S&P 500: Correction Still In Force

 | Oct 04, 2015 11:35

h3 Current Position Of The Market

SPX: Long-term trend -Bull Market?

Intermediate trend –SPX is in the midst of an intermediate correction (at least).

Analysis of the short-term trendis done on a daily basis with the help of hourly charts. It is an important adjunct to the analysis of daily and weekly charts which discusses the course of longer market trends.

h3 CORRECTION STILL IN FORCE/h3 h3 Market Overview/h3

“… if (when) the 1911 and 1903 levels give way, we could expect to test the former low of 1867 once again… (T)hat may produce only a temporary pause in the entire downtrend from 2135. There are lower projections, some of them potentially much lower. How the index handles the 1911/1903 and the 1867 support could give us some clues concerning whether or not we have started a bear market.”

1867 is a major support level because it is the bottom of the channel which defines the primary trend of the SPX at this time. This will be discussed in the analysis section. There was a 50/50 chance that it would hold once again, and it did! That does not mean that the correction is over! Far from it. The degree of distribution which occurred after the October2014 rally, has given us much lower counts which will take time to fill. Unless some radical changes take place in the market trend, this practically ensures that we have started a bear market or, at least, a lengthy intermediate correction. Whenever the channel line which is drawn from the October ’04 low is broken, the primary trend will accelerate into a steeper formation.

By rallying from the level of the August low, the index has somewhat clarified its current structure. Last week’s rally is evolving in a corrective wave and not an impulse, adding to the notion that 1867 should eventually be penetrated,perhaps soon. While some cycles have apparently made their lows, longer ones are still bottoming and should continue to pressure the market for some time to come.

Friday’s rally may have reached its apex at 1950. This fills a P&F target taken from the small base created over the last few days.

h3 Intermediate Indicators Survey/h3

The weekly MACD declined slightly from - 32.77 to -33.12. The deceleration is better observed in the histogram which rose slightly last week.

The weekly cumulative A/D rose fractionally last week. NYSI is shown below.

The projection target of 1950 comes from the 3X P&F chart.

h3 Chart Analysis/h3

The Weekly SPX chart(courtesy of QCharts.com, as well as others below)is supplemented by the weekly McClellan Summation Index (courtesy of StockCharts.com) which is posted directly below it. This permits us to obtain a good perspective of the present intermediate technical position of the index. I have drawn some of the main channels which are currently in play.

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Let’s start our analysis with a look at the long-term trend. The green channel, which delineates the trend since October 2011, has been decisively broken. The bull market channel which goes back to March 2009 is still intact, but may soon be tested. For the aficionados of the EWS, the break of the intermediate channel potentially represents the end of primary wave III and the beginning of primary wave IV. Their dilemma is to decide if the latter ended last week and if wave V has started. This is doubtful since the new uptrend (so far) appears to be corrective. Initial confirmation that we are in a bear market will occur when prices come out of the long term channel.

Possibly the most important channel, right now, is the one which defines the primary trend of the market. It was created with a trend line drawn across the last two tops and a parallel initiated at the October ’14 low. The bottom channel line draws its validity from having already connected four points over the past two years. That makes it a very important support level when tested; as it proved to be, last week. That channel implies that the primary trend is currently in an almost flat pattern which could turn out to be a larger replica of the one which formed above its (dashed) mid-channel line starting in December of last year.

Until its lower trend line is broken, prices could continue to trade within that channel’s range for months! If, however, we consider the current cyclic configuration, this is unlikely, and its title of “primary” trend could soon be relinquished to the purple channel, which could easily accommodate falling prices if that were to take place. The red channel is most likely defining the intermediate trend and could continue to outline declining prices as long as its upper line is not seriously violated.

If (when?) the primary support line is breached, and prices continue beyond the long-term trend line from 2009 -- which is not that far away from where prices are currently trading -- we will have an initial confirmation that we have started a bear market. As stated above, the amount of distribution which occurred at the top of the move strongly favors the bear case.

As you can see, a reliable analysis of the market trend can be made by observing the price action alone, without the help of fancy indicators and theories. Although some can be helpful if interpreted correctly, especially those which pertain to market breadth. As an example, the NYSI (below)began to warn of coming weakness long before prices broke. The same can be said of the declining MACD which began to show negative divergence as early as July 2004. Neither of these two oscillators is currently giving an indication that prices have made a significant bottom.