The market continued
its sideways move yesterday and banged-up against 1335 resistance for
most of the afternoon. Over the past three sessions the market has been
stuck in a four point range and trading on miniscule volume.
The minimal participation and movement is no surprise. Earnings
season (officially began this week) will as far as the big money is
concerned begin next week Monday with Alcoa AA. Shortly
thereafter, we will also get earnings from large cap technology companies
like IBM IBM, Apple AAPL and Microsoft MSFT,
as well as the banksters like JPMorgan JPM and Goldman Sachs GS.
These megacap companies will set the tone of the stock market for
the next few months. Technology has led the corporate world out of the
recession, and many are turning to the financial sector to add jobs and
to keep the recovery in place. Guidance from technology behemoths will be
heavily weighed by analysts - and the tech companies better start showing
better revenue growth. From the banks, analysts will be monitoring write
downs (should be write ups) as well as assessing the impact management
believes the end of quantitative easing will have on the banks.
So if there was ever a time or an excuse for the
market to blast in one direction or the other, next week caters to both.
And so it's no surprise that a week before earnings season begins, SPX is
testing previous highs. From a technical standpoint, a higher high should
be viewed as a continuation of the bullish trend that started last year.
And a new high could also be viewed as a bullish continuation from the
larger bullish trend that began in March 2009, but I don't agree.
Here is a link to our long term chart of SPX.
The orange line represented my target for SPX in the summer of
2010. 1350 was my target and the SPX reached 1344 before pulling back. As
a rule of thumb (my thumb), on the long-term charts we give the indices
2% wiggle room, near resistance or support lines. For SPX that means a
higher high can go to 1377 and, in my view, not be considered a breakout
on a long term chart. Since we are assessing SPX break out on a long term
basis, the index must overcome critical longterm resistance. But
long-term resistance is not a number, it's a range, and in this example
the range is roughly SPX 1324 through 1377.
Now let's go back to comments I made
throughout the month on how I think a move to new highs this week is
bearish. A break out this week would push short term, higher high
momentum traders, into the market – and squeeze the bears one last time.
Casual money would also be lured into the market since they missed most
of the run-up last year and have also been on the sidelines for the past
five earnings season rallies.
So now everyone with money is in the game, and they are all
positioned in one direction, long. But our long term chart tells us that
unless the bulls can take out 1377, there was no long term break out, and
instead the SPX is up against mighty long term resistance. That is not to
say the index cannot take its resistance out, but it will need validation
from corporate earnings to do so. I am not bearish, or calling for a top,
but do not expect me to give the bulls a pat on the back at a higher high
today either. The market has been in a huge bullish phase despite shaky
global economics for the past few years. And government stimulant
programs are poised to end shortly. So I think a higher high (this week
ahead of corporate earnings) needs to be viewed with a high degree of
skepticism.
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