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The broad market averages are about to encounter their first real resistance
point this week - the 1/3 retracement level of the October high and January
low. They are also running into the November lows. I've read a lot of commentary
this weekend from people who think the market is likely to top out at the November
lows. They see a big resistance area between the 1390 and 1425 level on the
S&P 500. They're right about this. In fact 1425 would be about a 50% retracement
level of the October high and January low and often 50% retracement levels
are where countertrend moves come to an end. However, I think this rally has
farther to go then that.

When the market was bottoming I had a 1450 target level for the S&P 500.
When I went long I was using that as a rough estimate to figure out my risk
to reward for my positions, but the market is likely to go even higher than
that. On January 25th I wrote an article titled
How This Rally is Likely to Unfold. In it I examined past bear market countertrend
rallies, such as those in the 2000-2002 bear market, to see how this one is
likely to play out. In all of those prior bear market rallies the market rallied
back up to its 150 and 200 day moving averages.
Such a move now would take the S&P 500 up to the 1460-1500 area. Not coincidently
1460 is the 2/3's retracement level and also is where the downtrend resistance
line connecting the highs of October, November, and December is now sitting.
We should expect the market to rally a minimum to these levels, with the odds
now favoring a move up to the 200-day moving average. In fact it is possible
for the market to rally 2-3% above its 200-day moving average to make a climatic
top if the market consolidates around its 200-day moving average and then makes
an exhaustion rally.
Once this rally ends - and I see it ending sometime in March or early April
- I expect to see another bear market decline of worse magnitude than this
last one that will take the S&P 500 down to the 1178 level. This would
be a 25% correction from its October high. BMO Capital Markets put out an excellent study showing
that 25% is the historical bear market decline during economic recessions.
They found that "since 1950, there have been eight official recessions in
the US lasting an average of 10 months. Stocks peak 10 months before the recession
begins, reflecting expectations of slower economic and earnings growth, and
fall an average of 26% to their trough, which occurs about three fourths of
the way through the recession."
Of course it could be that in the end this bear market ends up being one as
large as the one between 2000 and 2002. The Fed's Mishkin study (see
page. 38) projects the bear market in real estate continuing through 2009 and
this recession lasting until 2010, with a trough in the business cycle being
made in the first half of 2009 as real estate bottoms out!
The farther you try to project into the future the more unreliable your projections
are going to be. I'm not sure what the market is going to do at the end of
this year. All I know now is that I see this current rally going further from
here and then another bear decline taking place once it is over.
But I think at the moment I'm actually more bullish than most people. There
is still a lot of skepticism over this rally. Last week's Investors Intelligence
numbers showed an increase in the number of bears and decline in the number
of bulls despite the fact that the market bottomed the week before and we already
saw a nice lift off of the lows.
It is going to take weeks to get the Investors Intelligence numbers into a
position where people are bullish enough that we can look for a top from a
contrarian standpoint.
Combine this with the fact the market had reached technical oversold levels
not seen since the bottoms made on September 11th or in the Fall of 1998 and
there is every reason to think this rally is going to go on for more than just
two weeks - and will go on long enough to trap everyone into becoming bullish
at the top.
Those trying to pick a top in a matter of days need to think in terms of weeks.

I use TC2007 to
study the market and find stocks to buy. TC2007 breaks the market up into 239
sectors so that I can track how the sectors behave relative to the rest of
the market and each other. The above is a sort of the performance of the sectors
since the market bottom. What you see above are the very top performing sectors.
Most of them are related to real estate construction, banks, transportation,
and lending institutions, including savings and loans and credit services.
These are the very sectors that were leading the market to the downside since
October. This is the classic signature of a bear market rally. Countertrend
rallies in bear market are usually led by the groups and stocks that have fallen
the most, because their rallies are fueled by heavy short covering. At the
end of bear markets leadership tends to shift into different sectors - sectors
that end up leading in the first three innings of the next bull market, but
as long as the bear market continues countertrend rallies will be led by the
sectors that dropped the most during the declines.
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