Monday, July 21, 2014

Short Term Trend Forecast Update

Short Term Trend Forecast Update

The last forecast made on July 8th stated:
" Forecasted cycle tops and bottoms (+/-)
Top        July 12-15 +/-  (The market rallied into the 15th and hung in there until the morning of the 17th and then sold off)
Bottom  July 18-19 +/-   (The market sold off into the 17th and that was the bottom)
Top        July 23 +/-      (The market rallied off the 17th low but did sell off early on the 21st but is rallying off that higher low, so far as of 2PM EST)

Following cycles has been good to use as a guide or potential future road map, but, other tools must always be used to confirm any forecasted cycle trends. 

UPDATE 
Forecasts for cycle tops and bottoms (+/-)
Top   July 23-26 +/-
Bottom August 7th +/-

Since cycles do not distinguish between trading days and calendar days, the cycle dates may come out on Holidays or weekends.  So the dates suggested that do fall on such days are to be used as a window.   So, as always, other tools must always be used to confirm any forecasted cycle trends.  All other days are still noted with a "+/-" because the cycle dates are not always as perfect as we all would like them to be.  Although they have been pretty accurate.  
  
UPDATE in the Intermediate Term forecast 
Intermediate term cycles are currently pointing down into July 2014 - August 2014 +/- and may even extend further out in the 3rd and possibly the 4th quarter 2014.   These cycles will continue to be watched for any possible changes in the forecast.   The market continues to be strong as displayed in the advance decline line and other such indicators.  
 
This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 
Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

RiskOn RiskOff - Where are we now ?

This post is an update to the April 16 ,2014 post

Above chart dated April 16,2014 - courtesy of stockcharts.com
 
Above chart dated July 17,2014 - courtesy of stockcharts.com
JNK - SPDR High Yield Bond ETF
TLH - iShares 10-20 Year Treasury Bond ETF
JNK:TLH is the ratio of the two.  When the ratio is in a confirmed uptrend then it is suggesting a Risk On market.   When the ratio is in a confirmed downtrend then it is suggesting a Risk Off market.   Note what happened in June - August 2011 in the top chart and again in 2012.

As of today, there is still a negative divergence in this chart...
The JNK:TLH chart is not confirming the high in the SPX with a corresponding high in the JNK:TLH chart...  The JNK:TLH high was recorded on or about December 31,2013...

In June it looked as if this indicator was going to reverse to the upside and the red line was going to breach the blue line to the upside, but, in July the JNK:TLH ratio declined below both the red and blue moving averages.

As seen at the top of this blog, maybe it is best said as follows... "Confidence is contagious. So is lack of confidence" -Vince Lombardi


This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions.

Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Second Halves Following Flat First Halves

After information about the January Barometer was posted, the following article was noticed on Twitter sent by Jeffrey Hirsch from the Stock Trader's Almanac.  Both of these are theories with their respective probabilities of success.  They may work and they may not.  Please, as always, do your own homework and consult with professionals before making any investment decisions.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

$DJIA $SPX Second Halves Following Flat First Halves
By Christopher Mistal

Despite the continued generosity of the Fed, an improving labor market and generally solid economic and corporate data, stock market performance in 2014 has been rather lackluster. At the midway point this year DJIA was up a mere 1.5% and S&P 500, a little over 6%. On the heels of a record-setting 2013, this is a particularly meager showing for six months. However, this type of first-half performance is not all that uncommon. In 64 years since 1950, DJIA has been flat (defined as down less than 5% or up less than 5%) 20 times. Within these 20 years, S&P 500 was also flat 15 times.

Click images to view full size…
[Flat First Halves since 1950 Table]

Following flat first halves, full-month July performance was well above average at 2.1%. In all Julys since 1950, DJIA and S&P 500 averaged gains of 1.2% and 1.0% respectively. However, after July’s surge the market then tended to drift sideways to lower from August through the end of October. At which time a mild fourth quarter rally pulled the market modestly higher.

[Flat First Halves One-Year Seasonal Pattern since 1950]




This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 

Past performance is not indicative of future results.


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

SPY vs High Low 10dma

The following charts show divergences...
This needs to be watched...

This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 


Past performance is not indicative of future results.


