The Bears Are On Life Support And Hoping For A Fed Miracle

The end is at hand. Bears, just surrender now. Since the mid-June low (where I called the S&P 500 bottom), we’ve seen the fed funds rate jump from 1.00% to 4.75%. Of course, all we’ve heard since then is what?

Don’t Fight The Fed

Well, since that first 75 basis point hike on June 16th, the S&P 500 is UP, not down. We’ve had four 75-basis point hikes, two 50-basis point hikes, and two 25-basis point hikes. In my opinion, all of it was built into stock prices at the June 2022 low. How else do you explain the significant rate hikes over the past year and an S&P 500 that is 10% higher than it was when the first 75-basis point rate hike was announced? Stop listening to CNBC and the media clowns and pay attention to those who actually do research – like EarningsBeats.com. 2022-2023 isn’t the only period where we’ve seen a number of rate hikes coincide with stock market strength. Do you remember early 2016 when the market bottomed and then soared? That occurred during a period when the Federal Reserve raised rates 9 times:

This chart shows the “Effective” fed funds rate, which coincides with the direction of fed funds. Good thing we “fought the Fed” during that HUGE market rally. Ohhh! And what about the 2004-2006 period when the Fed raised rates at 17 consecutive meetings!?!?!?!?!?

Whatever you do, don’t fight the Fed! (sarcasm)

I’ve actually had plenty of folks come up to me and ask how the stock market can go up when the Federal Reserve is so hawkish – that the stock market has NEVER gone up when the Fed is hiking rates. My response? Do some research and STOP listening to the media. Many authors writing articles have never done an ounce of research, but those headlines drive lots of interested viewers! Quite honestly, that’s all that matters for most authors. Drive that viewership!

Market Rotation

Let me tell you what’s been happening “under the surface” of the stock market. Actually, before I do, let me show you why I told everyone that a cyclical bear market was a real threat as we entered 2022 at all-time highs. A huge part of it was sentiment (and I’ll get to that in a minute), but another big part was market rotation into defensive areas. As the S&P 500 printed its all-time high in January 2022, Wall Street was repositioning in those defensive areas. Lots of Monday morning quarterbacks will tell you how they pointed out the bear market. The problem is that most of them pointed out the bear market after it happened. What good does that do? I fired warning shots in December 2021. On the last day of that December, I wrote an article, “It Could Be A Very Rough Start To 2022”. That was just one day before the all-time high was set. I’ve had dozens and dozens of emails and feedback from EarningsBeats.com members, indicating how much money they saved by exiting stocks at the beginning of 2022. And it was as simple as following a few key charts. Here was one of them:

That red-dotted vertical line represented a MAJOR warning signal for stocks as the bulls’ last gasp came after significant bearish market rotation took place. Let’s see, should we follow the intermarket relationships or tune into CNBC? Those who used the former and avoided the latter did quite well in 2022.

But now the bulls are getting excited. Why? Because the intermarket relationships no longer favor the bears. Money is rotating quite bullishly into growth areas. Here’s the same chart as the one above, but this time for the past six months:

The growth ratios I follow are all soaring. Wall Street is repositioning into growth and this has been occurring throughout 2023. Ask yourself why. For everyone that’s now screaming “inverted yield curve” and “recession”, why would money rotate so heavily into growth stocks. It doesn’t make sense, and that’s why you need to pay attention to it.

But market rotation isn’t even the most bullish signal.

Sentiment

The equity-only put-call ratio ($CPCE) is my “go to” chart when I want to understand how retail traders feel about stocks. And when the 253-day (1 year) moving average of the CPCE begins to turn – and it doesn’t happen often – you need to take note. Extreme readings, either to the upside or downside, can mark major stock market bottoms and tops, respectively. Here’s how this chart looked on Saturday, January 8, 2022, at our 2022 MarketVision event:

The red arrows mark reversals in long-term downtrends. These are reversals off EXTREMELY bullish readings and sentiment indicators are contrarian indicators. They essentially tell you to “batten down the hatches” and grow much more defensive, or even think about shorting the stock market. The opposite is true when this 253-day moving average reaches a stop and begins to roll over. On the chart above, it doesn’t appear as though we’re quite ready to roll over, but I’ve used a User-Defined Index at StockCharts to track what I consider to be a much more reasonable CPCE. There were several outrageously-high daily readings in November and December of 2022, due to unusual hedging activities of institutions. They skewed the readings on the CPCE and needed some adjustment to more accurately reflect the true psyche of the retail trader. After making those adjustments, here’s how my “adjusted” CPCE chart now looks:

The long-term 253-day moving average is just beginning to roll over and if you look above at the earlier CPCE chart, you’ll see that when this rolls over, the S&P 500 begins to soar.

If the stock market was chess, and I was on the bull side, then I’ve been calling “Check” for a few months now. I’m calling “Check” one last time. We’re about to witness “CheckMATE”. It’s time to ditch your bearish thoughts. Stocks are about to scream higher. The Fed is our wild card short-term, but once the effects of this meeting dies down, stocks will soar.

If you’d like REAL research and facts and what truly drives the stock market, you need to join us at EarningsBeats.com. I’m never short on conviction. Even if you disagree with my views, I’ll provide you interesting insight to make better investment decisions. If you think knowing that a bear market was coming before it ever arrived would have helped you in 2022, then I believe following us at EarningsBeats.com in 2023 during a massive rally will prove quite beneficial as well. CLICK HERE to get your FREE 30-day trial started!

Happy trading!

Tom

Tom Bowley

About the author:
Tom Bowley is the Chief Market Strategist of EarningsBeats.com, a company providing a research and educational platform for both investment professionals and individual investors. Tom writes a comprehensive Daily Market Report (DMR), providing guidance to EB.com members every day that the stock market is open. Tom has contributed technical expertise here at StockCharts.com since 2006 and has a fundamental background in public accounting as well, blending a unique skill set to approach the U.S. stock market.

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#Bears #Life #Support #Hoping #Fed #Miracle

Market Trend Model Turns Bearish

This week, stocks started in a position of strength and ended in a position of weakness. While some groups, like semiconductors, have managed to remain strong, the major benchmarks managing to pound out a positive return for the week, the broad market message appears cautious-at-best by my read.

My main Market Trend Model is based on weekly exponential moving averages and helps me gauge the market trend on three time frames on the same chart. On Friday’s close, the medium-term model turned slightly negative, which means the model is now bearish on all three time frames.

This has only happened 11 other times since the tech bubble in 2000, and represents a confirmed distribution pattern for equities. Meaning it’s either a raging buy signal (if you think we’re in a secular bull market) or a serious sell signal (if you believe we’re now in a secular bear).

Allow me to explain.

Building a Market Trend Model

Years ago, I was trying to create a systematic model to mirror the subjective analysis I was doing every week. I’d always look at a weekly chart of the S&P 500 and ask, “What is the short-term, medium-term, and long-term trend?”

After lots of trial and error, I ended with something similar to the current setup using three sets of weekly exponential moving averages. Why did I choose exponential instead of simple moving averages? I’ll get to that below!


This chart will be one of many we’ll discuss in our upcoming FREE webcast, Charting a Financial Crisis. Join me on Tuesday, March 21 at 1:00pm ET for a visual review of the evidence and where opportunities can emerge in a period of great uncertainty. Sign up HERE for this free event!


For my model, I use the PPO indicator to show these three moving average combinations. If the indicator is above zero, it’s bullish. Below zero, and it’s bearish. Simple.

The long-term model turned negative in May 2022 after being confirmed bullish since June 2020. The medium-term model was briefly bullish in March and August of last year, then switched to a more consistent bullish reading in November. The short-term model has been volatile, switching often between bullish and bearish settings.

