Showing posts with label McClellan Oscillator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McClellan Oscillator. Show all posts

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Technical Analysis

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In my last "Trading Strategy" post on November 8, 2009 I have mentioned a possibility of the indexes (Nasdaq 100, S&P 500, DJI, etc) stacking in a sideway action at their October's high levels. The next day, on Monday November 9, 2009 we still had a strong advance and since then the rest of the week we may see that the indexes have been trading mainly sideway (see the S&P 500 chart below): the S&P 500 index exactly at its October's high levels, the Nasdaq 100 index a few points higher and the DJI index has made new 13-month high.

The S&P 500 Chart with elements of technical analysis:
Selling/Buying Volume Oscillator, Advance/Decline Oscillator, MarketVolume Oscillator,
MACD, RSI, Stochastics, McClellan Oscillator, Average True Range in Percents.

S&P 500 chart technical analysis - November 2009

In technical analysis it is common to take a look at the history, and from the history you may see that in majority cases sideway trading at new high level ends with a correctional move down. As a rule during this sideway trading you may see strong bearish signals. If you take a look at the chart (S&P 500 chart above) you would see that on Thursday, November 12, 2009 all technical indicators (except volatility indicators) have generated strongly bearish signals. Yet, on the next trading day (Friday, November 13, 2009) the indexes bounced up from their lower level of the sideway corridor (see the same chart above).

Last week I mentioned: "At that time (in September and October) the indexes have been moving sideways for several trading days … we may see some sideway action at this level again ... If the market starts to move sideways the odds are high that the technical indicators will become bearish." That is what we saw on charts: sideway move and bearish signals on Thursday. However, in the same post I have brought some reasons why I would not consider these bearish indications as strong signals, and why I would rather consider waiting. There were two main reasons why I would avoid trading short at that moment: a) no high volume during the up-move and b) no increase in volatility.

Absence, of high volume during up-move indicates that this up-move was not strong enough to generate greedy buying when investors start to rush into the stock market with the hope to jump into "the last wagon of the running train" - as a rule such action leads to a misbalanced in the supply/demands and at least to the short-term correction down. Absence of increase in volatility indicates that the current sideway move did not generated any panic among traders which suggest there were no increase in the number of bearish traders as well. These two reasons kept me last week from trading short, and the same two reasons still keep me out of it.

Right now technical indicator on the major index charts (S&P 500, DJI and Nasdaq 100 charts) are mixed. You may see Bullish indicators as well as some indicators remain bearish:

 - SBV (Selling Buying Volume) Oscillator is moving sideways at this moment which is a neutral sign. Yet, the bullish volume (accumulated since November 4, 2009) still could be considered as a force which is strong enough to push the stock market down into a correction.

 - The absence of the Bullish volume surges (no green MVO) suggests the higher odds of further up move.

 - The advance/decline oscillator is almost flat, yet, it moves up from its most recent low which could be considered as modestly bullish signal.

 - The same as A/D Oscillator, MACD is almost flat, yet, it is moving up from its recent low which is bullish sign, on the other hand it is still in the negative area which could be considered as bearish sign. Overall, MACD could be considered bearish with tendency to become Bullish.

 - General RSI direction is down and this is bearish sign in technical analysis.

 - General Stochastics direction is up and this is a bullish sign in technical analysis.

-  McClellan Oscillator is still in the negative territory which is bullish, yet, it is very close to cross the center (zero) line which in technical analysis is considered as a "Buy" signal.

 - ATR remains on the same level and this is very nice indication (as already mentioned above) of bullish sentiment."

Overall, I would consider technical analysis mixed at this point of time. There is still an existence of a danger of a correction down. At the same time, some technical indicators push me to believe that even if we see a correction it should not be a very strong move down, unless I see at least changes in volatility sentiment (increase in volatility). At the same time indication of resuming of up-move are not strong enough to be strongly Bullish.

I am not stating that I am always right, and that my technical analysis is perfect. I am just trying to share my thoughts about current stock market sentiment and possible development of a future market trend. It helps me to put my thoughts in the order and I hope it may help somebody in avoiding a mistake that can become "financial suicidal". I would rather recommend doing your own technical analysis and checking all my statements by yourself before even considering to follow them.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Short Analysis

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I have missed my Sunday post, therefore I'm writing during the week. Coming back to my previous "S&P 500 Technical Analysis" post on September 20, 2009 I may say that since then we have had the market (Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI indexes) moved as was predicted: sideway trading first (from September 21 until noon on September 23) and then a correction down.

Looking at the price movement it looks like the correction down is coming to the end – the indexes are moving up from their September 25 lows. However, taking a look at technical indicators I do not think that many traders see positive and promising signals. Right now my technical analysis on hourly charts shows following:

1. SBV (Selling Buying Volume) – bullish on the Nasdaq 100 and DJI and neutral on the S&P 500;
2. MVO (MarketVolume Oscillator) – the same as SBV bullish on the Nasdaq 100 and DJI and neutral on the S&P 500;
3. Advance/Decline Oscillator could be considered Bearish, yet close to the oversold levels on all main indexes (Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI);
4. MACD is neutral by moving basically sideway;
5. RSI and Stochastics reading are mixed, yet, I would say that they are more Bearish than Bullish;
6. McClellan Oscillator started to decline, yet, it is still positive.

