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I am hearing loud
assertions from both extremes -- that we have entered a bear market, and
the opposing view, that we have begun another major bull market up leg.
In my opinion, neither view is correct; however, the bulls are still
clearly in control.
Looking at our first
chart we can see that the S&P 500 has decisively broken up through
the top of the declining trend channel that has defined the recent
correction. Equally important, key timing model components are on the
verge of generating a new buy signal. Specifically, the PMO (Price
Momentum Oscillator) has recently crossed up through its green moving
average line, and the Percent Buy Index (PBI) is about to do the same.
Once the buy signal is generated, my market posture for stocks would
change from neutral to bullish.
(Editor's Note:
Complete descriptions of the Thrust/Trend timing model and its
components are available on the DecisionPoint.com website in the
Glossary section.)
Another positive factor
is that the S&P 500 has remained inside the rising trend channel
that has dominated the pattern for about 30 months (see the second chart
below). The price index will have to drop down through the bottom of
this channel before we can claim that a bear market is in progress.
As for the "major
bull market up leg" theory, there is no evidence that the current
rally is destined to do any better than the other rallies in the
2004-2006 time frame, all of which were contained by the top of the
rising trend channel. Not that it can't happen, but the recent
correction did not create the kind of deeply oversold conditions that
usually precede major bull market up legs.
Our second chart is a
monthly bar chart of the S&P 500. It offers some small hope to the
bears in that the monthly PMO has topped and has been falling for two
months. This sign of long-term internal weakness is by no means
conclusive, but it does raise some doubt as to whether the rally can be
sustained.
Bottom Line:
Medium-term oversold conditions and extreme bearish sentiment have
turned the market upward before any serious technical damage was done by
the correction. Our market posture remains neutral (as of Thursday's
close) but our primary timing model is close to generating a buy signal.
At this point my assumption is that the rally will continue, but that it
only has modest potential.

© 2006 Carl Swenlin
Editorial Archive
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Carl Swenlin
President
DecisionPoint.com
Redlands, CA USA
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