I should note that the medium-term model is my main risk on/off gauge. When its reading is bullish, that suggests a risk-on positioning and that I should be actively looking for new long ideas. When the model is bearish, that tells me to go more risk-off; in other words, I should focus more on capital preservation than capital growth.

So what does it mean that the model is now bearish on all three time frames? Now we need to bring in more history.

Counting the Bearish Trifectas

Let’s go back to the market top in 2000 and see how often this “bearish trifecta” has occurred.

We’ve had this “triple bearish” reading now 12 times since 2000. Only three of those happened before the 2009 market low, and the other nine came after. Four of the signals have triggered since the 2022 market peak.

What does this mean? Well, the left half of the chart shows the secular bear market that I would loosely define as 2000-2013. The first three signals occurred after the long-term model was bullish for years, and the rotation to a negative LT trend was an unusual event. Selloffs in 2001-03 and 2008-09 happened really accelerated after this bearish pattern.

After the 2009 low, this bearish trifecta could almost be considered a contrarian bullish signal, similar to a stock pulling back to an ascending 50-day moving average or the RSI dropping down to 40 during an uptrend. The bearish trifecta signals pretty much line up with every major bottom since 2009. So where does that leave us today?

Don’t Fight the Fed

Here’s where the macroeconomic argument comes in. If you believe that the market drop since the end of 2021 represents a major change of character for stocks, and that the Fed’s tightening cycle represents an end to the “easy money” era of the 2010s, then this could be just the beginning.

I would have discounted the likelihood of this scenario in a big way up until about a week ago. But with the latest financial crisis potentially still in its early stages, a larger waterfall decline from current levels now seems like a scenario we should all be considering.

On the other hand, if you think of 2022 as another buyable long-term dip along the lines of 2018 and 2016, and you assume that the Fed will reverse course quickly to alleviate further market downside (and you assume that it will work!), then perhaps this is yet another buy signal in the great secular bull market.

In either case, I’ve learned not to get too married to a narrative, and to consider all the potential outcomes. That has helped me to be better prepared for whatever comes next. And in this environment, it will definitely pay to be prepared!

By the way, interested in learning more about why I used exponential instead of simple moving averages for my Market Trend Model? Head over to my YouTube channel.

RR#6,

Dave

P.S. Ready to upgrade your investment process? Check out my free behavioral investing course!


David Keller, CMT

Chief Market Strategist

StockCharts.com


Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

The author does not have a position in mentioned securities at the time of publication. Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.

David Keller

About the author:
David Keller, CMT is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com, where he helps investors minimize behavioral biases through technical analysis. He is a frequent host on StockCharts TV, and he relates mindfulness techniques to investor decision making in his blog, The Mindful Investor.

David is also President and Chief Strategist at Sierra Alpha Research LLC, a boutique investment research firm focused on managing risk through market awareness. He combines the strengths of technical analysis, behavioral finance, and data visualization to identify investment opportunities and enrich relationships between advisors and clients.
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#Market #Trend #Model #Turns #Bearish

Long Bonds: Island Bottom and the Signal of Chaos

On March 7th, we asked “Will the Market Internals Turn More Bearish”?

While we focused mainly on Jerome Powell’s testimony, when he said “if the totality of the data were to indicate that faster tightening is warranted, we would be prepared to increase the pace of rate hikes,” in the same Daily, we featured the long bonds (TLT) and that the chart had a constructive exhaustion gap bottom in play. We went on to write that “the Real Motion indicator shows a positive divergence, as momentum is just under the 50-DMA while price is considerably below its 50-DMA.”

The question asked was, why would the long bonds bottom? Our answer:

“It could mean that while the short-term yields invert, the market is expecting a recession, hence a flight to safety in long bonds. We imagine that, should 20+ year bonds continue to go north, that too could be inflationary.”

We started the year introducing our report, “How to Grow Your Wealth in 2023.” In this Year of the Yin Water Rabbit, we began with:

You Can’t Run with the Hare and Hunt with the Hounds.

Little did we know then, how well this describes the Federal Reserve, the reversal in TLTs and the catalyst of 2023’s biggest dilemma of all — Recession or Stagflation: What Will It Be?

More from the Report: “For 2023 one word and two expressions keep coming up: Chaos, Trying to fit a square peg into a round hole, and Looking for Inflation in All the Wrong Places.”

Of course, the biggest headline this week in finance is the collapse of SVB and Silvergate. That sounds a lot like Chaos. The full fallout is unknown, but if the market has anything to say about it, both long bonds and gold rallied.

Folks calling for deflation are using Money Supply decline as an example. They are citing “higher for longer” concerning rates. They are talking about the strong labor market.

BUT… that is more of Trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.

Five Reasons Folks are Looking for Inflation in All the Wrong Places:

  • Climate-Natural Disasters
  • Food shortages could prevail-hoarding-sugar prices flying
  • Social unrest from high inflation, higher yields, losing credibility (banks, government) CLASSIC example this week.
  • Geopolitics-rising tides of issues-we hope not but be prepared.
  • Government spending/Federal Reserve-what are they going to do now? Print? Save the banks? Keep raising rates creating more liquidity crises?

The chart of the TLTs show price clearing the 50-DMA. That is an unconfirmed phase change to Recuperation. A second consecutive close above will confirm the phase change. Clearly the Leadership indicator tells a story, as bonds well outperform the SPY. And the Real Motion of momentum indicator, already with a positive diversion as mentioned on March 7th, now could stay in gear.

Could the picture reverse next week? Yes. However, to quote the Report: “The lesson we should take from this is not that inflation is destined to move to new highs in the months ahead (after all, nearly 30% of the time, it is, in fact, cresting!), but that we dismiss that possibility at our peril.”

Our Global Macro Quant Model bought gold. Even the algos know what’s up!


For more detailed trading information about our blended models, tools and trader education courses, contact Rob Quinn, our Chief Strategy Consultant, to learn more.

IT’S NOT TOO LATE! Click here if you’d like a complimentary copy of Mish’s 2023 Market Outlook E-Book in your inbox.

“I grew my money tree and so can you!” – Mish Schneider

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Follow Mish on Twitter @marketminute for stock picks and more. Follow Mish on Instagram (mishschneider) for daily morning videos. To see updated media clips, click here.


Mish in the Media

Mish joined the March 10 closing bell coverage on Yahoo! Finance, which you can see at this link!

Mish goes through the macro through key sectors and commodities in this appearance on CMC Markets.

Mish joins Mary Ellen McGonagle (of MEM Investment Research) and Erin Swenlin (of DecisionPoint.com) on the March 2023 edition of StockCharts TV’s The Pitch.

Mish talks women in finance for International Women’s Day on Business First AM.

Mish focuses on defense stocks in this appearance on CNBC Asia.

Mish points out a Biotech stock and a Transportation stock to watch if the market settles on Business First AM.

Mish joins Maggie Lake on Real Vision to talk commodities and setups!

Read about Mish’s article about the implications of elevated sugar prices in this article from Kitco!

While the indices remain range bound, Mish shows you several emerging trends on the Wednesday, March 1 edition of StockCharts TV’s Your Daily Five!

Mish joins Business First AM for Stock Picking Time in this video!

See Mish sit down with Amber Kanwar of BNN Bloomberg to discuss the current market conditions and some picks.

Click here to watch Mish and StockCharts.com’s David Keller join Jared Blikre as they discuss trading, advice to new investors, crypto, and AI on Yahoo Finance.

In her latest video for CMC Markets, MarketGauge’s Mish Schneider shares insights on the gold, the S&P 500 and natural gas and what traders can expect as the markets remain mixed.