As you may see the technical analysis is mixed at this moment and may suggest recovery from the correction as well as further developing of a deeper correction. The main point that makes me worry, despite positive volume signals, is that volatility is increasing. You may see that ATR (Average True Range) and VIX index are climbing up and this is a bearish sign.

As a rule in case like we have now (mixed technical analysis results) a good decision could be waiting for more clear signals. Right now the indexes clearly defined the resistance line: for S&P 500 and DJI indexes high levels on September 17, 18, 22 and 23 and for Nasdaq 100 high on September 23. At the same time we may draw some support line that would go through September 25’s low. Furthermore, conservative way could be waiting for indexes breaking one of these lines and checking the technical analysis at that point.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

S&P 500 Technical Analysis

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A week ago in my "Technical Analysis" post on Sunday September 13, 2009 I have pointed to a bearish sentiment and overbought signals on majority of technical studies. However, in the same post I mentioned: "As a rule, when market comes to some overbought level it is stuck at this level for a couple of trading sessions and moves side-way before a decline." As you may see the history analysis helps in making a correct decision not rushing into a short trade even in situation when technical analysis is in favor of a correction. In one trading session, on Thursday September 15, 2009 the stock was back in the up-trend. On that day (September 15), all technical indicators on the Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI turned from bearish into bullish.

Now, by the end of this week we have a similar picture. Again, many of technical studies on the Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI charts point to overbought (short-term) levels and bearish sentiment. And again, I would recommend taking look through the history of these indexes. You should see that in the resistance (before a correction) we have a few sessions of sideway trading. In opposite an exit from a support is sharp and strong. This is not a 100% rule, yet, I would say that the odds of having a sideways trading in resistance are quite high.

The last two weeks’ rally up (from September 3, 2009) has push the stock market and indexes into overbought condition ( for a short term at least). A correction down would be healthy for the market. However, a possibility of sideway trading still exists and personally I would watch the Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI indexes for stronger bearish signals.

Right now the technical analysis applied to hourly charts shows following:

  1. High volume surge on September 15-16, 2009 during the price advance (see big green MVO) suggests a possibility of reversal down.
  2.  The RSI (Relative Strength Index) and Stochastics have dropped below 70 and 80 lines respectfully and both these indicators are in decline which is a bearish sign.
  3.  The Advance/Decline Oscillator declines and is close to the center (zero) line. This could be considered as a bearish signal as well.
  4. The MACD moves up, yet, this move is almost flat. Even this indicator is bullish, it’s not a strong signal and it could turn into bearish signal very easily.
  5. The SBV Oscillator declines slowly which indicates bearishness, yet, it is still has high positive readings. It would be nice to see it dropping closer to zero line before considering it as a strong bearish signal.
  6.  McClellan Oscillator is neutral on the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 indexes - it moves flat at a zero line. However, McClellan Oscillator applied to the DJI index is positive (above zero line and in flat move).
The S&P 500 Chart with elements of technical analysis.

S&P 500 hourly chart analysis

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Technical Analysis

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Nice week. As all indicators were bullish last Friday (see my last week "Volatility" post on September 6, 2009) the stock market rallied up strongly. Now taking look at hourly charts we may see that majority of the technical indicators started to show some bearish signs:

- McClellan Oscillator declined below zero line - bearish sign;
- Stochastics and RSI dropped below 80 and 70 lines respectfully - bearish sign;
- MACD declines - bearish sign;
- Advance/Decline Oscillator declines - bearish sign;

I think closed attention should be paid to the high MVO on September 8-10, 2009. This indicates high volume activity during the price advance. As a rule such high volume could reverse a trend and we already saw slow down in up-move.

The SBV Oscillator is the only indicator that could be considered slightly bullish. It declines, yet, the SBV reading are still at high positive levels.

Overall, taking a look at technical analysis applied to the hourly charts ( see my previous posts for hourly charts setting) I cannot say that the market is very positive. In opposite, there are many signs that suggest a correction down. However, we have just had a strong rally. Taking look at the history I do not see many occurrences of sharp reversal after such up-move. As a rule, when market comes to some overbought level it is stuck at this level for a couple of trading sessions and moves side-way before a decline.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Technical Analysis

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The recent week could be considered completely flat with the exception of sharp up-move at the market open on Thursday July 30, 2009. I have already pointed to the short-term overbought market in my previous week's "S&P 500 Rally Up" post. If not this Thursday's sharp up move then this week's sideway trading would look like very nice resistance and now all technical indicators would point to the higher odds of correction down. I reality the picture is a little bit different. The S&P 500 technical analysis of hourly chart (1 bar = 1 hour) shows following:

- The SBV Oscillator (bar period 20) is bearish - it moves down slowly. In addition big bullish volume accumulation from July 13, 2009 may possibly push the indices down.

