SPX At Tipping Point

 | Mar 14, 2016 09:29

Current Position of the Market

SPX: Long-term trend: Severe correction underway.

SPX: Intermediate trend –.618 retracement reached as well as total projection. End of rally likely.

Analysis of the short-term trend is 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 discuss longer market trends.

Market Overview

Last week’s headline was: “MAX. PROJECTION 95-100% COMPLETE…” At the time, the SPX had registered a high of 2009 (95% of the count) and was starting to correct. That correction lasted until it had reached 1970 on 3/10, at which time traders decided that they should go for that extra 5%. Last Friday, SPX closed at 2021.94, just a few points shy of reaching the full projection.

Intermediate and long-term P&F counts have been accurate the great majority of the time and should be taken seriously. At what point would the current forecast be wrong? If the index continues to rise beyond 2043, the premise that we are in a “bear market” would begin to face a challenge.

When we reached 2009 and started down, some technical conditions which normally occur at a top and warn that a serious reversal is about to occur were still missing. Namely, negative divergence in the daily indicators! This condition is now in place -- as we will see when we analyze the charts. We will also see that the hourly indicators are running out of steam. And, another important feature may have been added: the creation of an exhaustion gap which occurred on Friday at the opening. It will be confirmed as such if we reverse and close it in a few days.

I have hesitated calling the current downtrend a bear market, preferring to label it as a “severe correction”. My reason is that the distribution pattern which was formed between May and August 2015 has a “strong” count which could result in a decline to about 1500. If we stop there, we would only have retraced a little more than .382 of the entire bull market! However, if we take into consideration the distribution phase (weak count) which occurred prior to the May peak of 2135, the decline could extend another 450 to 1050 points. In other words, the worst case scenario could have us retrace 70.7% of the bull phase, with a good possibility of stopping at a 50% retracement (about 1388).

SPX Chart Analysis

Daily chart (This chart, and others below, are courtesy of QCharts.com.)

The chart below focusses on the current countertrend so that we can examine it more closely. Since last week, the index traded outside of its original wedge pattern, but the rally of the past two days has created a larger wedge with Friday’s move back-testing the original lower trend line. The move also stopped at the bottom of the second layer of overhead resistance which was discussed last week. Perhaps more relevant, the entire pattern from the 1810 low has now taken the form of the wave formation that I original proposed: 3-3-5, which now looks complete. If that’s the case, we have to consider the larger formation, with 1810 representing the end of A (from 2116) and now B complete, or nearly complete, inferring that C is ready to begin and go below A (1810).

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Note that wave 3 of c ended without decelerating, which is the reason why at the end of last week, the daily momentum indicators were not showing deceleration either. Only the A/D oscillator did! This past Friday’s move went to a new high but the momentum oscillators did not, which gave us the negative divergence which had been missing while at the same time, the A/D oscillator is showing even more negative divergence.

We’ll discuss the “exhaustion” gap in our analysis of the hourly chart where it is much more visible.