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S&P 500 Made Its Case For Higher Stock Prices

Published 08/24/2020, 09:29 AM
Updated 05/14/2017, 06:45 AM

Friday's upswing took stocks to the all-time highs again, and the tech sector was in the driver's seat. Healthcare and consumer discretionaries also did well, but that's far from enough as the market breadth indicators keep flashing non-confirmations. And they're not alone.

Non-confirmations can drag on for a long time without ushering in a meaningful correction. They can get less pronounced by a prolonged sideways move in prices. Alternatively, a sharp and temporary correction can arrive with little fanfare. Which way do I see things turning out over the coming weeks?

Wednesday's correction attempt failed without much in terms of a follow-up. That's a point for a continued slow grind higher, or for a sideways consolidation as minimum. In other words, the correction isn't likely arriving very soon – but over the coming weeks, it most probably will. The outlook for days just ahead, looks rather bright to me.

Let check whether this theory holds water.

S&P 500 in the Medium- and Short-Run

I’ll start today's flagship Stock Trading Alert with the weekly chart perspective (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com ):

SPX Weekly Chart

While last weeks' bullish price action goes on without end in sight, it's happening on ever lower volume. The bears aren't though willing to step in, which makes higher stock prices likely, regardless of the bulls being stuck at two key resistances (the upper border of the rising black trend channel and the zone around the Feb and recent all-time highs) over the last few days.

The bears missed another opportunity to make a real stand on Friday, and the bulls turned the session around (please see this and many more charts at my home site). The volume barely noticeably rose, but still rose – boding well for Monday's session at the very least.

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How much did the credit markets support the upswing?

The Credit Markets’ Point of View

High yield corporate bonds (HYG ETF) made no progress on the way up. The decreasing volume still paints a picture of a short-term consolidation, which goes well with the bears being unable to reassert themselves.

Another piece in the corporate credit market puzzle are the investment-grade corporate bonds (LQD ETF) – and their rise negates the (HYG ETF hesitation in my view.

Such were my Friday's observations on the leading credit market ratios:

(…) Both high yield corporate bonds to short-term Treasuries (HYG:SHY) and investment grade corporate bonds to longer-dated Treasuries (LQD:IEI) – rose yesterday The longer they keep the sideways-to-bullish bias, the better the likelihood of their renewed move higher in earnest, and by extension, for stocks too.

HYG:SHY Daily Chart

After Friday, stocks got even more extended relative to the HYG:SHY ratio. Stocks are clearly willing to rise without taking a cue from this key ratio.

The yields in long-dated Treasuries (TLT ETF) keep rising – or at least, they don't indicate that some flight to safety would be going on. They're underscoring that the wheels of real economy are starting to turn since the late spring horrendous data went on a broad recovery. At their own pace and unevenly, naturally.

S&P 500 Market Breadth and Technology

SPX Weekly Chart

The state of weekly advance-decline line is one big red flag as higher stock prices are supported by less and less advancing issues, advancing volume, or new highs. Even the bullish percent index is weakening a little.

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Does it mean the bull market's end is in sight? Absolutely not, but a correction or soft patch wouldn't be totally unexpected. Does the above chart make it imminent? Not. So, what's a trader to do about it?

My favorite approach over the past weeks of such precarious readings has been tight open trade management with relatively frequent updates of the stop-loss parameters in order to lock in open profits. Unless I attempt to jump in on the brief momentum of the short side, which needn't really always pay off.

The stock tide keeps rising, and I would compare that effort to catching a low in an individual wave, using techniques based also on the short-term market breadth just next.

The short-term offers a weakening view of not only the advance-decline line that certainly doesn't confirm the stock upswing. On the other hand, it doesn't make a correction imminent – unless the generals leading the stock advance rollover, that is.

SPX Daily

Imagine that each S&P 500 stock would have equal representation in the index, and that weights would no longer matter. That's exactly what the equal weight S&P 500 ETF (RSP ETF) is all about.

And it reveals a very different view of the stock market that's still trading below the early June lows. In other words, it's been the tech sector that's been driving the index higher.

And technology (XLK ETF) is indeed pushing it higher, and not only because of Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) becoming a $2T market cap company. The other heavyweights are responsible for the lion's share of the gain – and perhaps more tech companies would start participating now that semiconductors (XSD ETF) finally made a daily reversal.