- The MVO(5,25,3) is Bearish as well. We may see a row of Bullish volume surges with the most recent on July 30, 2009. All these volume surges are result of the waves of greedy buying. The strongest one on July 23, 2009 has halted advance and directed the Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial sideway.

- The Advance Decline Oscillator with bar period 12 is close to become bearish. It started to decline, yet it still at high positive level and still could be considered as bullish.

- MACD(15,30,10) is bearish. It declines and it just crossed zero line and went into negative territory.

- RSI(17) dropped below 70, however, it is almost flat and still above 50. So, I would say the Relative Strength Index is slightly bullish.

- Stochastics (17) is slightly bearish. It declines, it moved below 80 yet it is still above 50.

- McClellan Oscillator with bar period 19 and 39 is bullish. It advances above zero line and is still in up-move.

The DJI technical analysis of the same indicators will give you the same result. The Nasdaq 100 hourly chart is slightly more bearish then the S&P 500 and DJI charts.

In conclusion I would say that the main U.S. indexes are overbought over the short-term. We may see some bearish signals. However not all technical indicators are in favor down move. It could be recommended to monitor chart closely next week. Should Advance/Decline Oscillator, RSI and Stochastics decline further it would increase the odds of possible correction down.

I’m sorry I have not provided chart snapshot today. I'll try to do it in my next post.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

S&P 500 again

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Nice week of positive market we had. The indexes reacted by a strong rally up on the big volume surge during the price decline on July 8, 2009. Now, we may see some picture opposite to the one we saw a week ago. Now, we have nice volume surge during the price advance (see green MVO).

Basically there are two main factors that should be paid attention to: high volume during the recent advance and the resistance line that is hit by the indexes (S&P 500 and DJI in particular).

Right now the indexes are at the same resistance levels they were in beginning of June, 2009. I will repeat what I mentioned in my previous “Volume Technical Analysis” post on July 15, 2009 that the current resistance line could be extended back to December 2008. The indexes spent some time moving around this line and then reversed down in December 2008 and in the begging of June 2009. Furthermore, this level could be considered sensitive to many long- and mid-term traders and there are good odds we may see indexes moving sideway at this level again with possible bounce down.

Second factor of high volume surge during the price up-move witnesses that the there is a possibility of overbought market (at least in short-term). This should halt the recovery and possibly may push indexes down again.

Regarding other technical studies you may see on my chart (see below) I may say that

1. The SBV Oscillator readings are still at high positive levels which is a bullish sign. However, we started to see some changes in the SBV direction, which would point to the beginning of changes in the money flow;

2. I have already mentioned about big green (positive) MVO that points to the high volume surge during the price advance. This volume surge may cause changes in the supply/demand balance and as a result it may lead to reversal.

3. Advance/Decline Oscillator is in the declining mode and is Bearish (it started to decline on Friday). From this we may say that, now, investors (traders) are not focused on the advancing stocks as they were in the beginning of the week. If the A/D Oscillator continues to decline into negative territory we may say that traders become more attracted by declining stocks.

4. RSI and Stochastics suggest overbought market. However, they are still bullish by moving above 70 and 80 lines respectfully.

5. McClellan Oscillator crossed zero line on its way down and this is a Bearish signal.

S&P 500

As you see, overall, my technical analysis is not Bullish. It is difficult to say that it is Bearish either. I would say that in short-term the indexes are overbought and we may see a correction down. Yet, some of the technical indicators are still Bullish and we still may see some sideway- and up-move prior to a correction. If the indexes (S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and DJI) go flat I would watch the sentiment closely, since it may push sentiment into bearish mood.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

S&P 500 Technical Analysis

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With exception of Monday, the past week could be considered positive. Yet, by the end of the week the indicators make me somewhat cautious about the further trend. The correction we had from June 12, 2009 until June 23, 2009 could be considered as the strongest down turn since March 9, 2009 (since the market is in the longer-term up-trend). The high levels the indexes hit in the beginning of June became a strong resistance barrier. The Dow Jones Industrials (^DJI) has been fluctuating around the same resistance level for a month (from December 1, 2008 until June 9, 2009). The S&P stuck close to its current resistance in December 2008 as well. Yes, the Nasdaq 100 index is one of the indexes that recovered stronger, but we should remember that the Nasdaq 100 represent non financial companies and was less affected by 2008 stock market crash.

So, we may see that June’s high levels are quite sensitive and even if indexes continue to move higher by recovering from the recent correction I would consider that the odds are pretty good that we may see them stuck at the marked resistance level again. I would say that we may even see second bounce from there (this is just my opinion based on my personal technical analysis).

