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The
action over the last week satisfies an expectation we have had
for the year 2006: a fresh all-time high. The move into new-high
territory was not an easy breakout. In May, the DOW crept to
within 90 points of an all-time high and thereafter sold-off to
lose 8% of its value throughout the next couple of months –
this was one of the strongest pullbacks the market had since the
major low in 2002. In July, the market found its footing and
once again made a second run for its all-time high. It has been
all-up ever since and into today. Here's a toast to the Bulls
for a well earned victory! Now it's back to work.
Now
that we have the DOW trading at a new all-time high, the popular
question seems to be "where is the next resistance?"
Well, we have already actually addressed that in the September
19th newsletter, and we still take the same posture
today. But let's follow-up.
When
a market is hitting an all-time high, looking for the next order
of resistance or a target point is usually very tough, needless
to say because it is literally in "uncharted
territory," and we therefore have no prior history to use
as benchmarks. In this case however, it is not as difficult as
usual because we have the luxury of having the S&P500
largely trailing the DOW, and still lingering underneath its
all-time high. While the DOW is the world's most popular
benchmark, the S&P500 is the most significant because it has
a very good balance between broadness and quality. This
characteristic of the S&P500 is the central reason why it is
used by nearly all equity market professionals as the
"main" benchmark for US Equities. We have therefore
looked there to set our next target point for a turn, even if
it's the DOW that is in the lead. To arrive at a good projection
for the DOW's first challenge, or resistance point in this
all-time-high territory, we shall use a concept covered in the Broad
Market Class that we call "translation of Support and
Resistance." We are not going to do any short-term analysis
this week, and just focus entirely on the big picture, and what
we can expect in the weeks and months ahead:

Chart
Notations:
-
The
Monthly chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average addresses
the Intermediate-to-Long-Term time horizon
-
Above,
we arrive at the 12,200 mark (gray area above) as the first
challenge area in the all-time high territory. We will allow
a margin of 100 points in either direction. (note that 100
points in the Dow is less than 0.8% of its value). And how
did we arrive at this value? We took or
"translated" resistance in the S&P500 – a
highly correlated market to the Dow and applied it here. We
shall see this in the next chart.
-
The
arrows designate the directional bias for this particular
time horizon (Int-Long-Term). If we find a market that is
able to sustain trade above the gray area: this is full-on
Bull market territory. On the flip-side sustained trade
below the prior high (red line) puts the market vulnerable
to getting sucked back into the Bear market range.
-
We
shall therefore take an overall neutral Int-Long-Term
posture in between the former high (11,750, red line) and
our target zone (~12,200, gray zone) – the reason for this
is due to high probability that what we are seeing here is
an unsustainable breakout. A SUSTAINED move into the Bull
Market territory (green arrow) has significantly less
probability than movement back into the bear market range
(red arrow). This is because of a few very important
reasons:
-
The
main benchmark of US Equities, the S&P500, is still
within the confines of CORRECTIVE activity (discussed next)
-
The
NASDAQ, the market premier measure for Speculative behavior
or "appetite for risk" is still in coma from the
dizzying 84% loss between years 2000 and 2002. We cannot
have a Bull Market when the Speculative market is still in
the hospital's ICU. A Bull market is characterized by a
movement of primary measures (such as the DOW and
S&P500, in tandem with a strong Speculative market).

Chart
Notations:
-
The
Monthly chart of the S&P500 above addresses the
Intermediate-to-Long-Term time horizon
-
The
design of the long-term trend in the S&P500 is very
different from the DOW. Note that it is trailing way behind,
and is still within the confines of "corrective
behavior."
-
We
have applied the .786 Fib Retracement here as the next
Resistance point, and took that and translated it over to
the DOW to arrive at our 12,200 resistance point there, just
using some elementary math.
-
In
the S&P500, the .786 Fib retracement is the final
frontier of resistance. A sustained trade above that point
would put a 100+% retracement into play. We shall deal with
that only if the market is able to exceed 1385. In the
meantime:
-
Note
that in over 4 years of trading since the 2002 low point,
the upward trend in the S&P500 (which is corrective of
the prior decline) has had no pullback of greater than 9%
magnitude. It has been a great and very consistent
environment for US investors, as returns were positive
almost all the way in those 4 years. We are now reaching a
stage in long-term market cyclicality that the market is
ripe for a good dose of profit taking. As we near this
critical resistance point, what is likely to be the largest
and fastest decline since the 2002 low point is imminent
(relative to this time frame discussed). If the largest
decline since the 2002 had a magnitude of 8-9%, then that
means that if the market reacts to the .786 Fib retracement
at this important cyclical juncture, the decline is likely
to exceed 9% in magnitude. It is also likely to be a fast
one. We shall maintain this posture for now, as long as the
S&P500 is trading below the 1385 mark. The weeks ahead
are going to be very pivotal in the markets. Let's tread
carefully, as we always do, as the markets continues its
progress through time.
Until
next week: Good Luck! Fernando Gonzalez
I
always like to hear comments and suggestions: Email
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Fernando
has over 6 years of high volume professional trading experience, with a
long-term track record of profitability. He helped develop the original
material and coursework for Online Trading Academy. He has designed and
individually conducted courses for over 400 trading students and several
hundred others in Lectures, Forums and Intraday participation within the
Day Trading Education and Advisory Community. He has also co-authored a
best-selling book: Strategies
for the Online Day Trader (McGraw-Hill 1999), which reached overall
best-seller list on Amazon.com & section bestseller list for Barnes
& Noble and other notable sources.
DISCLAIMER:
This newsletter is written for educational purposes only. By no means do
any of its contents recommend, advocate or urge the buying, selling or
holding of any financial instrument whatsoever. Trading and Investing
involves high levels of risk. The author expresses personal opinions and
will not assume any responsibility whatsoever for the actions of the
reader. The author may or may not have positions in Financial
Instruments discussed in this newsletter. Future results can be
dramatically different from the opinions expressed herein. Past
performance does not guarantee future results.
ABOUT
THE WEEKLY REVIEW:
The weekly review heavily focuses
on the application of Technical Analysis on the Broad Market Levels. You
will rarely see individual Stock Picks on the Weekly Review! It is the
author's belief that most Individual Stocks (certainly not all) will
follow the overall direction of the Broad Market that surrounds them, as
well as the Sectors they comprise. Discussion is focused heavily upon
the Major Market & Sector price activity. Rarely also will you see
discussion of the fundamental, macro-economic or political nature in the
Weekly Review. By focusing only on the technical, or price & volume
aspects of the major measures of the market, Fernando hopes to satisfy
any equity trader's needs for a qualified discussion and forecast of the
overall direction of equities, whether it be the Short, Intermediate, or
Long-Term time horizons. Whether you trade the Index Futures, Index
Tracking Stocks or Individual Equity Market Instruments, having an
experienced eye on the conditions of the broad market that surrounds you
is extremely important!

© 2006 Fernando Gonzalez
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