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When a stock is above a
moving average it is considered bullish, and the stock can be considered
to be in a rising trend for that time frame. A good way to determine the
market's overall condition (overbought/oversold) across a range of time
frames is to analyze the percentage of stocks above their 20-, 50-, and
200-day moving averages. The following chart shows the condition of the
stocks in the S&P 500 Index.
As you can see the
market is becoming overbought in all time frames. Each of the three
indicators is not only approaching the top of its trading range, but
they are very close to the declining tops lines I have drawn, which
demonstrates how participation is fading even as the S&P 500 moves
to progressively higher tops. If the indicators can press higher to
about the 90% level, it would be a longer-term positive; however, if the
declining tops lines prevail, it is likely that overhead resistance on
the price index will force another correction.
I am seeing this kind
of picture through a wide range of internal indicators, and investor
sentiment is becoming extremely bullish, so I expect that there will
soon be another correction of sufficient depth and duration to clear the
overbought condition and dampen confidence. As you can see from other
corrections in the last few years, this can be accomplished fairly
quickly and painlessly.

© 2005 Carl Swenlin
Editorial Archive
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Redlands, CA USA
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