Coming Up:

March 13th: Mish on TD Ameritrade with Nicole Petallides

March 14th: F.A.C.E. Forex Analytix with Dale Pinkert

March 16th: The Final Bar with Dave Keller, StockCharts TV

And down on the road

March 20th: Madam Trader Podcast with Ashley Kyle Miller

March 22nd: The RoShowPod with Rosanna Prestia

March 24th: Opening Bell with BNN Bloomberg

March 30th: Your Daily Five, StockCharts TV

March 31st: Festival of Learning Real Vision “Portfolio Doctor”

April 24-26: Mish at The Money Show in Las Vegas


  • S&P 500 (SPY): Our trading range theory was 4200-3200–maybe.
  • Russell 2000 (IWM): 170 next major support, 182 resistance.
  • Dow (DIA): 310 support, 324 resistance.
  • Nasdaq (QQQ): Unconfirmed bearish phase–confirms if second close under 290.
  • Regional Banks (KRE): Maybe overdone for now, but not necessarily done. 40 target, 55 resistance.
  • Semiconductors (SMH): Still in a bullish phase, over 240–maybe a pop for everything.
  • Transportation (IYT): 223 the 200-DMA major support–2nd in strength to SMH.
  • Biotechnology (IBB): Teetering on the 80-month MA at 121.
  • Retail (XRT): Under 64 remains weak–next big support at 56.00.

Mish Schneider

MarketGauge.com

Director of Trading Research and Education

Mish Schneider

About the author:
Mish Schneider serves as Director of Trading Education at MarketGauge.com. For nearly 20 years, MarketGauge.com has provided financial information and education to thousands of individuals, as well as to large financial institutions and publications such as Barron’s, Fidelity, ILX Systems, Thomson Reuters and Bank of America. In 2017, MarketWatch, owned by Dow Jones, named Mish one of the top 50 financial people to follow on Twitter. In 2018, Mish was the winner of the Top Stock Pick of the year for RealVision.

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#Long #Bonds #Island #Bottom #Signal #Chaos

Six Bullish Signs That a Short-Term Bottom May Be Brewing

The correction in stock prices may be gathering steam, and the potential for a full blown liquidity crisis seems to be rising. The reason may be that several big players in commercial real estate have recently defaulted on billions of dollars’ worth of loans.

Last week, in this space, I wrote: “Something happened to the markets around Valentine’s Day which could reverse the recent uptrend.” Well, the trend is increasingly wobbly, and we are getting new information which may explain at least part of what’s happening.

Real Trouble in Real Estate

The hotter-than-expected PCE (Personal Consumption Deflator) data grabbed the headlines. But it seems that its arrival on the scene may be more of a catalyst for an already churning dynamic in the market than the cause for the renewed selling on 2/24/23.

Think commercial real estate defaults.

Over the last few weeks, in this space, I’ve reported that several major real estate investors have faced increasing difficulties. I’ve also noted that it is possible that these and other commercial property REITs that have had problems with foreclosures may have been selling U.S. Treasury bonds in order to raise cash to fund operations, as their cash flow dries up due to rising vacancies.  

I’ve noted that Brookfield’s LA default (highlighted in prior link) has been well reported, while the even bigger Blackstone (BSX) is also having its share of problems along with Starwood (STWD). Brookfield’s (BAM) CEO Bruce Flatt is calling the L.A. default insignificant, while citing demand for premium space around the world, in places like Dubai, as more than enough to offset the L.A. issues for the company.

Six Bullish Signs that a Short-Term Bottom May be Brewing

The creep up in U.S. Treasury bond yields of late has been due to steady selling from one or more players. The question that matters most for investors is who is doing the selling and why. So far, it’s not clear. But, for now, things seem to have calmed down. And this pause has had a calming effect on the stock market, which may be a worthwhile short-term trading opportunity.

The selling in bonds may have come too far too fast, given the apparent rolling over of yields, on 3/3/23, as I discuss below. Thus, it follows that, if this is the case, then a short-term rebound in stocks is more likely than not.

As a result, there are six short-term indicator reversals in the works for the stock market. And if they hold, they will support higher stock prices. I describe them in detail below. The first one is the pulling back of the U.S. Ten Year note yield below 4%. The other five are related to the technical action in the stock market, including market sentiment, the action in major stock indexes, liquidity indicators, and the market’s breadth.

Meanwhile, although not out of the woods completely, homebuilder stocks may actually have one more price surge, as spooked buyers who have pulled back their horns due to the recent climb in interest rates could return, as they fear that rates will rise again in the not too distant future.

I have recently added several new picks including actionable options to my model portfolio. Check them out with a free trial to my service here.

Is Starwood the Canary in the Coal Mine?

I’ll discuss the homebuilders below. But first, a bit more on commercial real estate.

Investors are clearly losing confidence in companies that invest in commercial real estate. For instance, take the response to real estate giant Starwood’s (STWD) recently reported better-than-expected results. Normally, you’d expect some sort of rally due to the good news. Yet, instead of a move higher, the stock’s price mostly went nowhere. That suggests that confidence in the sector, even in companies that are holding their own, is starting to erode significantly.

Starwood delivered $140 million in profits, a 53% year-over-year increase based on $456 million in revenues, also a nifty 56% year over year increase. CEO Barry Sternlicht shed some light on the status of the commercial market, noting that the multifamily market is “solid” while the commercial market is “bifurcated.” He also added that the U.S. office market is being hampered by the “work from home” dynamic, while noting that the rest of the world isn’t this way anymore.

Perhaps the remark that should have eased investors’ fears was Sternlicht’s comment about Starwood’s exposure to office properties is only 13% of its total portfolio, while adding that the company has “almost no exposure” to New York and San Francisco, where the office markets are struggling more than other areas. He also noted that office markets in states like Texas are doing much better.

Instead, investors seemed to focus on Sternlicht’s comments about the Fed, where he noted that the Fed isn’t likely to bring inflation back to 2% without some sort of miracle occurring.

The stock had a token bounce 3/1/23, but almost immediately rolled over and resumed its downward path — only to then rebound once bond yields reversed on 3/3/23. We’ll see how this develops. Certainly, the stock is oversold. Thus, if bond yields take a breather, the shares could bounce for a few days to weeks.

At this point, though, it may pay to look elsewhere, as the Accumulation Distribution (ADI) and On Balance Volume (OBV) indicators are not offering much hope, as ADI’s recent bounce, an indication of short covering, has been overshadowed by the worsening On Balance Volume (OBV). Putting the two together, sellers are taking the opportunity to increase their selling into the temporary rise in prices due to short sellers abandoning the stock.

You can check out both long and short real estate and homebuilder picks here with a free trial to my service.

Why the 4% Yield on the U.S. Ten Year Note Could Help Homebuilders in the Short Run

The first potentially bullish sign of a turnaround in the markets is the action in bond yields.

For several weeks, I’ve been writing about the U.S. Ten Year note yield (TNX) and the crucial 4% yield area. Well, last week, 4% TNX crossed above the key line in the sand for a couple of days before reversing. What that means is that all market interest rates that are tied to TNX may again reset higher in the next week or so, at least temporarily, due to the lag effect. 

Among the most crucial rates are those related to mortgages. Already, we’ve seen the troubles in commercial real estate due to higher rates. More recently, we’ve seen homebuilder stocks roll over, as investors factor more decreases in existing home sales, and even new home sales which rebounded in January when TNX fell to nearly 3.5%.

Now, we’ll have to see if this was the top for the current move or whether yields will rise further after a pause. With payroll data due on 3/10 and CPI due out on 3/14, anything is possible.

You can see that mortgage rates have already retraced most of their recent drop and that, once again, the 7% yield is within reach. We’ll see what happens to these rates and what the response from potential home buyers is if there is a slight pullback in rates. My guess is that we will see more action on the housing front in the short term as homebuyers try to lock in current rates before the Fed raises rates again.

