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 Last week's review
noted a sharp rebound in the indicators, as buyers flocked to the most
beaten-up market sectors. As we can see from the Cumulative
Demand/Supply measure (top chart), this rally has continued in the past
week, taking us toward overbought status before a pullback late in the
week. Such sharp rises out of a market bottom are typical for this
indicator and generally precede price tops, sometimes by a considerable
time period. It's when we see indexes making price highs with weakening
Demand vs. Supply that we generally look for sustained reversal. After
an initial upthrust such as we've had, it's generally worked out well
to be a buyer on dips in Demand vs. Supply. Note that you can track
daily Demand and Supply figures each morning via my Twitter posts.
A
similar rebound is evident in the number of stocks making new 65-day
highs vs. lows (bottom chart), as the vast majority of issues have come
off their lows. As long as we continue to expand the number of stocks
registering fresh new highs and don't see an expansion of stocks making
fresh new lows, it is premature to fade market strength. (That same
principle was instrumental in not fading the significant market
weakness during June and the early part of July). The 20 and 65-day new
highs/lows are also updated each morning via Twitter.
As
you can see from the charts, however, we seem to be hitting overbought
status at successively lower price levels in the S&P 500 Index,
which is characteristic of longer-term bear markets. My recent analysis
suggested that much of the bounce we've seen in stocks can be
attributed to short covering and sector rotation, not an influx of new
money coming into equities. Smaller cap stocks have tended to outperform larger caps of late; I would become particularly defensive should weakness from the larger issues infiltrate those smaller ones.
Longer
term, of course, the market is anything but overbought, as we have only
26% of S&P 500 stocks; 39% of small caps; 36% of mid caps; 33% of
NASDAQ 100 stocks; and 13% of Dow Jones Industrials stocks trading
above their 200-day moving averages. Note again how the larger the
index cap, the weaker the performance. Intermediate-term rallies of
late--even during the recent market weakness--have tended to peter out
after over 70% of stocks are trading above their 50-day moving
averages. We're not near that point yet. That measure is also updated
each AM via Twitter.
In
summary, we have made a strong upthrust from mid-month market lows and
have moved higher, as short-covering in weak sectors and a drop in oil
and other commodity prices has been supportive for stocks. If precedent
holds, this bounce has further to go, but so far the evidence points to
the distinct possibility that it will only be a bounce in a larger bear
market. Should the indicators show signs of weakening even as stock
prices are in their bounce mode, I would become more aggressive in
pursuing the downside. Should we test the mid-month lows with
significant divergences among indicators and sectors, I would turn very
strongly bullish.
Originally posted at: http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/
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