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Today's Commentary (Short Term Outlook) |
Dow 10,000? Yawn
Stocks were flat to modestly higher
yesterday during the light volume holiday trading. The Dow closed
up about 21-points, while the Nasdaq was down slightly. The TSP
did not post new share prices because of the holiday so they will
combine today's action in with Monday's and give us a final price later
today.
The S&P 500 was up a respectable 0.4% and posted a new 52-week closing
high. As I mentioned, volume was very light so I don't want to
make too much of the action, but I did notice that the new high is not
being confirmed by the MACD indicator again. It's a negative
divergence and something to keep an eye on.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
I am back in defensive mode despite the continued strong trend upward.
There are some cracks in the bullish case but fighting this bull market
has not been a very good strategy this year. I've made some decent
gains with a few trades over the last few months and I am not in the
giving back mood. It may cost me by missing out on a rally but
I'll wait for another set up near support, although with the ever
decreasing range of the rising wedge, I would not be surprised if
support doesn't hold during the next pull back.
New highs are good of course, but when I hear the all of the hoopla again
about Dow 10,000, it bores me. The cheerleaders on CNBC will do
anything for ratings, because after the wild year in 2008, this year has
been rather dull volatility-wise - despite the big gains. Maybe Dow 10,000 will get
people excited? I doubt it. We've seen that show many times over
the last 10 years. The first time was in 1999 and the thrill is long
gone.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
Now, Dow 14,000 might get us excited.
The dollar remains below resistance, oil has been on the rise, and while
the bond market was closed yesterday, on Friday bond yields shot up
pushing bond prices and the F-fund down.
You can see below that the yield on the 10-year note had broken below
the 3.25% support (shown as 32.5) last week but on Friday it jumped back
above support and the 200-day EMA, and now trades just below the 50-day
EMA.
Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The downside trend is still intact but it wouldn't take much more upside
action in yields to break that resistance and move above the 50-day EMA.
That would be bad for the F-fund. The F-fund is in a good risk /
reward position similar to where stocks were at the beginning of
October. It could be a good buying opportunity, but if yields
don't stop moving up very soon, all bets are off for the F-fund.
Last week's TSP Talk Sentiment Survey
came it at 55% bulls, 34% bears for a 1.62 to 1 bulls to bears ratio.
That is a neutral reading so the system remains on a buy signal this
week, but the 1.62 to 1 is the highest (most bullish) ratio since
December of 2007, which could be a warning sign. An official sell
signal is not given in a bull market until the ratio hits 2.0 to 1.
That's all for today. Volume should
pickup the rest of the week and we will see if the bulls can continue
the momentum higher. Thanks for reading.
We'll see you back here tomorrow.
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