TECHNICAL ANALYSIS:
PRICE/VOLUME COMBINATION:
I’d begin to take a different approach to equities. Money is flowing into key sectors and away from “risk off” types of assets, like treasuries. The bulls have already enjoyed a huge runup in price during October, so a bit of profit is to be expected at some point. The nature of any selling will be significant, but I fully expect bulls will support prices at critical areas like price support and 20 day EMAs.
Now that the S&P 500 has cleared 1256.88 price resistance (neckline) and done so on BIG volume (5 billion shares traded yesterday on the S&P 500), look first for support there on any pullback. Should that level fail to hold, the 20 day EMA, currently at 1220 and rising, will be become VERY important.
The biggest resistance across our major indices is the Russell 2000 at 773. There were multiple tests of that support level during 2011 prior to the early August meltdown. Small cap bulls would REALLY like to see 773 resistance taken out.
MACD DIVERGENCES:
Divergences really shouldn’t hold back the market action to the upside. Both 60 minute and daily MACDs will support higher prices near-term. While the weekly divergences have improved, they remain one of our more bearish technical indicators at present.
MOMENTUM OSCILLATORS:
The stochastics and RSI are as follows on our major indices:
Dow Jones: 92-66 S&P 500: 90-64 NASDAQ: 86-61 Russell 2000: 93-64
We’re a bit overbought on stochastics, but RSI has not yet touched 70, so there’s still room for more upside action before we become overbought on both oscillators.
SENTIMENT:
The VIX is near the flat line for today, but resting very close to 25, a far cry from the readings in the 40s from August, September and early October. The break below support is further support for the bulls as a falling VIX is generally synonomous with a rising equity market. Not only are we now trending lower on the VIX, but we’ve also closed below key support.
The equity only put call ratio (EOPCR) is at .58 as of 12:00pm EST and relative complacency has spiked back to 14.43%. Yesterday’s closing EOPCR was .51 and relative complacency was 17.47%. These are fairly extreme readings and will make much more upside action near-term problematic. If it does create a short-term pullback, other technicals suggest it will be a buying opportunity.
MAX PAIN:
We’ll revisit max pain the week before November options expire.
HISTORY:
The Bowley Trend is our historical indicator that alerts us to specific periods throughout the year when three of our key indices (S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000) tend to trend in one direction or the other.
All of our major indices have turned BULLISH and will remain that way through next week’s close.
We know there’s a tendency for rising prices this time of year, but as the earlier part of this week proved, tendencies are not always proven reliable. History simply provides us one other indicator that must be taken in context with other indicators.
SECTORS:
Most of our sectors are hovering near the flat line today, with consumer discretionary stocks a notable laggard. Part of that was the XHB (homebuilding ETF) touching big resistance in the 16.75-17.00 area and pulling back today. The XHB was down close to 3% at last check. The apparel retailers index is also down 2% after testing 2011 year-to-date highs yesterday. In my opinion, this is normal technical behavior. After pulling back a bit, another breakout above these key resistance areas would likely power consumer discretionary stocks to a relative leadership role vs. the S&P 500.
Semiconductors made a massive breakout on Thursday, easily clearing major price resistance at 385. The SOX gapped above this level at the open on Thursday and never looked back. 385 is now serious price support for this group, as is the rapidly rising 20 day EMA at 374.
After yesterday’s very poor technical showing, the U.S. dollar index appears poised to retest support in the 73.00-73.50 zone that was tested multiple times over the summer. A breakdown below 73.50 would likely lead to a flurry of buying in commodities.
ECONOMIC AND EARNINGS REPORTS:
September personal income was weaker than expected (0.1% vs. 0.3%), while personal spending matched consensus estimates at 0.6%. October Michigan sentiment rose approximately 6% to 60.9 while expectations were for little change from the prior month. So, economically, there was a little news to support both the bulls and bears.
INDIVIDUAL STOCK TRADES:
Two stories emerged during this quarterly earnings season thus far. Both Select Comfort (SCSS) and Unisys (UIS) posted excellent quarterly results recently and upped guidance. The market reacted quite favorably to both reports. I would expect we’ll see higher prices on both into year end. Therefore, I like entering both from current prices down to their respective gap support (top of the gap) levels, holding so long as their rising 20 day EMAs hold as closing support.
SUMMARY:
The market can move higher in a variety of different ways. The key is to determine if a move is sustainable or not. The only way to do that is to see how much money is flowing into the market and where that buying is being distributed. In April, we were very concerned about the market breaking to new highs because April was led in very large part by the three defensive sectors – healthcare, utilities and consumer staples. Those types of rallies are not sustainable because investors are showing no appetite for risk.
Thursday’s action, however, was VERY BULLISH. We saw wide participation, heavy volume and, most importantly, a MAJOR breakout in financials, especially banks. I know there’s a lot of deciphering that’s taking place right now regarding the European sovereign debt crisis, and the plan that was approved to attack it. But the bottom line is how our markets here in the U.S. reacted to the announcement.
In my opinion, the reaction could not have been much more positive. We always have to “play what we see”, not what we think we see or what we want to see. The action on Thursday was bullish enough that I believe we’ve put the lows in our rear view mirror. I believe we will see a much better stock market over the short- to intermediate-term because of the technical changes that have been taking place. While pullbacks will occur along the way, I’d tend to avoid trying to short stocks at this point. If that changes, I’ll be sure to pass it along to you. But given the positive developments, we will focus our attention into year end on the long side of stocks. The primary line of defense for the bulls will be the 20 day EMAs. Should we fall back beneath those key moving averages with a spike in volume, I may have to re-evaluate. Until then, I’m bullish.
I hope you have a GREAT weekend and are able to spend some quality time with family and friends!
Happy trading!