Despite the recent up-move (from June 23, 2009), at the current moment my longer-term technical analysis is not very optimistic. For a longer term sentiment I usually refer to the daily charts: from 1-year (1 bar = 1 day) to 3-year (1 bar = 3 days). I do not give snapshots of these charts in this post, however, I will try to post them in one of my next posts. All these charts are Bearish at this moment: I see negative money flow, I may consider that the market become somewhat overbought after the strong 3-month recovery rally (March-May 2009), average daily trading volume is down which means that the first wave of Bullish investors who push market up become exhausted, etc. Overall, my longer-term technical analysis is Bearish. However, on the other hand, we should not disregard the fact that during the recent correction down the main indexes (S&P 500, DJI, Nasdaq 100, Russell 2000…) were released from their overbought conditions at least partially which could keep the market and indexes at the current high levels.

In a shorter term – see S&P 500 index hourly chart below – we may see some sentiment changes towards bearish mood: SBV moves down, high green MVO (volume surges during the price up-move), declining Advance/Decline Oscillator, declining MACD and declining RSI. Stochastics is still could be considered positive and McClellan Oscillator is still above zero line which is a positive sign as well. In summary, I would say that my shorter-term technical analysis results point to the possibility of slide. Again (as I mentioned before) this is intraday chart and should be monitored during the trading hours for possible changes in the sentiment and trend.

Chart: S&P 500 index 60-day view (1 bar = 1 hour)

S&P 500 hourly chart

Sunday, March 15, 2009

S&P 500 Chart

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For several weeks I have not been referring to any chart in my posts. I assumed that, whoever reads my blog may know from my previous posts charts setting I usually discuss and may simply open these charts. Now, I think, it is time for me to make chart snapshoot again. At the end, I believe it is easier to follow my posts and points of my technical analysis by looking at the chart (majority of people, including me, visually accept faster) than just simply reading the words.

Below you may see the S&P 500 60-day chart (1-bar = 1 hour). Some of traders call it 60-day chart because you may see 2 months of data on screen, some of traders cal it hourly charts because one bar covers one hour. I give both references for earthier understanding.

S&P 500 chart
On the S&P 500 chart (Nasdaq 100 and DJI chart similar at this time) above you may see the standard set of my technical indicators for hourly charts. As you may see I do not rely on one indicator and even I consider volume as one of he most powerful tools I do not rely solely on it. Basically I have three groups of indicators on this chart: volume based, price based and advance/decline indicators. In this way I believe I cover all aspects of the trend analysis.

At this point of time my technical analysis of the hourly charts tells me that the market could be considered overbought in the short-term and we may expect to see some correctional movement down. By shortly summarizing the indicators above I may say that:
  • High green MVO, RSI above 70, Stochastics above 80 - all of these suggest the indexes are overbought in short term (short-term because it is not high time-frame chart).
  • Declining SBV, MACD and McClellan Oscillator point that the sentiment started shift toward the Bullish mood.
  • RSI and Stochastics are still above 70 and 80 respectfully by still pointing to the Bullish sentiment.
From these three points above I may assume that we may expect to see a short-term correction down because the indexes could be considered overbought and we already started to see some changes in the sentiment from Bullish toward Bearish. However, I would like to see some flat market before. It is unusual to see sharp reverse down after strong up move. As a rule market (indexes) can have sharp reversal in support, yet, in resistance it is common to see several sessions of flat market. At the same time the SBV is still high and McClellan Oscillator with MACD did not crossed zero lines - these as well tells me that we may see some flat price movement before correction.

From the short-term analysis prospective I would recommend always consult higher timeframes (it is always a good trading strategy to analyze several timeframes). If you apply the same technical analysis to daily charts (1-year chart where 1bar = 1 day and 3-year chart where 1 bar = 3 days) you may see that in the longer term the market is still strongly oversold and longer-term sentiment is strongly Bullish. Because of that even I expect to see correction down I would not expect it to be very strong but rather a short-term move down within longer-term recovery. I even assume that because of the strongly oversold longer-term market (indexes) the shorter-term overbought levels could be ignored and there is a possibility of further up-move.

Overall (do not confuse you) I would say that my technical analysis suggest recovery in the longer-term, yet possibility a correction in the shorter-term.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Technical Analysis

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Since I did not make any reference to the charts and technical indicators in my last "DJI Volume" post, I decided to make a short additional post.

I already mentioned in my previous post (a few hours ago) that now, I would not like to be on the place of those traders who are in short position, either it sold short stocks, or bought put options... I think it expresses my opinion very clear. This statement is based on the same technical indicators I always use and it mainly based on the huge volume surge seen on Friday in the DJI sector which on my opinion could mark another bottom and reversal.

In more details my technical analysis applied to the set of technical indicators on the 60-day chart (1 bar = 1 hour) tells me:
1. SBV started to advance - positive sign, yet it would be nice to see further advance as confirmation of recovery.
2. A lot of read SBV - suggests strongly oversold market
3. Big red MVO - points to strongly oversold market and extremely high panic selling which may lead to strong reversal.
4. MVO did not started to advance yet - means that we still have a lot of traders who sells in panic or who sell short in greed.
5. Advance/Decline Oscillator still declines - which reveals dominance of negative sentiments.
6. Advance/Decline shows a lot of red - suggests strongly oversold market.
7.MACD almost flat - more as a neutral sign.
8. Stochastics advanced above 20 after being below this level - positive sign that show that market is moving away from its low levels.
9. RSI advanced above 30 after being below this level - positive dynamic movement.
10. McClellan Oscillator is on up-side after crossing zero line - considered as positive signal.