The homebuilder sector (SPHB) had been fairly steady in comparison to other areas of the stock market, but the move above 4% on TNX is had a noticeable negative effect on the sector. Not surprisingly, though, as soon as TNX pulled back from the 4% area on 3/3/23, homebuilder stocks rebounded.

That’s not really surprising because, for homebuilders and for sellers of existing homes, the recent and aggressive rise in mortgage rates created a panic scenario. Thus, the potential for a temporary reversal in rates may be beneficial in the short term. Indeed, if those buyers who recently pulled back their bids due to higher rates fear that even higher rates are coming in the not-too-distant future, it will likely spur a boost in the homebuilders shares.  

For a detailed explanation of how to manage your portfolio during a liquidity crisis, watch this Your Daily Five video.

Five Technical Signs Which Point to Short Term Bottom

The technical environment for stocks improved on 3/3/23 as bond yields reversed their recent climb and the NYAD, SPX, NDX, VIX, and XED all delivered some positive action. However, if there is going to be a meaningful short term rally, these five signs need to hold.

The New York Stock Exchange Advance Decline line (NYAD) broke below support at its 20-day moving average last week and found support just above its 50-day moving average. This is certainly encouraging, as is the close for NYAD above its 20-day moving average.

Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (SPX) bounced back above the the 4000 area after finding support at its 200-day moving average. This is also bullish.

The Nasdaq 100 Index (NDX) also found support at its 200-day moving average, adding to the short term bullish scenario.

Adding to the sigh of relief, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) rolled over, signaling that bearish sentiment is pulling back. 

When VIX rises, stocks tend to fall, as rising put volume is a sign that market makers are selling stock index futures in order to hedge their put sales to the public. A fall in VIX is bullish, as it means less put option buying, and it eventually leads to call buying, which causes market makers to hedge by buying stock index futures, raising the odds of higher stock prices.

Liquidity finally stabilized, as the Eurodollar Index (XED) has found new support at 94.75 after breaking below 95, which had been a reliable support level. Usually, a stable or rising XED is very bullish for stocks.

You can learn more about how to gauge the market’s liquidity in this Your Daily Five video.


To get the latest up-to-date information on options trading, check out Options Trading for Dummies, now in its 4th Edition—Get Your Copy Now! Now also available in Audible audiobook format!

#1 New Release on Options Trading!

Good news! I’ve made my NYAD-Complexity – Chaos chart (featured on my YD5 videos) and a few other favorites public. You can find them here.

Joe Duarte

In The Money Options


Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader, and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst since 1987. He is author of eight investment books, including the best-selling Trading Options for Dummies, rated a TOP Options Book for 2018 by Benzinga.com and now in its third edition, plus The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book and six other trading books.

The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book is available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble. It has also been recommended as a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month.

To receive Joe’s exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations, in your mailbox every week visit https://joeduarteinthemoneyoptions.com/secure/order_email.asp.

Joe Duarte

About the author:
Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst going back to 1987. His books include the best selling Trading Options for Dummies, a TOP Options Book for 2018, 2019, and 2020 by Benzinga.com, Trading Review.Net 2020 and Market Timing for Dummies. His latest best-selling book, The Everything Investing Guide in your 20’s & 30’s, is a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month. To receive Joe’s exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations in your mailbox every week, visit the Joe Duarte In The Money Options website.
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#Bullish #Signs #ShortTerm #Bottom #Brewing

Real Problems in Real Estate

The correction in stock prices may be gathering steam, and the potential for a full-blown liquidity crisis seems to be rising. The reason may be that several big players in commercial real estate have recently defaulted on billions of dollars’ worth of loans.

Last week, in this space I wrote: “Something happened to the markets around Valentine’s Day which could reverse the recent uptrend.” Well, the trend is increasingly wobbly, and we are getting new information which may explain at least part of what’s happening.

Real Trouble in Real Estate

The hotter than expected PCE (Personal Consumption Deflator) data grabbed the headlines. But it seems that its arrival on the scene may be more of a catalyst for an already churning dynamic in the market than the cause for the renewed selling on February 24, 2023.

Think commercial real estate defaults.

Over the last few weeks, in this space, I reported that several major real estate investors have faced increasing difficulties. I also noted that it’s possible that these, along with other commercial property REITs that are having problems with foreclosures, may have been selling U.S. Treasury bonds in order to raise cash to fund operations as their cash flow dries up due to rising vacancies.

I’ve noted that Brookfield’s LA default (highlighted in prior link) has been well reported, while the even bigger Blackstone (BSX) is also having its share of problems along with Starwood (STWD). Brookfield’s (BAM) CEO Bruce Flatt is calling the LA default insignificant, while citing demand for premium space around the world, in places like Dubai, as more than enough to offset the LA issues for the company.

Nevertheless, the Toronto-based asset manager’s stock is rolling over along with the market for sure.

If there’s a worsening of the situation, the default which we may look back on as the one that broke the camel’s back, is that of Pimco’s $1.7 billion worth of mortgage notes tied to buildings owned by Pimco’s Columbia Property Trust in Los Angeles, Boston, New York and Jersey City, New Jersey.

Together, Pimco and Brookfield have defaulted on nearly $2.5 billion. But there seem to be more on the way, as TheRealDeal.com recently reported the Chetrit Group just defaulted on an $85 million loan in the tony New York City Hudson Yards property. If things don’t improve soon, and margin calls escalate, we could see a complete reversal of the recent rally in stocks.

Just in case, I’ve added some new select hedges to my model portfolios. You can check them out here with a free trial to my service.

Bond Yields Test Crucial Resistance Levels: REITs Heading Lower

As I noted above, the commercial real estate market is facing serious headwinds. Moreover, if things don’t improve fairly quickly, the problems could spread to other areas of the market.

Meanwhile, the 10-Year U.S. Treasury yield ($TNX) has stubbornly remained above 3.8% and seems to be mounting an attack on the 4% area. This may be in response to selling by investors, who’re having trouble making payments due to an increasingly restrictive Federal Reserve. A move above 4% would be a major negative for stocks, which could trigger very aggressive selling.

The rise in treasury bond yields has spawned a major reversal in mortgage rates, which is likely to dampen or at least slow the potential bottoming of the residential real estate market.

The homebuilder sector ($SPHB) has been fairly steady in comparison to other areas of the stock market, but a move above 4% on $TNX could send mortgage rates to levels near or above 7%. If that happens, it’s likely to kill the housing market. Already, the homebuilder sector ($SPHB) is threatening to break below its 50-day moving average.

Even more dire is the situation in commercial real estate, where the Dow Jones Real Estate Index ($DJR) has just broken below its 50- and 200-day moving averages and could be headed significantly lower if there’s no improvement in the market’s liquidity. Note the close inverse relationship between $TNX and $DJR and how they both reflect on the S&P 500 index ($SPX).

For a detailed explanation of how to manage your portfolio during a liquidity crisis, watch this Your Daily Five video.

Test of Key Market Support is Unfolding

The New York Stock Exchange Advance Decline line ($NYAD) broke below support at its 20-day moving average last week and is now on its way to a test of its 50-day moving average.

Meanwhile, the S&P 500 easily sliced through the 4000 area and is now actively testing the key support band of 3950 and the 200-day moving average.

The Nasdaq 100 Index ($NDX) broke below the 12,200 and is now testing the support of the 200-day moving average.

For its part, the Cboe Volatility Index ($VIX) is still lagging the current bearish trend due to a larger focus by option traders on contracts which expire in short periods of time, while VIX measures the volatility of longer-term options. Still, VIX is showing signs that it wants to turn up in a hurry.

