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In
our previous article, we noted that the
market had been approaching some very important and pivotal
technical areas. While the market's trading is always important
to one trader/investor or another, there are certain times
during the market's evolution when the market's trading is
important to ALL traders. This would perhaps be one of them,
mostly due to the discussion in our previous
article, which will zoom into today. So without further ado,
let's go right into the charts:

Chart
Notations:
-
The
Monthly overlay line charts comparing the DOW, S&P500
and Nasdaq-100 address the Long-Term Time Horizon (1 to 3
year)
-
We've
scaled the chart so that we can properly compare the extent
of the recovery of these major market measures over the last
4 years. It doesn't take much analysis to note that the DOW
is the strongest of the lot, the S&P500 is not too far
behind, but still trading below its prior all-time high,
while the Nasdaq-100 is still basically in a coma.
-
What
is the significance of this for a long-term investor? … or
for Short-Term trader? It has a great significance for all.
That's because it suggests exactly what environment we are
in. The long-term environment bears a great weight on
participants of all time frames, in the same manner that the
weather or climate would affect inhabitants of any
particular location. A Bull market environment is one that
has no ceiling, and a Bear market is one that has no floor,
and either one will stretch beyond the imagination of most
participants. These characteristics stretch farther beyond
magnitude and direction, but also pace or speed, the
combination of which greatly affects all participants.
-
In
our chart above, it is difficult to say that the markets are
in Bull-mode just because the DOW is at an all-time high –
take one look at the condition of the Nasdaq-100, which
represents the market's speculative arm, and you might ask
yourself how the markets can be in Bull market mode when
there is little evidence of rampant speculation. On the flip
side, we would be hard pressed to label this as a Bear
market environment when the premier measure of Blue Chip
stocks is trading at an all-time high. So what is it? Well
there are times when it is wise to be long-term Bullish,
times to be long-term Bearish and times to remain long-term
Neutral, this would perhaps be among those times. There is
just too much bifurcation going on across the markets that
it would be wiser to label Intermediate-Term trends as
unsustainable. And since the most recent Intermediate-Term
trend has been up, it should not be too far fetched to mark
the most recent uptrend as unsustainable, despite the DOW
trading at all-time high. Let's take a look at some detail:

Chart
Notations:
-
The
Daily chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average above
addresses the Short-and-Intermediate-Term time horizon, and
is a follow-up to our previous article.
-
The
grey area which marks our first resistance zone is derived
from translating our resistance mark from the S&P500 (at
the .786 retracement). This falls at approximately the
12,200 mark +/- 0.8%.
-
Our
posture here is no different from that we noted on the
previous S&P500 chart, the market has now entered that
zone and it would be wise to switch from what was a
short-term Bullish posture to short-term Neutral, which our
Intermediate-Term posture is in Neutral. Same as the
S&P500, let's look for the market to give us a
significant reaction to this resistance zone over the next
10 Trading days – the DOW and the rest of the equity
markets should be running into some quicksand here.
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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