Sorry for not showing a chart, I think you may always take a look at chart on marketvolume.com - chart setting could be seen on chart in my "DJI Chart" post (look for indicators setting in the chart legend).

Sunday, February 8, 2009

DJI Chart

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A week ago in "New Bailout" post on February 1, 2009 I have mentioned that the market is heavily oversold and possible run up. That was exactly what happened past week, however, there is some points that make me cautious. When I do not have certain degree of confidence I prefer to watch. Here they are:

  • I do not like that during the last up move the NASDAQ 100 recovered almost to the January 6, 2009 high (highest level after November 21, 2008 bottom) while the S&P 500 and DJI indexes are still close to the lowest support levels and they are still far from the January 6, 2009 high.
  • I do not like that the last up move we saw this week was supported by very high volume (especially in DJI sector). No doubt that institutional players were in game and I am not sure what they were doing. Volume is always two side transaction and we have volume only when we have buyers who satisfying sellers and I'm not sure on what side institutional traders were: a) they were buying because they know that the recovery will continue or b) they dump before decline.

Because of these two points I think I will wait until I see how market react on this high bullish volume - will this volume be ignored? or will we see decline? Taking look at the technical analysis of the hourly charts (1 bar = 1 hour) I may say that despite the disharmony in the recovery between Nasdaq 100 and DJI with S&P 500, the technical indicators an all these three indexes show basically the same picture and the same sentiment. Furthermore I would refer to DJI chart again, since the volume surges were most expressed on this index.

DJI chart
 Almost all of the technical studies on the DJI chart above still show positive sentiment, yet, at the same time they show that the market is overbought at this stage. Exception is RSI which is still on the up move. MVO is growing up by emphasizing the overbought condition. By ignoring what I say above I may say that this chart is still positive and suggest possibility of the further recovery, yet, with elements of overbought market which may push indexes lower. Based on the past experience I would not expect to see down turn until I see some flat market, MVO decline to zero, McClellan crossing zero line, SBV and Advance/Decline Oscillator decline.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Short technical Analysis

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Last week my technical analysis (see "Dow Jones Industrials" post on January 18, 2009) was positive, yet, it looks like the stock market stuck on the same level for a week mowing around support highlighted in my previous report. Now, taking a look at the same technical indicators I see that all of them on all main indexes (S&P 500, DJI and Nasdaq 100) are still bullish with exception of McClellan Oscillator which is on its way down indicating a possibility of slide.

DJI chart


I still consider January 15, 2009 low level (drawn in my last post) as a possible support level and this sis mainly because of high trading volume in this period. Yes, over the past week the indexes dropped lightly below this level, however not deep enough to consider that there still a lot of panic sellers who may push market lower.

There is sill one factor that makes me worried. If starting from November 2008 the volatility was going down, see ATR%(7) on yearly (1 bar = 1 day) chart and in the beginning of January 2009 volatility dropped almost to 2008 summer levels, then starting from January 12, 2009 we may see an increase in volatility. For me it means that if a month ago I started to spend less time in front of chart and step by step switch to last year summer's indicators setting then now I have to be again on the alert and monitor charts daily during the trading hours. It looks like it could be too early to relax.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Dow Jones Industrials

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Another week is behind. Following my previous week "DOW Chart" post I may say that my worries abut further slide were confirmed. In that post I mentioned that the stock market is oversold and we may face a reversal soon, yet, I put a few condition that would be nice to meet before a reversal is confirm. One of this condition was McClellan Oscillator crossing zero line and the other one was presence of  negative MVO which would reveal the high volume surge (panic selling) during decline...

So, what do we have now? - We see that both of these conditions are met and we already saw some recovery. By taking a look at the same set of  technical studies I used a week ago I may say that technical analysis based on these indicators is Bullish. If a week ago the indicators show oversold market yet they were negative, then right now they still show oversold market but with Bullish sentiment which makes me believe that the odds are on the side of the recovery. The small exception is the S&P 500 index which is bullish but not as bullish as Nasdaq 100 and DJI indexes.

DJI chart
There are two positive factors for me that I would like to highlight.

a) The same as on October 9-13, 2008 and the same as on November 19-24, 2008 we saw high volume activity in the DJI sector on January 14-16, 2008. I always stated and I repeat myself - I associate high volume surge during decline as panic selling. Yet, because volume is always two side transaction and there is always a buyer for each seller, high volume during the decline tell us that the buyers started to satisfy demands of the panic sellers by buying from them in huge amounts and as a rule that leads to the shift in the supply/demand balance when those who wanted to sell already sold and do not push market down in panic any more.

b) Second positive factor is that in 2008 each time we had huge volume surge and reversal it was lower than the previous support level. This is the first time when we have huge volume activity which is above the previous support level. If we have a reversal now, this is going to be the first reversal which will set new support level that is higher than the previous support (support on November 21, 2008).