When VIX rises, stocks tend to fall, as rising put volume is a sign that market makers are selling stock index futures in order to hedge their put sales to the public. A fall in VIX is bullish, as it means less put option buying, and it eventually leads to call buying. This causes market makers to hedge by buying stock index futures, raising the odds of higher stock prices.

Liquidity tried to stabilize on February 25, 2023, but the Eurodollar Index ($XED) still closed below 95, which had been a reliable support level. Note the market’s most recent rally, off of the October bottom, has corresponded to this flattening out in liquidity. Note how the continuous decline in the Eurodollar index corresponded to the bear trend in 2022 and how the current liquidity reduction has impacted the market negatively.

You can learn more about how to gauge the market’s liquidity in this Your Daily Five video.


To get the latest up-to-date information on options trading, check out Options Trading for Dummies, now in its 4th Edition—Get Your Copy Now! Now also available in Audible audiobook format!

#1 New Release on Options Trading!

Good news! I’ve made my NYAD-Complexity – Chaos chart (featured on my YD5 videos) and a few other favorites public. You can find them here.

Joe Duarte

In The Money Options


Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader, and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst since 1987. He is author of eight investment books, including the best-selling Trading Options for Dummies, rated a TOP Options Book for 2018 by Benzinga.com and now in its third edition, plus The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book and six other trading books.

The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book is available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble. It has also been recommended as a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month.

To receive Joe’s exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations, in your mailbox every week visit https://joeduarteinthemoneyoptions.com/secure/order_email.asp.

Joe Duarte

About the author:
Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst going back to 1987. His books include the best selling Trading Options for Dummies, a TOP Options Book for 2018, 2019, and 2020 by Benzinga.com, Trading Review.Net 2020 and Market Timing for Dummies. His latest best-selling book, The Everything Investing Guide in your 20’s & 30’s, is a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month. To receive Joe’s exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations in your mailbox every week, visit the Joe Duarte In The Money Options website.
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Economic Modern Family: More to Prove to Traders

All in all, the key sectors (retail, transportation) have more to prove, especially by clearing the 23-month moving average or 2-year business cycle. This is a significant level, as these sectors proved recession was held off when they both held the 80-month moving average or their 6-7 year business cycle low.

So if, after 2021 was a huge up year and 2022 was a huge down year, 2023, SPX clears a 2 year cycle, it looks way better for the economy and market. If SPX cannot clear, we are back to predictions that SPX can fall as low as 3200. And stagflation predominates.

To date, there has been incredible resilience in the market indices. All the indices are in a trading range. SPX 4200 is the key resistance. 4100 is pivotal (above bias more positive, below bias more negative). And 3900 is the key support.

The chart is of the weekly price action. Particularly striking is not only the 4200 level, but also that we had an inside trading week last week (inside the trading range from the week prior). Furthermore, this week begins within the trading range of last week.

A range within a range means pause. It also means the investors/traders are getting smarter–holding off until the next direction becomes clearer.

Let’s look at more charts.

The CPI tomorrow could shed light on next moves. In the meantime, here is the monthly chart of the retail sector or our very own Granny Retail. Note how the blue line confirms that 2-year business cycle resistance, as if to say we are a bit optimistic about the future growth of the economy and hardiness of the consumer.

Nonetheless, Granny also says not so much, as we can easily get dismayed and break under the green line or (we are in a) recession line.

Of course if Granny is hesitating, the Transportation sector is as well.

Looking a bit more positive than consumerism, transportation, or the movement of goods and services, certainly defies recession. However, IYT sits between the 23-month and 80-month moving averages as well. Most of the family charts in fact, look the same. As if we are this close to a new leg higher, or a major disappointment for the bulls. 

Interesting to follow right now is how our MarketGauge’s  GEMS Model is positioned. GEMS has broad exposure to sectors, regions, bonds, indicies, and global macro assets.

The top ranked ETF using our Trend Strength Indicator (TSI, a measure of momentum using our proprietary software) is the Europe Index (VGK). However, that too sits right below its 2-year business cycle or 23-month moving average. It seems, pretty much everywhere we look, the market is paused waiting to see what happens next with inflation.

Please read the weekend update, as we believe the real pause is in inflation. And we see no reason to believe that central banks of governments are close to having it under control.


For more detailed trading information about our blended models, tools and trader education courses, contact Rob Quinn, our Chief Strategy Consultant, to learn more.

IT’S NOT TOO LATE! Click here if you’d like a complimentary copy of Mish’s 2023 Market Outlook E-Book in your inbox.

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Follow Mish on Twitter @marketminute for stock picks and more. Follow Mish on Instagram (mishschneider) for daily morning videos. To see updated media clips, click here.


Mish gives you some ideas of what might outperform in this new wave of inflation on the Friday, February 10 edition of StockCharts TV’s Your Daily Five. She has picks from energy, construction, gold, defense, and raw materials.

Read about Mish’s interview with Neils Christensen in this article from Kitco!

In this appearance on Making Money with Charles Payne, Charles and Mish discuss whether Powell can say mission accomplished.

Mish shares her views on how to approach the earnings announcements of Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet, and gives her technical outlook on how the earnings results could impact the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 in this appearance on CMC Markets.

Listen to Mish on Chuck Jaffe’s Money Life, beginning around the 27-minute mark.

Kristin and Mish discuss whether or not the market has run out of good news in this appearance on Cheddar TV.

Harry Melandri and Mish discuss inflation, the Federal Reserve, and all the sparkplugs that could ignite on Real Vision.

Jon and Mish discuss how the market (still rangebound) is counting on a dovish Fed in this appearance on BNN Bloomberg.

Mish discusses price and what indices must do now in this appearance on Making Money with Charles Payne.

In this appearance on TheStreet.com, Mish and JD Durkin discuss the latest market earnings, data, inflation, the Fed and where to put your money.

In this appearance on CMC Markets, Mish digs into her favourite commodity trades for the week and gives her technical take on where the trading opportunities for Gold, oil, copper, silver and sugar are.


  • S&P 500 (SPY): 420 resistance with 390-400 support.
  • Russell 2000 (IWM): 190 pivotal support and 202 major resistance.
  • Dow (DIA): 343.50 resistance, 338 support.
  • Nasdaq (QQQ): 300 the pivotal area, 290 major support.
  • Regional Banks (KRE): 65.00 resistance, 61 support.
  • Semiconductors (SMH): 248 resistance, 237 then 229 support.
  • Transportation (IYT): The 23-month MA is 244–now resistance 228 support.
  • Biotechnology (IBB): Sideways action 130-139 range.
  • Retail (XRT): 78.00 the 23-month MA resistance and nearest support 68.00.

Mish Schneider

MarketGauge.com

Director of Trading Research and Education

Mish Schneider

About the author:
Mish Schneider serves as Director of Trading Education at MarketGauge.com. For nearly 20 years, MarketGauge.com has provided financial information and education to thousands of individuals, as well as to large financial institutions and publications such as Barron’s, Fidelity, ILX Systems, Thomson Reuters and Bank of America. In 2017, MarketWatch, owned by Dow Jones, named Mish one of the top 50 financial people to follow on Twitter. In 2018, Mish was the winner of the Top Stock Pick of the year for RealVision.

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#Economic #Modern #Family #Prove #Traders

If This Is a Bull Market, the Dip Buyers Will Reappear

There are loud voices on Wall Street who continue to talk about bear markets. In my opinion, that’s a good thing. That’s because bull markets climb walls of worry. And the higher this rally goes, the more the bears seem to growl.

So, are we in a new bull market? A lot depends on what happens after the dust clears on the employment numbers. If the dip buyers come back strong, the uptrend will continue.

