Mind The Gap

 | Dec 20, 2017 09:37

Whenever the subject of technical analysis crops up you can usually guarantee that most people’s eyes will start to glaze over, particularly those who prefer fundamentals in analysing the markets.

I think there is room for both, though I do prefer technical, and this is where the study of price action can come in useful when looking at asset prices. It is through this prism that it might be prudent to take a step back from what is quickly becoming a consensus trade for 2018 that of US markets going ever higher.

With it becoming increasingly likely that we will get to see a tax reform bill passed by the end of the year, the expectation is that US markets will continue to push even higher and build on the meteoric gains of the past two years.

This year alone the S&P500 and Dow Jones are on course to post gains of 19% and 25% respectively, on top of the gains seen in 2016 of 18% and 22% respectively.

Even if you accept the fact that the US economy is performing quite well and that US companies are operating at their most efficient, these are still extraordinary gains, when compared to markets elsewhere.

The big question is then how much higher can we go given that most of the gains seen this year have been predicated on there being some sort of fiscal stimulus or tax reform, which now looks like being delivered.

From an investment point of view that means that investors have a decision to make as we head into 2018. How much more gas is in the tank for this rally given the gains seen already.

This is where price charts can come in handy, and for this we can look at a simple weekly chart with a 200 week MA.

Since its inception in 1957, the S&P 500 has spent most of its time above the 200 week MA but it has rarely if ever been as far away from its long term average as it is now.

The same can be said of the Dow Jones, and as a long term rule prices eventually return to their long term average mean over time.