I usually do not give any advices, however, for long-term traders, for pension investors there is simple trading strategy which has only one rule: "Buy each time you see huge volume surge during price decline". As I mentioned in October 2008 (read my "Long-Term Investment" post) and as I stated in November 2008 (read my "DJI Analysis" post) I would say again - I consider it is good time to consider... Yet, if you believe that USA economy is going to crash further and never recover back, if you believe that this is only a beginning of the end (there is always a possibility) then you should stay away from any type of investment...

Again, I could be wrong and I'm not an investment advisor, so, do not trust me and do not trust anyone when you invest your money. Do not make any trading decision on what I told above - do your own home work.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Index Analysis

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Four weeks ago in my DJI post (on 11/23/2008) I have posted the following chart with statement that the market has set new support. I would like to point again to the same DJI chart:

DJI support chart


After 10/10 support (October 10, 2008 support level) the stock market and indexes did moved flat for a month until November 5, 2008 when they started to decline again. Now, it is a months after 11/21 support (support on November 20-21, 2008) and the logical question could be "should we expect to see reversal soon since there is a possibility that the stock market has stepped back from it's November's extremely oversold levels and accumulated some Bullish volume in December?"

We had first strong volume surges with  setting a support level on September 18, 2008, second on October 10, 2008 and the third one (most recent) on November 21, 2008. Each of this volume surges during the index declined pushed the indexes into oversold condition and every  time market become oversold stronger and stronger. If on September 18, 2008 the market reacted on high volume by strong one-day rally up (about 10% in a single session), then after 10/10 bottom (market was stronger oversold) the reaction on high bearish volume was expressed by 1-month up and flat move with about 16% recovery. The last time, on November 21, 2008, when after high volume surges the stock market has become oversold even stronger then on 10/10, the market respectfully reacted stronger - we have one month up move and indexes (S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and DJI) with 22-25% recovery.

The market is still could be considered strongly oversold because of the high Bearish volume on 9/18, 10/10 and 11/21, yet, I would weighted it as longer-term oversold condition. Over the shorter term we see some overbought levels - should not be a surprise with more than 20% up over a month - which may push indexes and whole market down, not necessary into another crash, yet on my opinion we may see an attempt to retest 11/21 bottom.

I would never try to guess what is going to happened to the market in several month or in a year - this is a job for fundamental analysts. What I do: I track if there is possibility of trend changes in the shorter term and then I monitor these changes for a possibility of developing them into stronger recovery or stronger crash. Right now, I see that indexes (S&P 500, DJI and Nasdaq 100) signal a possibility of the move down (keep in mind that I could be wrong, I'm just an average trader). The S&P 500 chart below explains my worries (Nasdaq 100 and DJI charts have similar look):

SP 500 support chart


Last week, in my S&P 500 Analysis post I mentioned that red MVO (volume surge during the price decline) may push the S&P 500 index up (we had up-move this week). Now, my main concern is that green MVO (volume surge during the price advance) may push the indexes down. The rest of technical indicators, including Stochastics, RSI (Relative Strength Index), SBV, McClellan Oscillator are bearish on this chart as well.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

S&P 500

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In my previous "DJI Chart" post on November 2, 2008 (a week ago) I have described the possibility of the slide. The market was overbought in short term at that time and during this week we shad two session of the slide (November 5-6). I think some trader are worried if this slide is going to continue to the 10/10 (October 10) lows.

I would repeat myself that over the longer term I'm still bullish and this slide did not change any of the technical indicators I use on the higher-timeframes (1-2 years charts) - all of them are still bullish and all of them point to the higher odds of the further recovery. Yet, the question about the retesting of the 10/10 lows is not about longer term. I would rather consider it as a short-term question.

In short-term, the technical analysis applied to the 60-day chart (1 bar = 1 hour) is more bullish than bearish and I would expect to see short-term up move within the next few sessions. If a week ago I saw the short-term overbought indexes, today I see short-term oversold market.

S&P 500 chart
The technical analysis applied to the S&P 500 index above is the same as it would be applied to the Nasdaq 100 and Dow Jones Industrials indexes. At the current moment all three main indexes show similar sentiment:

a) We see Bearish volume surge - red MVO which already equal to zero - This Bearish volume may push the indexes up;

b) Advance/Decline oscillator is rising and is above to cross center line. This suggest that investors are moving towards advancing stocks - they are buying;

c) MACD is moving up which  is indication of Bullish trend;

d) RSI and Stochastics moved above 30 and 20 levels respectively which is bullish sign as well;

e) McClellan oscillator started to move up which is a good sign for up-move, yet it still below zero line which indicate bearish market;

f) SBV show small advance, yet, this advance is too small to consider this technical indicator bullish.