Taking Stock

The S&P 500 index ($SPX) is up some 19% from the October bottom, near 3500, and is currently trading above its 200-day moving average. That means that, when the S&P 500 closes somewhere above 4200, it will meet the definition of a bull market. For now, even after the employment report pullback, we remain in an uptrend.

Doubters in the recent uptrend got yet another wakeup call when the Fed raised interest rates, as expected, and Fed Chairman Powell sounded as pragmatic as he possibly could in his press conference. As a result, the market rallied. By Friday, when the employment report surprised those expecting signs of weakening on the jobs front, the market again sold off. However, by day’s end, there was no technical damage done to the market; at least, not yet.

Of course, there are plenty of reasons to be concerned about the future. First and foremost, there is whatever is next in Ukraine. Closer to home, we have the Fed. And even though the central bank may slow the pace of its rate increases, Mr. Powell isn’t likely to stop raising interest rates in the first half of the year. Still, private matter surveys such as PMI, ISM, consumer confidence, homebuilder sentiment, crashing home prices, layoff announcements, and similar data continue to suggest the economy is slowing.

The difference between government reports and private market data doesn’t add up, for sure. Indeed, there are some analysts who suggest that the BLS numbers are too statistically jiggered to be believed at face value. In fact, a recent report by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve cast serious doubt on the BLS numbers.

Bull Markets Are for Dip Buyers

When the news whipsaws the market, it’s important to focus on the general vibe of any market trend. For example, bear markets are unforgiving. Bad news is bad news. And good news is bad news. Rallies are often powerful but fizzle quickly. And the longer they last, the more investors become disillusioned.

Bull markets seem to find the silver lining, no matter what the news. Take, for instance, the recent Federal Reserve rate hike, which led to a rally. The silver lining was that the Fed raised interest rates by 25 basis points instead of 50 or 75 basis points. Moreover, bull markets are fueled by naysayers. Bearish analysts pound the table, calling for the end of the rally on a regular basis. Yet, it keeps going higher.

But perhaps the most salient feature of a bull market is the constant dip-buying behavior from investors. This is the mirror image of what you see in a bear market, where every rally is sold and new lows are a regular occurrence. So, the next test for this uptrend is whether, after the employment report pullback, the dip buyers reappear.

Trade What You See But Don’t Trust the Market

Because we are in an uptrend, and perhaps in the early stages of a bull market, it pays to focus on what the price charts are saying and how the markets respond to news.

The bond market is torn over the notion that the Fed will cause a recession by over-tightening interest rates. That’s why yields have dropped starting in October. At the same time, bond traders aren’t sure about what the robust BLS jobs report means for the economy and what the Fed will do in response.

The 3.5% yield on the 10-Year U.S. Treasury Yield index ($TNX) seems to be a good floor for bond yields at the moment. Thus, what happens at this chart point is very important. If yields break below this level, it will likely be in response to a very credible piece of economic data—either on the inflation front or on the employment front—that the economy is increasingly weak. An even more important point is the 50-day moving average. A move above that for the 10-Year yield would be a negative sign.

On the other hand, certain areas of the technology sector continue to power higher despite bad earnings misses from Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet (GOOGL), and, recently, Microsoft (MSFT). The strength has come from the semiconductor sector, and companies like Apple (AAPL) have managed to convince traders that the worst may be passed.

The bottom line is that focusing on what’s working while keeping an eye on how the markets respond to the news, is likely to be the best strategy for the rest of 2023.

I have plenty of picks that are working in the current market; check them out with a free trial here.

Uptrend Remains Intact: NYAD, SPX, and NDX All Hold Above 200-Day Moving Average

The Nasdaq 100 Index ($NDX) has moved too fast and has gotten ahead of itself over the last few days. On February 3, 2023, it closed above the upper Bollinger Band®, which is usually a sign that a reversal or a consolidation is due. A move back toward the 200-day moving average and the 12,000 level may not be out of the question. A break below the 200-day moving average would be very negative. For now, we are seeing normal technical behavior.

On the bullish side, note the upturn in on balance volume (OBV) as the accumulation distribution line accelerates. This combination of indicators highlights an increase in short sellers bailing out (ADI) and buyers coming in (OBV).

The New York Stock Exchange Advance Decline line ($NYAD) reversed its recent uptrend at the same resistance level in which it reversed in August 2022. The major difference is that this reversal has occurred above the 200-day moving average. A move back to the 20-day moving average would not be unexpected here.

Meanwhile, the CBOE Volatility Index ($VIX) is barely moving, which is a bullish sign. The index continues to make new lows, which is also bullish. When VIX rises, stocks tend to fall as put volume rises. It gives us a sign that market makers are selling stock index futures to hedge their put sales to the public. A fall in VIX is bullish, as it means less put option buying and eventually leads to call buying, which causes market makers to hedge by buying stock index futures, raising the odds of higher stock prices.

Get all the details on why my favorite indicator, the NYAD, is bullish on the market right here.

Liquidity, the market’s lifeblood, remains flat, which is better than when it’s falling, as the Eurodollar Index ($XED) has been trending sideways to slightly higher for the past few weeks. Note the market’s most recent rally, off of the October bottom, has corresponded to this flattening-out in liquidity. Note how the continuous decline in the Eurodollar Index corresponded to the bear trend in 2022.

The S&P 500 index ($SPX) remained above 4100, having now moved fairly decisively above its 20-, 50-, and 200-day moving averages. A move above 4200 would be a 20% move off of the October 2022 bottom.

As with NDX, the Accumulation/Distribution (ADI) On Balance Volume (OBV) combination suggests money continues to flow into stocks.


To get the latest up-to-date information on options trading, check out Options Trading for Dummies, now in its 4th Edition—Get Your Copy Now! Now also available in Audible audiobook format!

#1 New Release on Options Trading!

Good news! I’ve made my NYAD-Complexity – Chaos chart (featured on my YD5 videos) and a few other favorites public. You can find them here.

Joe Duarte

In The Money Options


Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader, and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst since 1987. He is author of eight investment books, including the best-selling Trading Options for Dummies, rated a TOP Options Book for 2018 by Benzinga.com and now in its third edition, plus The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book and six other trading books.

The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book is available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble. It has also been recommended as a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month.

To receive Joe’s exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations, in your mailbox every week visit https://joeduarteinthemoneyoptions.com/secure/order_email.asp.

Joe Duarte

About the author:
Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst going back to 1987. His books include the best selling Trading Options for Dummies, a TOP Options Book for 2018, 2019, and 2020 by Benzinga.com, Trading Review.Net 2020 and Market Timing for Dummies. His latest best-selling book, The Everything Investing Guide in your 20’s & 30’s, is a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month. To receive Joe’s exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations in your mailbox every week, visit the Joe Duarte In The Money Options website.
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#Bull #Market #Dip #Buyers #Reappear

Earnings Analysis: GOOGL, AMZN, AAPL

Three big bellwether stocks announced earnings on the same day, after the close, and they all missed estimates. Does this mean the Technology sector or the broader market will head lower?

Not necessarily. From a technical perspective, ahead of earnings, the charts of Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Apple (AAPL) were leaning towards being bullish. Here’s a technical perspective.  

Alphabet (GOOGL): What to Watch Out For

GOOGL’s breakaway gap on February 2 indicates some significance for the following reasons. It betrays strong bullish sentiment on the day it’s slated to report earnings after hours. It also places share prices above three critical levels of resistance:

  • The 200-day moving average
  • The December 2 (2022) high leading to the most recent rounding bottom, and 
  • The October 25 high preceding the bearish swing, which brought GOOGL stock to its lowest 12-month level.

CHART 1: WILL GOOGLE STAY ABOVE ITS 200-DAY MOVING AVERAGE? We’ll see how the stock reacts after its earnings report. If it goes above it, the 200-day MA could become a support level. Chart source: StockChartsACP. For illustrative purposes only.

