| "Can "Mac D" lead a Nasdaq rally?" "A Fibonacci ghost blocks the bullish divergence's path "
 
 By Tomi Kilgore, CBS.MarketWatch.com
 Last Update: 12:00 AM ET Nov 27, 2000
 
 
 NEW YORK (CBS.MW) - After hitting a new low for the year last
 Wednesday, Nasdaq bulls were thankful for a 5.4 percent rally on Friday.
 Although the retracement path is littered with resistance points, at least
 one technical indicator has been hinting that a stealth rally may be in the
 works.
 
 But even if the moving average convergence/divergence (MACD)
 indicator did suggest that a short-term rally might be in the works,
 resistance should be waiting at around 3,030 and 3,210, backed by
 centuries old Italian ratio.
 
 George Appel developed the MACD lines using a
 series of moving averages. Typically, a "trigger", or
 a nine-day exponential moving average (EMA),
 one that weights the recent closing prices more
 heavily than older ones, is compared to the
 difference between the 26-day EMA and the
 12-day EMA. Some technical analysts use the
 "Mac D" to follow a trend because it helps block
 out a lot of the noise.
 
 Pat Fitzgerald, Senior Technical Analyst at
 Thomson IFR, pointed out that although the
 Nasdaq Composite index ($COMPQ: news, msgs)
 has been putting in lower lows since April, the
 MACD has been putting in higher ones.
 
 On Oct. 18, when the Comp hit a low 3,026.11,
 the trigger stood at -160.42. And last Wednesday,
 after the Comp fell to year-to-date low 2,754.14,
 the trigger closed at 112.53. When the direction of
 a charted instrument differs from that of a technical
 tool, it is often referred to as a "technical
 divergence."
 
 In this case, it's thought to show that, although
 bears have been the aggressor of late, bulls have been getting in some
 good body shots. Although it's difficult to gauge the timing, the thinking is
 that bears will eventually run out of gas and the Comp's price will
 catch-up to where its guts have already gone.
 
 But it shouldn't be a smooth ride by any means.
 
 Resistance rears its head
 
 Fitzgerald sees one of the first roadblocks coming
 at roughly 3,030 for two reasons. First, it was the
 Oct. 18 low (3,026.11). Previous lows, when
 they are surpassed, tend to be resistances on
 retracements considering initial buyers at that level
 that have been burned may be very reluctant to try
 again.
 
 Second, it follows a "golden ratio" lovingly adopted by technical analysts
 to calculate retracement levels.
 
 Follow the 'golden' rule
 
 An early 13th-century mathematician ghost named Fibonacci wrote about
 a ratio - 0.618 - that he found to be prevalent in natural systems. Since
 the market is perceived to be a living, albeit unforgiving, creature,
 technicians have applied the ratio and its inverse - 0.382 - to their
 analysis. As long as a retracement stays within 61.8 percent, it is still just a
 part of the original move. If it passes that mark, the move takes on a mind
 of its own.
 
 If you calculate 38.2 percent of the difference
 between the Nov. 6 high (3,480.01) and
 Wednesday's low (2,754.14), you should get
 277.28. Add that to 2,754.14, and you get the
 first Fibonacci retracement level (3,031.42).
 
 The fact that the 3,030 level was identified as an
 impediment by using more than one method gives it added significance.
 The 3,210 resistance area is also the junction of two different paths.
 When looking at the drop from the Nov. 6 high, it's represents a 61.8
 percent bounce. That's the most significant "Fibo," one that bears will have
 every incentive to defend.
 
 In addition, when the
 Comp rebounded off
 its Nov. 13 low
 (2,859.39), it topped
 out at 3,208.95 on
 Nov. 15. If bears
 managed to beat
 back the bulls there
 once, technicians feel
 they may have the
 confidence to take another crack at it.
 
 A Fibo's ticking bomb?
 
 Looking at where a
 post-Thanksgiving
 rally might stall may
 be a bit pre-mature.
 I applied the Fibo
 technique to a
 monthly chart,
 subtracting 1,357.09
 (November 1998
 low) from 5,132.52
 (March 2000 high), and multiplying the difference (3,775.43) by 61.8
 percent (2,333.22). Take that off the March 2000 high and you get
 2,799.30, a level surpassed briefly last Wednesday. Of course, that
 would be close enough for horseshoes, hand grenades and some
 technicians. But others may be running for cover.
 
 If that scenario were to play out, I asked Fitzgerald where he saw support
 in the Comp. If Wednesday's low were surpassed, he saw strong support
 around 2,450.
 
 Going to a
 longer-term chart,
 you will see two
 weekly lows
 (2,474.41 and
 2,442.22) in that
 area in the middle of
 August 1999 (weeks
 ending Aug. 6 and
 Aug. 13). If
 something works, you keep doing it until it stops working.
 
 Below that, the 2,330-40 level stands out. That coincides with the low of
 the week ended Apr. 23, 1999 (2,329.87) and the week ended May 28,
 1999 (2,339.12).
 
 cbs.marketwatch.com
 
 Mang
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