Overall, in short-term I would expect an up-move rather then further drop towards the 10/10 lows. Again, the market is still very dynamic and volatile and today's bullish sentiment can reverse very fast. Because of that I would recommend monitoring charts every day.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

S&P 500 Chart

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As I mentioned in my previous "End of the market crash" post on October 13, 2008 in majority situation after the strong bounce up we may see the attempt of the market to retest the support levels and later this week we witnesses such drop down when on October 16, 2008 the Nasdaq 100 hit the October 10 lows and the S&P 500 and DJI indexes went down close to it. Yet, after that we saw bounce up again and the indexes are still on its way up. I think the question that I put last week "if this is the end of stock market crash" is still not answered. The same as before I would state that October 10, 1008 has put serious point to consider the trend reversal. We had huge volume at that day, the market is in extremely heavy oversold condition, strong rebound has confirmed that market can run up very fast very strongly... All of this make me to consider the high possibility of strong reversal and if not the end of the stock market crash then at least strong mid-term up-trend. Yet, as I mentioned before, I would like to see that the October 14, 2008 highs are broken and the indexes are moving up above them as confirmation of that. Still, for long term investments (401k) I consider that this is good time to buy on such volume when the indexes are so deep down. Even if the indexes will go lower then on the high volume at better position you will buy again. Over the long term the returns from the multiple positions should be rewarded.

Going back to the short-term chart, in my case it is 60-day S&P 500 chart, I may say that the technical indicators are more or less positive and my technical analysis tells me that we still may see some up move. It's difficult to say where the market is going to be in a week. I such volatile market (VIX Volatility index is above 60) we may see strong change in either direction any time. At such time it's especially important to monitor charts on the daily basis. For those who cannon watch charts daily, yet, still would like to make short-term trades I may suggest one thing only - stay out of the market until the volatility is down, your time will come

SP 500 chart - Technical Analysis

The S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and DJI indexes show similar pictures. The reading of the technical indicators on all these indexes are pointed in the same direction

 - SBV, MV, Advance/Decline Oscillator, RSI and McClellan Oscillator are Bullish
 - MACD and Stochastics are bearish

Overall, more points are in the favor of the further recovery.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Nasdaq 100

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In my last "Nasdaq 100 Chart" post I have mentioned about the desire of the Nasdaq 100 index to compensate in recent decline what it missed in June-July 2008 decline. I've already emphasized in July (see "DJI" post from 07/20/2008) that the Nasdaq sector was not as oversold as S&P 500 and DJI indexes at that time. It looks like now the Nasdaq stocks decided to catch in the recent decline what was misses in July. While the S&P 500 and DJI indexes were ready for the recovery the Nasdaq 100 index was still behind. However, now (over the last week) we see strong volume surges in the Nasdaq sector. The volume during the decline indicates panic selling and high volume surges during decline indicate that some traders decided to satisfy the demands of the panic sellers by buying huge amount of shares. Keep in mind that Nasdaq 100 index has been in decline since August 16, 2008 while the S&P 500 and DJI only since September 2, 2008 (only 4 trading session).

Now After this week I see very good chances for a recovery. By looking at the 1-year index charts I may assume that the Nasdaq 100 index has become oversold as well and now all three indexes have power to move up. Yet, I could be wrong and I do not recommend following conclusions of my technical analysis. Each trader has to do his/her own homework...

Coming back to my favorite 60-day chart, I see good odds of bullish market, at least at the beginning of the coming week (for the rest of the week I would analyze the same chart during the next week).

Nasdaq 100 chart


I have selected the Nasdaq 100 chart again since (on my opinion) this index was the major engine behind the recent decline. The S&P 500 and DJI indexes technical indicators look similar. This week I decided to set a table of these three indexes which summarizes used by me technical indicators and results of my technical analysis:

 Nasdaq 100S&P 500DJI
SBVBullish - Moving up
MVOBullish -Big volume surges. Now, MV=0 and this is a positive sign as wellBullish - Big volume yet not as big as in the Nasdaq 100 sector
AD Osc.Somewhat Bullish - Moving up, yet still at low negative levels
MACDSomewhat Bullish - Moving up, yet still at low negative levels
RSIBearish - Still below 30Bullish - Just moved above 30
StochasticsBullish - Crossed 20 and moving up
McClellanSomewhat Bullish - Negative and far from center line

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Nasdaq 100 chart

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I mentioned in my previous "Panic Selling..." post that the Nasdaq 100 index was not as oversold as S&P 500 and DJI indexes during the recent crash in July 2008 by pointing on some bearish sentiment in the Nasdaq 100 sector while the DJI and S&P were more optimistic. Over the last two session we continued to see the power pressure of the Nasdaq companies which continued to push the stock market down. The question is for how long.

