The wedge breaks down, but there's
a case for the bulls
Stocks drifted down most of the day, but a late spike higher kept
things under control. The Dow dropped "just" 60-points, but
this time the S&P 500 and small caps were the laggards.

The C and S funds were hit hard dropping 1.8% and 2.4% respectively,
while the I-fund, with the help of more weakness in the dollar, lost
just 0.45%.
The S&P 500 finally gave a convincing break to the downside of the
rising wedge. We expected a break, but we did not know when,
or how high the S&P could go first. Now we know, but the call
for more downside action may not be that easy.

Chart provided
courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
The chart looks bad in my
opinion, but it still hasn't moved below 851, the prior low.
If that breaks, that will not be a good sign.
Jason from sentimentrader.com brought up some interesting stats once
again (it really is a great site). He understands the strong
seasonal bias going forward, but he explains his main concerns, but
there's a twist...
From
www.sentimentrader.com:
1. We're in a bear market.
2.
The rally has been relatively weak, with the S&P not even at a
one-month high.
3.
The 21-day Up Issues Ratio is 23% above its six-month average.
All three of those issues seem like they should give us a bearish
bias looking forward, much more so when we combine them all
together.
So
let's look back over the past 68 years, and try to find any other
such occurrences. The table below highlights all such occurrences
since 1940, along with the performance in the S&P 500 going forward.

...
[this shows] quite a bullish tint going forward.
Even though the underlying breadth of the market was clearly
overbought in these precedents, the extreme nature of the buying
thrust was a sign that we were seeing nascent buying demand that
tended to continue, and had a predisposition to occur later in a
bear market rather than sooner. Three months later, only two
instances showed negative returns (and one just barely at that).
More surprising is that six months later, all but one were positive
and with an admirable average return of +15.1%. On average, the
worst the S&P dipped at any point during the next six months was
-3.7% compared to an average maximum gain of +16.5%, showing a
reward more than four times greater than the risk. Obviously, since
we're seeing greater volatility now than at any point in history, we
need to take these average returns with a grain of salt if trying to
apply them to our current situation.
- Jason Goepfert
I found that very interesting,
and combined with the bullish seasonal bias over the next week or
two, it certainly gives us something to think about.
If the S&P 500 can make a higher high over yesterday's high of
887.37, that may be enough for me to use my first transfer in
December. If it fails to make a higher high before the
deadline today, I will just wait another day to decide.
That's all for today. Thanks for reading. See you
tomorrow!
|