2014 January Barometer

January Effect. The stock market has shown an uncanny tendency to end the year higher if prices increase during the month of January, and to end the year with lower prices if prices decline during January. The saying is, "So goes January, so goes the rest of the year." Between 1950 and 1993, the January Effect was correct 38 out of 44 times--an accuracy of 86%.   (An excerpt from marketinout.com)

The following is a detailed chart of January 2014 with the 2014 calendar superimposed below the chart.


The month of January 2014 obviously closed down and that would suggest that 2014 might be a down year, OR, it may suggest a correction at sometime during the year.
The reason this chart was shown in great detail is because, sometimes, the January price pattern may suggest the general price pattern for the year.   Note that this is only a suggestion as nothing is ever written in stone.

Additional information on this topic can be found at the Stock Traders Almanac, as follows.

Friday, January 31, 2014

January Barometer 88.9% Accurate (STA14 Page 16), Almanac Investor Subscribers Emailed Official Results

Dow: 61.9% S&P: 66.7% NAS: 61.9% R1K: 61.9% R2K: 76.2%
"Sell in May and go away. However, no one ever said it was the beginning of the month."
John L. Person (Professional trader, author, speaker, Commodity Trader's Almanac, nationalfutures.com, 6/19/2009, b. 1961)

$SPX January Barometer Results Are In
By Jeffery A. Hirsch & Christopher Mistal




Devised by Yale Hirsch in 1972 our January Barometer (JB) states that as the S&P 500 goes in January, so goes the year. The indicator has registered only seven major errors since 1950 (all within secular bear markets) for an 89.1% accuracy ratio. Vietnam affected 1966 and 1968; 1982 turned out to be the start of the next secular bull market; two January rate cuts and 9/11 affected 2001; the anticipation of military action in Iraq held down the market in January 2003; 2009 was the beginning of a new bull market following the second worst bear market on record; and the Fed’s second round of quantitative easing likely saved 2010.

January 2014 Changes

Well today’s close makes it official. Ye Olde JB is negative (page 16 STA14). On top of this, DJIA closed below its December closing low of 15,739.43 on January 29 (page 40 STA14). Both are ominous for this nearly 5-year-old bull market. Since 1950, this combination has occurred 21 times with declines going on to average –14.0%. Full-year performance was negative 14 times with all 21 years posting an average loss of –3.2%.

Click image for full size...
[Years DJIA Fell Below December Low In First Quarter & Down January]

This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 

Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Advance Decline Oscillator & Volume Oscillator

Advance Decline Oscillator
Volume Oscillator
Both of the charts above, the Advance Decline Oscillator and the Volume Oscillator, display rising bottoms.  A red trend line was drawn to connect the rising bottoms in each chart.   The red trend line was violated today on both the Advance Decline Oscillator and the Volume Oscillator.  This is a heads up to watch for a potential turn in the stock market in the days, weeks or months ahead.  Indicators/Oscillators should be watched on monthly, weekly and daily charts for further clues.  The shorter periods will lead the longer periods when a turn occurs.


This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 
Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Short Term Trend forecast

Short Term Trend forecast Update
The last forecast made on July 3rd stated:
" Forecasted cycle tops and bottoms (+/-)
Top        July 4 +/-  (This forecast worked out very well)
Bottom  July 6 +/-  (This forecast bottom carried over to Monday and then continued on Tuesday as frequently happens when a forecast date falls on a weekend or Holiday)
Top       July 12-15 +/- " 
Following cycles has been good to use as a guide or potential future road map, but, other tools must always be used to confirm any forecasted cycle trends. 

UPDATE 
Forecasted cycle tops and bottoms (+/-)
Top        July 12-15 +/-
Bottom  July 18-19 +/-
Top        July 23 +/-

Since cycles can not distinguish between trading days and calendar days, the cycle dates may come out on Holidays or weekends.  So the dates suggested that do fall on such days are to be used as a window.   So, as always, other tools must always be used to confirm any forecasted cycle trends.  All other days are still noted with a "+/-" because the cycle dates are not always as perfect as we all would like them to be.  Although they have been pretty accurate.  
  
UPDATE in the Intermediate Term forecast 
Intermediate term cycles are currently pointing down into July 2014 - August 2014 +/- and may even extend further out in the 3rd and possibly the 4th quarter 2014.   These cycles will continue to be watched for any possible changes in the forecast.   The market continues to be strong as displayed in the advance decline line and other such indicators. 
This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 
Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Monday, July 7, 2014

Higher Market Highs ?