The Nasdaq 100 index is most dramatic over the past couple of session and that is why I brought out the Nasdaq 100 60-day chart to see what is the tendency in the changes of this index sentiment changes. The same as before the S&P 500 is not as bearish as the Nasdaq 100 and the DOW(30), I would say, even somewhat bullish. Despite the negative Nasdaq pressure the Dow Jones managed to end today's session even with shallow gain.

Nasdaq 100 chart
Summarizing the Nasdaq 100 technical indicators on the chart above I may say that
  • SBV is still bearish - moving down (neutral on S&P 500 and positive on the DJI);
  • We see high volume surge during the last two trading session slide (high negative MVO) which is a good sign for possibility of the coming reversal. Yet MVO is still below zero line (the same on the S&P and DOW);
  • Advance/decline oscillator is more neutral by moving close to the central line (similar on the S&P and DOW);
  • MACD started to move up which would favor the reversal (S&P 500 and DJI MACD bullish as well);
  • RSI is at 30. Should it drop below it would point to the possibility of the further slide. Should it move up it would indicate bullish sentiment (S&P and DOW RSI are somewhat bullish);
  • Stochastics is below 20 - bearish sign (S&P and DOW Stochastics are bullish);
  • McClellan Oscillator reversed and started to move up, yet it still below zero line.

So, I see some negative signs in the Nasdaq 100 index. Yet, at the same time I see some technical indicators started to change from bearish into neutral and from bearish into bullish, which could point that we could be close to the bottom. It looks like the S&P and DJI are ready to go up and they wait for the Nasdaq companies only.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

S&P 500

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In my last "New Highs/Lows" post on August 12, 2008 I have reviewed my longer term outlook based on technical analysis of 1-year index charts with mentioning that over the shorter term I see oversold levels on Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and DJI indexes - we saw a dive on the market on August 13 with some recovery by the end of the week.

In majority cases the reversal point after down trend (support) is very sharp and sudden. In opposite a reversal point after uptrend (resistance) is not as volatile and as a rule spread over the time when we may see almost flat market. We had up-move after August 1st and then some decline with Flat market after August 11th.  Now, my shorter-term main question is "Does the market released the oversold pressure over the last week and now it's ready for go further up? or the stock market levelled the indexes before deeper slide?". Keep in mind that I'm referring to the shorter-term trends. My longer-term technical analysis is basically unchanged and I still in Bullish mood and believe in higher odds to see the indexes higher than they are today (refer to my 1-year technical analysis in my "New Highs/Lows" post on August 12, 2008 and my "DJI" post on July 20, 2008).

Chart 1: 60-day S&P 500 Chart technical indicators
S&P 500 chart


From the chart above I may see that my S&P 500 technical indicators are bullish, yet, some of them close to become bearish:

  • SBV - Bullish - The SBV moves up pointing to the positive sentiment;
  • MVO - Bearish - The MVO shows high volume surges during the recovery in the period from July 22, 2008. Each time after such volume surge we saw small correction, however, we did not see high volume surges during these corrections (absence of red MVO). From one side it tells us that high volume surge during the up-move is needed to push the S&P 500 index down, yet much smaller volume is needed to reverse the S&P 500 index back into up-trend and this fact confirms my longer term outlook. Yet these volume surges are making an input into moving the index into oversold levels which may push the market into stronger correction;
  • Advance-Decline Issues Oscillator - Bullish/Bearish - The AD Oscillator is at high positive level, yet it started to move down by pointing to the possible beginning of the changes in the sentiment towards the declining stocks;
  • RSI and Stochastics - Neutral - The RSI and Stochastics are on the edge of 70 and 80 levels respectively. Should they start to move down it may point to Bearish trend. Should they go back above their critical lines it would point to the possibility of further Bullish trend;
  • MACD- Neutral - The MACD is flat and basically neutral;
  • McClellan Oscillator - Bullish - The McClellan Oscillator is on its way up and is Bullish at this point of time.
The DJI 60-day chart looks similar to the S&P 500 chart above. Yet, the Nasdaq 100 60-day technical analysis is more negative by pointing to the higher odds of a possible slide into correction. For the Nasdaq 100:

  • SBV - Bearish - The SBV moves down;
  • MVO - Bearish - The MVO shows absence of red (high volume during the price drop) and shows a lot of green (high volume during the price rise);
  • Advance-Decline Issues Oscillator - Bearish - The AD Oscillator is on its way down;
  • RSI and Stochastics - Bearish - The RSI and Stochastics dropped below 70 and 80 levels respectively;
  • MACD- Bearish - The MACD is on the down side;
  • McClellan Oscillator - Bullish - The McClellan Oscillator is on its way up, yet it is still below zero line.
Overall, by analyzing 60-day technical indicator I may say that I see the possibility of the correction down, yet, at the same time I see the possibility of the scenario when the market can ignore the Nasdaq 100 bearish indicators and move up under the pressure of the Bullish parent longer-term trend. I would say that for me, the shorter term trend is undefined at the current moment and one of the conservative strategies in such situation could be staying in cash until I see the Nasdaq 100 become bullish or the S&P 500 and DJI more bearish.