But, All is Not Well
On January 6, 2006 the Secondary trend, according to Dow theory, was once
again reconfirmed as bullish. Last week there were minor secondary non-confirmations
forming and this week those minor non-confirmations were corrected as both
averages moved yet again above the most recent Secondary high points. As a
result, the Secondary Trend has been reconfirmed as positive. In order to turn
the Secondary Trend negative, it will take a joint move by both averages below
their previous Secondary low points.

In the next chart below we have the Industrials verses the Dow Jones Top Ten
Index. The Top Ten Index is a subset of the Industrials and is comprised of
the top 10 dividend yielding stocks within the Industrials. Here, we find a
non-confirmation that has been going on now for over a year. The fact that
this index is not confirming the Industrials is cause for concern as this is
an important non-confirmation that is occurring from within the Dow 30. Since
the Top Ten is a subset of the Industrials, we should indeed be seeing it confirm
the movement of the Industrials themselves. With a third of the larger index
lagging, this failure can only be viewed as an unhealthy sign. On a percentage
basis, the move out of the October Secondary low by the Top Ten has been a
greater move than that of the Industrials, but with regard to price structure,
the divergence or non-confirmation is obvious.

In fact, the last time such non-confirmation occurred was in connection with
the 2000 top. That non-confirmation is shown on the chart below and we all
remember what followed where this chart leaves off.

In the next chart below we have the Industrials verses the Nasdaq 100. Here,
both indexes have held above the recent support levels as is noted in green.
However, the fact that the Nasdaq is lagging is troublesome.

In fact, the last two intermediate term tops have occurred with just such
non-confirmations between these two averages in place. These non-confirmations
are marked in blue on the chart below and you can clearly see that we have
the same such non-confirmation occurring now. Should the Nasdaq 100 fail to
hold this support level, then it should mark the beginning of the end for this
intermediate term cycle advance. Should the Nasdaq 100 better its January high,
then this non-confirmation will be mended, all four of these averages would
be in gear with each other and new recovery highs would be one giant step closer
to reality.

Also in regard to the Nasdaq, when we look beneath the surface, the internals
stink. As an example, I have plotted a chart of the Nasdaq 100 below. In the
upper window I have plotted a measure of Advancing Nasdaq Issues in green and
Declining Nasdaq Issues in red. Note that the intermediate-term advance into
the December 2004 high peaked with diverging advancing issues and increasing
declining issues. The same is also true for the August 2005 intermediate-term
cycle top and we are seeing this same pattern occurring once again at present
levels.

When we back up even further we find that every single intermediate-term advance
since the first leg up out of the 2002 low has occurred on progressively lower
advancing issues. This is telling us this advance has been liquidity driven
and not supported by strong internals with real buying. No advance can continue
with continuously weakening internals.

In fact, the last time such non-confirmation between price and the Nasdaq
advancing issues occurred was in connection with the 2000 bull market top.

The bottom line here is that yes, the Secondary Trend according to Dow theory
remains bullish, while the Primary Trend remains bearish. The Dow theory phasing
continues to suggest that there is more downside on a larger scale yet to come.
The fact that we are seeing non-confirmations between other indexes serves
as warnings that simply cannot be ignored. In the meantime, the Secondary Trend
remains positive. If you would like more specifics on this Advance/Decline
data, cycles, the statistical probabilities for 2006, Dow theory phasing, expected
turn points, access to the Cycle Turn Indicator to pin point these turn points
and much much more, then please visit www.cyclesman.com for
subscription information. I cover the stock market, gold, the dollar and bonds.
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