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Summary

Summing up, the S&P 500 went on its path of higher prices, rebuffing another downswing attempt on Friday. While the non-confirmations are concerning, they aren't an immediate obstacle to an upswing over the coming days, but I certainly look for them to force stocks to go sideways as minimum – sooner or later over the coming weeks.

As for now, the very now, the path of least resistance remains higher, and better be approached with a tight stop-loss as small caps aren't willing to participate and market breadth issues are a chapter in and of itself.

The stock bull isn't over yet though, not by a long short, and I look for the non-tech sectors to take up the baton once the much-awaited correction actually arrives – or more precisely, when that correction starts getting long in the tooth, I look for the cyclicals to get moving.

Disclaimer:

All essays, research and information found above represent analyses and opinions of Monica Kingsley and Sunshine Profits' associates only. As such, it may prove wrong and be subject to change without notice. Opinions and analyses were based on data available to authors of respective essays at the time of writing. Although the information provided above is based on careful research and sources that are believed to be accurate, Monica Kingsley and her associates do not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the data or information reported. The opinions published above are neither an offer nor a recommendation to purchase or sell any securities. Ms. Kingsley is not a Registered Securities Advisor. By reading Monica Kingsley’s reports you fully agree that she will not be held responsible or liable for any decisions you make regarding any information provided in these reports. Investing, trading and speculation in any financial markets may involve high risk of loss. Monica Kingsley, Sunshine Profits' employees and affiliates as well as members of their families may have a short or long position in any securities, including those mentioned in any of the reports or essays, and may make additional purchases and/or sales of those securities without notice.

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Latest comments

Thanks as always Monica!!  If possible, would like to get your thoughts on the importance of the RSI (daily) breaking 70 and approaching 75 here.  Thanks!
Thank you for the question - I'm answering it in today's article, which I hope appears here shortly...
 Thanks!
 :)
Monica, I wonder how much pf the tech rally is being fueled by retail investors awash with stimulus money. This is important because most of the retail investors buying tech and speculative stocks have zero interest in value or cyclicals. The expected rotation may never happen if the smart money stays on the sidelines. Arguably, it’ll be more profitable to let the robinhooders take the brunt of the losses and wait for lower prices before transitioning cash back into the market.
The rotation would still happen, at least on a relative basis - just as it did weeks ago when tech appeared losing breath compared to cyclicals. Bubbles, they first need to get out of proportion to be ripe for pricking... We aren't there yet
Tom...I think those with more $ profits 📈 in their account are the "smart" money investors. PS hi-tech is not going away. I don't understand your position when you could utilize stop loss positions and could have been trading with house money profits. Thanks MK
Swooped in on spy calls at 3pm est, got 15 calls at .08 cost basis... they finished the day at .8. I sold at .24 (200% gain). I got burned by the algos too many times when the strike your call but then let it fall just under Strike in the last 5-10 min. Decided i would take profits early this time, that hurts a bit. But this is just to show everyone, on option expiration days, you dont always need to chart watch the whole day... i play this type of call/put game every mon/wed/fri and if you can notice a pattern in VIX and SPY, as well as put/call ratio, you can make easy money.
Furniture Stocks also taste so good, hahahahaha
whats wrong with blowout??
Fully agree Monica, this is all about mega cap tech, and this weekend in particular. No doubt some smart a*re investment banker came up with the idea of of setting two massive stock splits either side of a weekend! XLK bid and chase.. So I sold the opening in ndx and running the short. Its my belief that TSLA will ******out today and maybe AAPL also..
graeme hughes: Thank you... FAANG is FAANG, what can I say
i believe i can fly, i believe i can touch the sky, hahahahahaha!!!!!
Thank you Monica!
Thank you Richard!
i love casino, hahahahaha
really? Based on credit markets, 10y yield, crude, or breadth ?
 Running with the herd, near to the exits...
 i eat teddy bear cookies for breakfast
 A full bowl :)
3422 is my lucky number, i should bet it all
that ain't the top in all likelihood :)
And when I say to George "Running with the herd, near to the exits...", it doesn't mean that I won't quickly join the herd again if no correction comes ;) So far so good, and I am running
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