomas J. Bowley | Invested Central

IS THIS RALLY SUSTAINABLE?

Great question. There are as many arguments saying "no" as there are those saying "yes". Who do you believe? In August, our major indices were tumbling and it seemed like every media outlet was touting our doom and gloom. By the end of September, psychologically it seemed like a completely different market. There are a ton of reasons to like the market to keep doing what it's been doing. Price action has been superb. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) is based on price and the divergences are solid across all timeframes. Those weekly MACDs, which looked so ugly back on those April highs, suggested a rough summer ahead and that's what we saw. Currently, however, the MACDs on the weekly timeframes look super. They've all crossed back above the centerline and are pointing straight up. This tells us that bullish momentum will support higher prices.

But price action is only half the story. The other half is big too, and that's the side that deals with volume. I love the analysts who try to make excuses for the market and tell us that this time it doesn't matter and then proceed to lay out all the reasons why. VOLUME ALWAYS MATTERS. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise. It's the combination of price and volume that matters. Neither one without the other can be relied upon - in any market. So exactly what kind of what volume matters? Well, this is where judgment is involved. I'll be the first to say that you won't see the same type of volume during periods of market strength that you'll see during market selloffs. Fear is a very powerful emotion, one that makes most of us do things we wouldn't ordinarily do. And when fear involves the loss of money, really strange behavior takes over. The acceleration of volume during periods of panic will never be matched by the acceleration of volume during periods of market ascent. In other words, we shouldn't be looking for the type of volume we saw in May (during the flash crash) to confirm the recent market strength. It's very, very unlikely to happen. We should see above average volume though.

I spoke for weeks about the importance of 1131 resistance on the S&P 500. That was the June reaction high. In August, the S&P 500 rose to intraday highs between 1120 and 1130 on 7 consecutive days without once trading above 1131. In September, we saw five more consecutive sessions approach 1131 without a breakthrough. On September 20th, the sixth consecutive intraday attempt at 1131 finally worked. 13 times we tried to penetrate 1131 and we failed. The bulls tore down what appeared to be an impenetrable wall of resistance. Every technical analyst I follow talked about the importance of 1131 resistance. Given that this major level of resistance was lifted, the short covering would begin in earnest, right? Cash on the sidelines would finally pour in, right? Hardly. A summer's worth of resistance was taken out on......3.4 billion shares on the S&P 500. Let's put this in perspective. The average daily volume on the S&P 500 during September prior to the 20th was 3.7 billion shares. The average daily volume on the S&P 500 during August (a very slow month for equities historically) was 3.9 billion shares. The "long-awaited" breakout after 13 failed attempts occurs on 3.4 billion shares and we're supposed to be ok with it? Pardon me, but I can't get excited by the action.

I view the lack of volume as a negative and a significant red flag. It doesn't mean I'd be shorting. We do have to respect the price action. The market is sending me loads of mixed signals and they're not all related to price/volume. Consider sentiment for a moment. I like to follow the VIX and the equity only put call ratio. The latter rose to extreme levels back in April and that made it easier to call a top. Currently, the action in options is quite boring, if I'm being honest. There are no impending signs of a market top and that may be one of the reasons September was such a strong month.

It's hard to imagine that few would trade equity calls given the straight up move in September, but the facts speak for themselves. Leading up to the April 26th top, the equity only put call ratio averaged .47 month-to-date in April. During that same period, an average of 1.95 million equity call contracts were traded each day. Now let's fast forward to today. During September, the equity only put call ratio averaged .58 and an average of 1.13 million equity call contracts were traded each day. Does that sound like a complacent market that's ready to reverse big time to the downside?

Nope, not to me either. The VIX, on the other hand, is more bearish. Despite a significant rally in equities during September, the VIX finished the month slightly below where it was on September 2nd. Ordinarily, the VIX moves inversely to equities. While equity prices were rallying strongly throughout the month, it seemed as though VIX traders weren't buying into it. The VIX has stubbornly remained in the 21-24 range.

The message that sends to me is traders are looking for increasing volatility down the road. Increasing volatility is associated with weakening equity prices. So should we follow the equity only put call ratio and its flippant attitude or the lack of bullish behavior in the VIX? The VIX is included as our Chart of the Day for Monday, October 4th. CLICK HERE to see how the VIX is failing to confirm the bullish market action of late.

There's one really big problem this rally faces in my opinion, and it's the poor relative performance of financials. The financial group should act much healthier in an improving economic environment. Money should be flowing TO the group, not AWAY from it. While the media outlets would have you believe our economy is on the improve, and many economic reports would confirm this belief, the lack of money flowing to financials while an exorbitant amount flows to bonds simply doesn't support this argument. It's as if Wall Street is telling us one thing and doing the opposite.

They wouldn't do that, right? If banks and other financials aren't technically as strong as the remainder of the market, I have problems buying into the improving economy theory. Sorry. Look at this chart:

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In my view, when the financial sector is falling and its relative strength is also falling at the same time the overall market is rising, it's a MAJOR warning sign. We saw it in 2007 just before the market began its most recent bear market. We also saw the relative strength of financials weaken in April as the market neared a significant intermediate-term top. Currently, we have the market rising while BOTH financials AND their relative strength are dropping. I can't help but be cautious is this type of environment. If I leave some money on the table, then so be it. When it comes to preservation of capital, cautiousness always prevails over greed.

The price action remains bullish and we'll continue to do what we've been doing at Invested Central. That's trading fewer shares, mostly on the long side for now, but with both eyes fixated on the exit sign. If you adamantly wish to remain on the long side, consider hedging strategies to minimize risk. It wouldn't be prudent to trade this market without insurance.

Happy trading!

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Fund Prices2024-04-15

FundPriceDayYTD
G $18.18 0.04% 1.23%
F $18.64 -0.61% -3.02%
C $79.24 -1.20% 6.56%
S $77.27 -1.66% 0.23%
I $41.14 -0.29% 2.38%
L2065 $15.75 -0.94% 4.19%
L2060 $15.75 -0.94% 4.19%
L2055 $15.76 -0.94% 4.19%
L2050 $31.64 -0.81% 3.38%
L2045 $14.44 -0.76% 3.24%
L2040 $52.80 -0.71% 3.11%
L2035 $13.96 -0.65% 2.96%
L2030 $46.52 -0.59% 2.83%
L2025 $12.97 -0.32% 2.08%
Linc $25.35 -0.25% 1.78%

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