What are the odds of still higher market highs?

By Sy Harding of the Street Smart Report
 
Saturday, July 5, 12:40. 
The market plunged in January, and recovered only into a going nowhere sideways trading range for the next three months into May. It then broke out to the upside, stalled a bit, but this week spiked up to another new high.
070514a

As a result, the first half of the year, which was looking hesitant if not toppy, has turned out to be quite positive, with the Dow now up 2.9% for the year, and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq up more than 7%.
It accomplished those new highs even with widespread warnings that valuation levels, overbought conditions, investor complacency, public investor participation (stock and fund holdings), margin debt, insider selling, corporate IPO and M&A activity, earnings growth slowing, and a long list of other conditions similar to those seen, not at previous buying opportunities, but at prior significant market tops.
It accomplished the new highs even though the economy has been stumbling, GDP plunging to negative growth of 2.9% in the 1st quarter, and expectations for the second quarter and the full year being revised down, to looking at another year of a sub-par economy, more than five years after the recession ended.
It accomplished those new highs even though the bull market has already doubled since the 2009 low, an exemplary accomplishment for a bull market under any circumstances let alone in an anemic economic recovery.
It accomplished those new highs even though everyone by now must be well aware that this has become the third longest lasting bull market in history, and is without the economic foundation of previous bull markets.
  • The 1920’s bull market lasted almost 9 years in the rip-roaring economy of the ‘roaring twenties’ – and then crashed 90%.
  • The 1990’s bull market lasted almost ten years in the rip-roaring economy of the 1990’s – and then plunged 50% (the Nasdaq 78%).
  • The 2003-2007 bull market lasted five years – and crashed 50% in the 2007-2009 bear market and financial meltdown.
    This bull market has now lasted 5.3 years.
    It also accomplished these new highs in spite of the S&P 500 now having gone 1,004 days without a normal 10% correction. It’s the longest stretch without a 10% correction since the 1,127 day run from July 1984 to August 1987, 30 years ago – which ended with the 1987 crash, the S&P 500 being down 37%, scaring then also confident investors out of the market for several years.
We all recognize that it was accomplished, at least until the end of last year, by six years of unprecedented government rescue and stimulus efforts.
Yet  it has continued in the first half of this year even though the Fed is withdrawing the stimulus punchbowl, with monthly QE already cut back from $85 billion a month in December to $45 billion, and coming down at a rate of $10 billion a month.
And this year’s continuing positive activity is taking place in the market’s unfavorable season of May to October, and in the usually negative 2nd year of the Four-Year Presidential Cycle.
It can always be different this time in some areas.
As proven in 1999, investors can become even more confident, valuations (p/e ratios, etc.) can become even more extreme.
But the above is a very long list of conditions that would all have to defy the odds.



Use the following link to read the balance of this article

http://bit.ly/TZnbvt


This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 
Past performance is not indicative of future results.




Thursday, July 3, 2014

Short Term Trend Forecast

Short Term Trend forecast Update
The last forecast made on June 25th stated, "So far there is no change in the next forecasted cycle low July 6th +/-      But, cycles indicate that there may be some kind of counter trend action between June 26th and July 4th.".

The counter trend action did happen as the cycle forecast suggested.  
 
Following cycles has been good to use as a guide or potential future road map, but, other tools must always be used to confirm any forecasted cycle trends. 
UPDATE 
Forecasted cycle tops and bottoms (+/-)
Top        July 4 +/-
Bottom  July 6 +/-
Top       July 12-15 +/-
 
Since cycles can not distinguish between trading days and calendar days, the cycle dates may come out on Holidays or weekends.  So the dates suggested that do fall on such days are to be used as a window.   So, as always, other tools must always be used to confirm any forecasted cycle trends.  All other days are still noted with a "+/-" because the cycle dates are not always as perfect as we all would like them to be.  Although they have been pretty accurate.  
  
UPDATE in the Intermediate Term forecast 
Intermediate term cycles are currently pointing down into July 2014 - August 2014 +/- and may even extend further out in the 3rd and possibly the 4th quarter 2014.   These cycles will continue to be watched for any possible changes in the forecast.   The market continues to be strong as displayed in the advance decline line and other such indicators. 
 
 
This has been posted for Educational Purposes Only.   Do your own work and consult with Professionals before making any investment decisions. 
Past performance is not indicative of future results.