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Market Overview:
We have moved up over the past five months quite powerfully. There have been
many critical levels of resistance along the way which have been headaches
initially but in time have all been taken out by the bulls, putting those levels
in their rear view mirror. 956 on the Sp was the last big one that seemed as
if it just couldn't happen. I mean come on, we've come so far so quickly, that
level will fail for sure. Not to be the case. That too went away. Now we see
two levels that are seemingly just too tough as well. One is the multi down
trend line on the Nas at 2015. We've been banging on the door with the market
being very overbought. Surely the overbought alone is enough to stop it cold.
That has been the case thus far. We keep getting right there only to see the
market pull back. On top of that multi year trend line at Nas 2015 we also
have a bigger one to overcome. Very quietly, and not talked about by basically
anyone, we are up against the 70 week moving average at 1036 on the Sp. We
still have a ways to go to get there. Why am I focusing on this? because historically,
the 70 week moving average, when in a true bear market, has stopped all rallies
dead in their tracks. It has caused one bull run after another to top out and
collapse back down. With the market extremely close to Nas 2015 and fairly
close to Sp 1036, and because we're so overbought, this would be a perfect
spot for that pull back we've all been waiting for. Doesn't mean it's coming.
If you go back and look at April-June 2008 we stayed at rsi 70+. Two plus months
so it can happen. Doesn't mean it will. We all have to be prepared for a sharp
pullback at any time. Here's the reason for why the bears are desperate here.
If we do clear with force Sp 1036 and Nas 2015, we are in a confirmed bull
market. No question about it. No longer can we say this is possibly only a
bull market rally within a deeper secular bear market. The bears know all the
other levels that were taken out hurt them badly. They know if these levels
just mentioned get taken out, they're dead for good. So if you think they were
desperate at other levels along the road, you haven't seen anything yet. These
are I'm going to my death bed levels and I am not going down that easily feelings
from the bears. These are the levels they defend the most. If the bulls can
keep things close for a while, the bears will get worn out. Incredibly interesting
and important times indeed.
The futures were up a bit this morning in anticipation of the huge jobs report
that was due out at 830 am eastern time. The thinking was for a loss of 275,000
jobs with an unemployment rate of 9.7%. There was also the thinking that revisions
to the past few months, as babbled by a popular Cnbc commentator the day before,
were for additional losses of over 100,000. Wrong! Revisions were only 43,000
and the actual monthly losses for this past month were 243,000. Better than
expected. On top of that, the unemployment rate was 0.3% better at 9.4%, rather
than the 9.7% expected. Job losses, the unemployment rate and revisions were
all better than expected for the bulls thus futures blasted off. They pulled
back some before the market opened but we still had a nice gap up. The market
started to pull back adn we were printing ugly black candles in the first hour.
It looked bad but out of nowhere, we blasted back higher and were up nearly
200 points on the Dow before late selling took us down pretty good. We got
to the breakout on the Nas at 2015 but couldn't get the job done. A solid day
for the bulls. We're still overbought. We're still on an overall major buy
signal. Shorting just because we're so overbought is too risky. Sticking with
the overall trend makes the most sense. Dealing with pullbacks is something
we'll have to deal with. Just the way it is. Some exposure is necessary at
all times when on a buy signal. Keep with the trend please.
Sentiment Analysis:
This has deteriorated some with the bulls now a bit over 20% more than the
bears. This is not where bull markets run in to trouble, It usually takes nearly
40% more bulls before things get out of hand from a sentiment perspective.
The put call ratio is on the lower side but nothing at all on the dangerous
side of the ledger. No repeat days of below 0.60. Most days in the 0.70 range.
When we sell some, it ramps higher than that. we're not at a level of optimal
bearishness but by no means are we at a point where this should all come crumbling
down.
Sector Watch:
The Financials led the way this week led by the Banks. Most other groups saw
decent gains including the Aerospace Group led by solid moves by BA and UTX.
The Transports continue to show solid price action and the Retail area showed
some signs of firming up late week. The Materials area continues to show some
good relative performance. The Commodities on the other hand started to lag
due to a combination of late week strength in the US Dollar which is starting
to setup in a Bullish Falling Wedge Pattern (see our 5th chart below) and weakness
in the Shanghai Market which after tagging the 3,500 level stalled out late
week at our Downtrendline (see our 6th chart below). The Biotech/Healthcare
areas lagged somewhat this week after strong recent moves. Some of the recent
leading stocks in various groups started to take a breather during the week
including GS, RIMM, and others while the second/third tier picked up some of
the slack keeping the bid under the overall market.
The Week Ahead:
A big week ahead as we see just what the bears have with regards to stopping
the bulls from taking out Nas 2015 and Sp 1036. There isn't nearly the type
of economic reports to come as we had today. We also no longer have the major
earnings reports to worry about. Most of those are past us. the market can
play on its own without too much outside influence. With most of the recent
news being positive, the onus is on the bears to stop the bulls cold in their
tracks. A pullback from overbought can happen at any time but don't forget
that we're clearly still in a buy signal. Very interesting times are upon us
in terms of the lnoger term picture for this stock market.






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Robert New and Jack Steiman
www.TheInformedTrader.com
The Informed Trader is a site for self directed traders/investors.
We offer Nightly Market Commentary, focused Long/Short Alerts, ETF/Sector Analysis,
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Copyright © 2009 Robert
New and Jack Steiman
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