Sunday, April 5, 2009

S&P 500 Volatility

Follow Me on Facebook Follow Me on Tweeter

Isn't it nice to watch rising market. Last week on March 29, 2009 in my "S&P 500 Chart" post I have mentioned about increased possibility of the a correction down and we had it. Now, the stock market is up again. We see over the last month what I would call "one step down, two-three up" - we have shallow correction down and then strong continuation of recovery. Again, I repeat what I stated on March 22 in my "Short Technical Analysis" post:

...March 6, 2009 bottom was the last drop in the recession and now we are in the long-term recovery. In this case this bullish volume could be ignored and could indicate long term change in the stock market sentiment as it was in period from March 12 to March 21 of 2003...

That is exactly what wee see: big bullish volume surges during the index up-move are required to push indexes into a small correction, while even small bearish volume surge reverses the indexes back into the up-trend. It's not just about volume indicators. If you take a look at other technical analysis indicators you may notice similar picture: only after strong oversold signal the indexes go down and weak overbought signal push indexes back into recovery mode.

That is exactly what we see when to we do shorter term technical analysis: big bullish volume surges during the index up-move are required to push indexes into a small correction, while even small bearish volume surge reverses the indexes back into the up-trend. It's not just about volume indicators. If you take a look at other technical analysis indicators on shorter-term charts you may notice similar picture: only after strong oversold signal the indexes go down and weak overbought signal push indexes back into recovery mode.

To better understand this shorter term phenomenon we have to take a look at higher timeframe charts. Yes, 60-day chart is good and I use it in many cases to define the general market sentiment, yet, time on time look at higher timeframe is recommended.

From the 2-year S&P 500 chart (1 bar = 2 days) below you may see, that even we had high volume over the past month, from the long-term prospective it is still volume at the bottom – it is still bearish volume and the market is still strongly oversold on this chart.

S&P 500 chart

The stock market sentiment (sentiment of the Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI indexes) is positive on this chart. The next sensitive level for S&P 500 is $900 and for DJI is $9,000. We saw a lot of volatile trading around both these levels in period from October 2008 until January 2009.

On the same S&P 500 chart above I have plotted ATR (Average True Range) indicator to display the market volatility over the past year. I mentioned several times that volatility technical analysis is recommended for every trader. The purpose of this analysis is to recognize different stock market stages and adjust technical indicators and trading systems to the current market condition. By following the market volatility I would say:

  • Before June 2007 the ATR was in the range of 10-15 points – we were in uptrend.
  • In June 2007 the S&P 500 volatility doubled – first sign of recession.
  • The Volatility stayed on the June’s level (in the 20-30 points range) until August 2008 – From June 2007 until August 2008 we were in recession.
  • After August 2008 we had sharp increase in volatility (up to five times) with peak on October 22, 2008 – it was stock market crash (it was not any more a recession, it was crash).
  • We had extremely high volatile market in period from August 2008 until November 2008 – stock market crash.
  • Since then the S&P 500 volatility dropped down and basically stays on the June 2007 - August 2008 levels. I would call period from December 2008 until February 2009 as "after crash distribution" or as "levelling" when those stocks that still have to go down went further down (DJI stocks) and those stocks that were healthy and already undervalued remained flat (Nasdaq 100).

No comments: