In the middle
What a week! Tuesday saw a huge Election Day rally.
Wednesday and Thursday greeted Wall Street with one of the worst
two-day performances it has ever experienced. Then stocks
rebounded strongly on Friday recouping some of the losses with a 3%
rally.
The
S&P 500 is now sitting almost directly in the middle of what we
are calling a trading range. We could see 1000 next, or 850.
It really is a tough call with many of the overbought/oversold
indicators sitting near neutral at the moment.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
I circled the high
volume capitulation day above, which is still holding as the low of
this bear market. That low is just that, a low for now, as it
does not indicate THE bottom. Taking a look at the bear market
of 2000-2002, there were several high volume reversals that led to
strong rallies, but the bear market's downward trend continued.
The 17% rally we have seen from bottom to top since the October 10
low is typical. It can still go higher, but there is no reason
to believe that we have seen THE bottom - not based on this data
anyway.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
As far as sentiment goes, the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey spiked
sharply in favor of the bulls last week (which is bearish for stocks
from a contrarian perspective). The 45% bullish reading, and
the 1.36 bulls to bears ratio were the highest readings since last
May. The last two moves toward these levels came near
short-term tops.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
Surveys tell us what people are saying they believe market will do.
Rydex mutual fund assets tell us what people are actually doing with
their money, and they are in agreement with the survey. Based
on where the Rydex traders are putting their money now, they are as
bullish as they have been all year. Actually the 0.87 reading
is the highest (on the chart / lowest in number) since late 2006.
Again, this type of optimism has come near short-term market peaks.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
The dollar has been
consolidating from the explosive move higher in October. The
pennant / wedge it has been forming is a continuation pattern,
meaning it tends to breakout in the direction of the trend before it
formed the pennant. It could float within the pennant for a
few more days, but we'd look for a breakout to the upside when all
is said and done. It is not uncommon for these wedges to
experience an initial failed breakout in the opposite direction,
before it corrects and heads back to the actual breakout.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
I am not overly confident of the direction of the market in the
coming days, but I am still leaning toward seeing a new low
eventually. That doesn't mean we won't see a nice rally first.
I am just reluctant to be a buyer this early in the month. I
think I would rather be a buyer toward the end of the month when the
Thanksgiving rally kicks in. Once again, the TSP limits are
affecting how I am playing this.
That's all for today.
Thanks for reading, and I'll see you back here tomorrow!
|