  • Depending on the scenario, gaps often get filled, and the outcome following the fill depends on whether the initial bullishness was driven by real anticipated value or overextended exuberance.
  • For the current swing to develop into a stronger trend, GOOGL should remain above its 100-day moving average. 
  • A move below the January 6 swing low (at 84.86) would likely invalidate any uptrend thesis.

Amazon (AMZN): What to Watch Out For

Adding the Ichimoku cloud overlay to the price chart takes care of some of the critical points a trader should be looking for. The cloud helps identify trend direction, support, and resistance levels. 

While Amazon’s stock price may be tempting to buy given it gapped up to its 200-day moving average, it’s best to take a step back and look at the bigger picture (see chart below).  

CHART 2: AMAZON IN THE CLOUD. The Ichimoku cloud overlay identifies support and resistance levels and trend direction. Chart source: StockChartsACP. For illustrative purposes only.

Consider the following:

  • Price is trading above the shaded band, which means the top line of the band (green line) would be your first support level. The bottom band line (red line) would be the second support level. 
  • The base line (cyan) can be used to confirm a trend. Since AMZN’s stock price is above the base line, it’s an indication that price could go higher. 
  • The conversion line (pink) is another trend confirmation indicator. The direction of this line coincides with trend direction. In the chart of AMZN stock, the pink line is trending higher, which is another positive for the stock price.

There are many other ways to use the Ichimoku cloud indicator but its main purpose is to act as a measure of future price movement which is why you see the cloud extending beyond the prevailing price bar. You can see a bullish cloud forming with the red line above the green line. There’s also a lagging span line (white). While it’s lagging, it still is useful in identifying price direction. It’s trending up and is above the price charts from 26 bars ago. That’s another positive indication.

Any reversal in any of these lines or a reversal in the crossover should alert you to a potential reversal in price direction. 

Apple (AAPL): What to Watch Out For

Out of the three, Apple’s stock price has held up pretty well. Since reaching a high in January 2023, the stock price has seen slightly lower highs and lows but the stock has held above its 50% Fib Retracement levels (see chart below). 

CHART 3: A BULLISH BIAS IN APPLE? The stock price is approaching its 23.6% Fib retracement level and there’s a chance that price could move higher. Chart source: StockChartsACP. For illustrative purposes only.

  • If you look at the Fib retracement levels from the 2020 low to the January 23, 2022 high, price is approaching its 23.6% level (upwards), having bounced slightly above the 50%  retracement level. If Apple’s stock price crosses above it, then it would likely become a support level, considering it’s been tested as a resistance level about five times since 2021.
  • Note that from December 13 to the present day outlines a V Bottom. If Apple stock pulls back in the next few days to test its V bottom neckline (white trendline), you at least have some idea as to the prevailing market sentiment, which currently leans bullish.
  • The relative strength index (RSI) and stochastic oscillator indicate that AAPL may be approaching “overbought” levels. That might make you think that prices may pull back but remember, these oscillators can sustain oversold readings for a lengthy period of time (so exercise caution).

Another thing to consider: Apple’s earnings, along with those of Amazon, Alphabet, and other stocks within or correlated to big tech may play a significant role along with or despite the prevailing technical readings. This is a case where fundamentals may or may not play along with trader sentiment as revealed by the pre-earnings technical setup. 

Trade With Caution

Earnings are tricky to trade, particularly for those attempting to enter early on to catch the upside. Based on the Nasdaq’s performance compared to the S&P and Dow, the overall market bullishness seems to be favoring tech-heavy names. Today’s triple earnings, following Meta’s positive surprise, may boost all three stocks. But they could also pull back to their support levels. So, just set your stops before you enter any trades. 


  

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

Jayanthi Gopalakrishnan

About the author:
Jayanthi Gopalakrishnan is Director of Site Content at StockCharts.com. She spends her time coming up with content strategies, delivering content to educate traders and investors, and finding ways to make technical analysis fun. Jayanthi was Managing Editor at T3 Custom, a content marketing agency for financial brands. Prior to that, she was Managing Editor of Technical Analysis of Stocks & Commodities magazine for 15+ years.
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Karl Montevirgen

About the author:
Karl Montevirgen is a professional freelance writer who specializes in finance, crypto markets, content strategy, and the arts. Karl works with several organizations in the equities, futures, physical metals, and blockchain industries. He holds FINRA Series 3 and Series 34 licenses in addition to a dual MFA in critical studies/writing and music composition from the California Institute of the Arts.
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#Earnings #Analysis #GOOGL #AMZN #AAPL

The S&P 500 Leaves the 200-Day Behind

How much weight should we put on the fact that the S&P 500 index powered above its 200-day moving average this week? If history is any indication, then this is actually a fairly momentous occasion. Unless it’s a repeat of March 2022, in which case we’re obviously poised for a push to new lows any minute now.

To be clear, any signal considered bullish or bearish is based on the average reaction back through the history of the financial markets. So, instead of a signal always being 100% bullish or 100% bearish, I tend to think in terms of tendencies. In short, we should ask ourselves, “What tends to happen after this signal has occurred?”

Today, we’ll dig into a brief history of the S&P 500 and its 200-day moving average.

The 200-Day as a Market Barometer

One of my mentors used to say, “Nothing good happens below the 200-day moving average.” To rephrase, it pays to be patient for a move above the 200-day moving average, because, until then, it’s at best a bear market rally.

Way back in 2021 (actually not that long ago!), the SPX stayed well above its 200-day moving average. In fact, it often tested the 50-day moving average, and pretty much every one of those tests ended up being a decent buying opportunity.

In January 2022, when the S&P 500 broke below its 50-day and 200-day moving averages, it certainly suggested that something was different. This is the sort of “change of character” that I hope to identify in my daily and weekly market analysis routines. Attempts to break out above the 200-day in August and November 2022 failed to see any upside follow through. So, when I see the price break above this moving average earlier this month, then the subsequent followthrough with higher swing highs over the last five trading days, I have to consider that a bullish tell.

Going into next week, I’d love to see a confirmed break above the 4100 level, which, I believe, would open the way to a retest of the August 2022 high around 4300. But let’s continue our analysis of market history and consider some alternative approaches to the 200-day moving average.

The Moving Average Crossover Technique

While there is often plenty of noise produced when we achieve a “golden cross” or “death cross” on the major averages, I have found them to not be the most effective ways to determine uptrends and downtrends. However, while the timing may not be perfect on these signals, I would admit that the occurrence of a golden cross next week (which seems highly likely if we rally further around the Fed meeting) would confirm even more strength in equities off the October low.

You’ll notice on this chart that, when the 50-day moving average (blue) crosses above the 200-day (red), it’s often way after the bottom. And that makes sense for a trend-following indicator! The most recent buy signals were in July 2020 (well after the March low) and April 2019 (after a big rally off the December 2018 low).

So while waiting for the golden cross may not feel like the best timing signal ever created, the fact remains that, in a secular bull market phase (which we are arguably still in), these signals often lead to much stronger gains.

We could also strip out the 50-day moving average and just look at the slope of the 200-day moving average. On The Final Bar this week, my guest Willie Delwiche did a great job explaining why the slope of the 200-day can be an important data point.

You can easily see the relationship between the slope of the 200-day moving average (in purple on this chart) and the trend of highs and lows in the raw price data (in light gray). So when the 200-day has been sloping lower and then turns higher, this could be a better indication of an upside follow-through than some of the other techniques we’ve discussed.

Putting It All Together With Other Indicators

You have to remember, however, that moving averages don’t just happen in a vacuum. There are other indicators we can use to confirm or deny the signals we’re finding in a simple analysis of the moving average patterns.

Let’s add the PPO and RSI on the weekly S&P 500 chart and see how the current configuration relates to other market declines. Now that we’re using a weekly chart, I’m showing the 40-week moving average (similar to the 200-day moving average and shown in red) as well as the 150-week moving average in green.

If you look at 2022-2023 and compare it to 2015-2016 and 2007-2008, you’ll notice that these factors are all the same for the S&P 500 index:

  • A new all-time high, followed by a lower high and a failure to hold the 40-week moving average, which then turns lower
  • A retest of the 40-week moving average from below, then a break below the 150-week moving average
  • The PPO gives a buy signal, followed soon after by another sell signal
  • The RSI shows a bullish momentum divergence

But then the patterns start to diverge a bit. In 2008, the S&P failed to get back above the 40-week moving average. There was no additional buy signal from the PPO, and the RSI plunged into the oversold territory as the SPX accelerated lower for the next six months.

In 2016, however, the S&P briefly dipped below the 150-week moving average before powering back above this long-term barometer. The index then moved above its 40-week moving average, the RSI pushed above 50, and the PPO generated a new buy signal.

Now look at the current configuration, and you’ll notice that it matches much more closely to 2016 than 2008. The conclusion? This may be just the beginning of a bullish recovery as positive momentum builds for stocks.

Want to digest this article in video format? You can find it over at my YouTube channel.

RR#6,

Dave

P.S. Ready to upgrade your investment process? Check out my YouTube channel!


David Keller, CMT

Chief Market Strategist

StockCharts.com


Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional. 

The author does not have a position in mentioned securities at the time of publication.   Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.

David Keller

About the author:
David Keller, CMT is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com, where he helps investors minimize behavioral biases through technical analysis. He is a frequent host on StockCharts TV, and he relates mindfulness techniques to investor decision making in his blog, The Mindful Investor.

David is also President and Chief Strategist at Sierra Alpha Research LLC, a boutique investment research firm focused on managing risk through market awareness. He combines the strengths of technical analysis, behavioral finance, and data visualization to identify investment opportunities and enrich relationships between advisors and clients.
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#Leaves #200Day

The S&P 500 Showing More Bullish Signals, Watch This Key Level

Say what you want, but January has proven to be a very reliable predictor of U.S. stock market action from February through December since 1950 and, with just a little more than a week left to go in January 2023, market action is suggesting that we’re going to have a very strong year. It’s just one more historical fact that suggests higher prices are ahead of us. I’ve also mentioned recently that of the previous 13 bear markets since 1950, excluding the 2022 cyclical bear market, 6 ended during the calendar month of October. If October 2022 proves to be the ultimate low, that’ll make 7 out of 14, 50% of all bear markets. That’s another piece of compelling evidence that the bear market low is IN.

If I step away from historical tendencies, however, and simply look at the S&P 500 chart, the downtrend line since the beginning of 2022 is what nearly every technician is watching:

The downtrend line currently intersects at approximately 4000, depending on how you draw your trend line. In my view, that’s the first critical level to clear in order to confirm the end of the bear market decline. Check out the subtle difference that we’re seeing in January 2023, though. After the last 3 death crosses and bearish PPO centerline crosses, we saw selling accelerate and new lows quickly reached. We’re seeing something entirely different this time. The PPO has turned back above centerline resistance in bullish fashion and we’ve also seen a bullish “golden cross” just a few weeks after the death cross suggested we’d head lower. What’s happening? Well, I can tell you what I think is happening. We’re chopping in preparation for a solid year ahead. Many are waiting for price action to confirm what’s been taking place beneath the surface for months. I told our members and the entire investing public that June 2022 had the characteristics of a major market bottom and that it was time to concentrate on long positions, letting go of the bear mentality that was appropriate during the first six months of 2022. I don’t think I could have been much clearer:

Did we eventually move slightly lower in October? Yes we did. I’m still pretty happy, though, with my signals that suggested shorting the S&P 500 at the beginning of the year and moving to a long position in mid-June 2022. The S&P 500 closed lower than 3636 on 5 separate trading days from September 30th through October 14th. Since my bottom call, the S&P 500 has closed higher on 143 different trading days. I think I’ve been on the right side of the market since June and 2023 will prove that the October 2022 low was THE ultimate bear market low. Waiting for further signals, in my humble opinion, will result in lower returns, but I suppose time will tell. I remain very bullish and said throughout 2022 that the bear market was of a cyclical (short-term) nature.

Another critical technical component that tells me the worst is behind us is that we’re seeing buying with bad news. The October low saw a massive reversing candle after a much-worse-than-expected September CPI inflation report. After a gap lower, buying was intense ALL DAY LONG. Check it out:

Another very positive development is that after a brutal 4th quarter for many growth stocks, the sun is suddenly shining in 2023. The 10-year treasury yield ($TNX) set a new recent low and this time, growth is performing much better than value. That’s a very important change in market character, because many of these growth stocks have large market cap valuations and can much more easily move our benchmark indices like the S&P 500. Check out the sudden improvement in growth stocks in 2023:

The drop in the TNX in November/December didn’t have quite the same bullish effect on large cap growth stocks (IWF) that the June/July drop had. Growth vs. value (IWF:IWD), however, is moving solidly higher in 2023, clearly benefiting from the lower TNX. I have highlighted in red the months of negative relative momentum that growth stocks have experienced. While things have certainly improved, we haven’t seen any significant confirmation of long-term renewed strength. The bulls still have work to do.

An encouraging part, however, has been key individual stocks’ resilience to bad fundamental news. Take Salesforce.com (CRM) as an example. It downtrended throughout 2022 and was the Dow Jones worst-performing component stock for the year. But then, after announcing 8,000 layoffs, or 10% of its work force, CRM rallied strongly:

The green arrow highlights the successful 20-day EMA test the day that the layoffs were announced and you can see the subsequent rally. CRM has now broken above its recent downtrend channel and is on the verge of clearing important relative strength resistance vs. its software peers ($DJUSSW).

Last week, at our quarterly “Sneak Preview: Q3 Earnings” event, I highlighted Netflix (NFLX) as one of my favorite companies heading into earnings season. NFLX absolutely loves the month of January and January 2023 has been no exception. Check out this seasonality chart:

Over the last 20 years, NFLX has averaged gaining 15.7 during the month of January. That’s incredible and is the reason why NFLX was our favorite seasonal stock for January 2023 and passed along to our EB.com members to open the month. Those bullish thoughts proved to be correct as NFLX is currently higher by approximately 17% this month. Quarterly results were reported on Thursday and were solid, as expected.

Tomorrow, I’ll be hosting our “Q4 Earnings” event at 4:30pm ET and I’ll be providing my favorite 10 companies that will report earnings over the next 2-3 weeks as earnings season really heats up. I’ll also disclose the 10 companies that I’d completely avoid heading into earnings. I’ll discuss dozens of other companies reporting quarterly results as well. I use a key technical indicator to evaluate companies prior to their quarterly earnings report and it’s proven to be extremely effective in predicting reported results. If you’d like to join me tomorrow, simply CLICK HERE and sign up for a FREE 30-day trial. You can check out our entire service at no cost for an entire month! I hope to see you tomorrow!

Happy trading!

Tom

Tom Bowley

About the author:
Tom Bowley is the Chief Market Strategist of EarningsBeats.com, a company providing a research and educational platform for both investment professionals and individual investors. Tom writes a comprehensive Daily Market Report (DMR), providing guidance to EB.com members every day that the stock market is open. Tom has contributed technical expertise here at StockCharts.com since 2006 and has a fundamental background in public accounting as well, blending a unique skill set to approach the U.S. stock market.

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#Showing #Bullish #Signals #Watch #Key #Level