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Strategies & Market Trends : Ask Vendit Off-Topic Questions -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Venditâ„¢ who wrote (4650)2/5/2005 2:34:34 PM
From: Walkingshadow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8752
 
The jobs reports all hit the news right on schedule an hour before the open at 8:30am ET, and were followed about an hour later by the Michigan Sentiment report, which came in less than expected.

08:30 Average Workweek 33.7 vs 33.8 consensus

08:30 Nonfarm Payrolls 146K vs 200K consensus

08:30 Unemployment Rate +5.2% vs +5.4% consensus

09:47 Michigan Sentiment- rev 95.5 vs 96.0 consensus

Here was the report I got early in the session:

=============================================
(Dow +7, Nasdaq +2, S&P +1.05)
Little enthusiasm at the open as the market opens with a tinge of caution following weaker than expected payrolls data... While a rise of 146K in Jan non-farm payrolls was disappointing versus expectations of 200K, and below an average gain of 177K over the four prior months, the data were not too bad to drastically threaten consumer spending, as hiring is clearly taking place just not at a robust rate... The average gain of 177K also represents an annualized gain of 1.6% which, in addition to an increase of about 1 1/2-2.0% in productivity, remains consistent with real GDP growth of 3.0-3 1/2%... Lower yields in the benchmark 10-year note, up 20 ticks to yield 4.08%, have also provided a floor of early support for the market.
=======================================================

Here was the report I got at 10 am ET, after the market had surged higher. I notice the rally began precisely at 9:45am, but I think that was coincidental. I can't imagine it was sparked by the uninspiring Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index:

=================================================
The Jan Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index has just checked in at 95.5, roughly in line with expectations of 96.0, but off 1.6 points (-1.6%) from the Dec level after the 6% two month rise over Nov and Dec... The index, however, which serves as a better indicator of consumer mood than buying habits, continues to trend modestly higher, as it has stood above the 92.1 average since 1990.
=================================================

Before the reports, the Nasdaq futures were trading moderately up, about +3 compared to fair value. Immediately after the news, they dipped reversed and dipped to about -4.5 compared to fair value 15 minutes before the open, then began moving higher.

139.142.147.22

The story about the tobacco court decision came through the wires at 14:05 ET. The market opened flat and suddenly began to rally about 15 minutes into the session, long before the tobacco news hit the wires. There was no reaction following the legal announcement at all (actually, the market traded down somewhat during this time). About an hour later there was a rally into the close.

139.142.147.22

So obviously, the tobacco ruling nothing to do with anything.

....uh, unlesss you happened to own shares of MO or something:

139.142.147.22

But interestingly, compare the action in the chart above to that of the Dow after 2pm:

139.142.147.22

Now MO is, of course, a component of the Dow:

finance.yahoo.com^DJI

So the court decision hit at 2:05pm ET, and caused an immediate gap up in MO, but had no affect on the DJIA, which actually traded down between 2pm and 3pm ET, just like QQQQ.

Once again, I think the inescapable conclusion is that the tobacco ruling had no real effect on the general market at all.

I think we can also conclude from the futures action and the flat open at 9:30 am ET that the jobs reports were not the catalyst for the rally either, otherwise the futures would have rallied, and the markets would have gapped up.

My conclusion is this is a classic bull trap, and all that bullishness will evaporate early next week, probably Monday. I suspect there will be "follow-through" that is virtually all driven by filling of retail buy orders accumulating over the weekend; retailers are the only ones affected by BS news stories crowing about things like the great tobacco decision and the good news coming from the jobs reports and such. Then, the professionals, lying in wait, will take control. That might be late in the session Monday, or it might be Tuesday, but either way I think it will occur as QQQQ tries to invade the zone of heavy resistance above $38. Retail buying will never power QQQQ through that area of strong resistance, and the professionals know that, and will position themselves accordingly (i.e., short). I think at that point The MMs and specialists and professional traders will begin walking everything downwards. Retail panic selling will set in, fueling the resumption of the medium-term correction.

The only thing that could change this scenario is, as always, big news. Not like the "news" from the jobs reports or tobacco, it will have to be far more substantial than that, IMHO.

T



To: Venditâ„¢ who wrote (4650)2/5/2005 5:21:44 PM
From: Walkingshadow  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8752
 
More....

There are a few market internal indicators worth noting, in addition to what I previously posted about the volatilities.

Specifically, short-term market internals: the advance/decline issues ratio, the advance/decline volume ratio, the NYSE TICK ($TICK), and the Nasdaq TICK ($TICKQ).

The advance/decline issues and volume ratios for the SPX stand now at 4.30 and 4.36 repectively, which are extremely high readings indicating excessive bullishness on a short-term basis (this says nothing about the long-term trend !!).

There were only a few times in recent months when these ratios were this high. Specifically, December 21, January 14, and the very next trading session, which was January 18.

Analysis of this chart will show what happened subsequently.

139.142.147.218

December 21 is the bullish white candle 2/3 of the way through the month, and the SPX closed at 1205 on that day. After that, the index rose a bit more, reaching a peak (on a closing basis) 4 sessions later on Dec. 28 of 1214, which was 0.7% higher than the close on the 21st. It was all downhill after that.

What about the other two extreme bullish readings? January 14 and January 18 are the twin bullish candles (the 10th and 11th candles in January on the 3-month chart).

139.142.147.218

The index reached a peak at the close on the 18th of 1196 (note this is still below the highs of December). Beginning the very next trading session, the index dropped 2.8% over the next 4 tradings sessions, closing at a low of 1164 on Jan. 24.

How about another short-term market internal---the TICK?

Same story there. The NYSE and Nasdaq TICKs have reached extreme bullish values. The last time these internals were this bullish was December 15:

NYSE $TICK:
stockcharts.com[w,a]dallyyay[db][pb10][vc60]&pref=G

Nasdaq $TICKQ:
stockcharts.com[w,a]dallyyay[db][pc10][vc60]&pref=G

Analysis of the chart (in this case QQQQ) shows that this day was the high of the month, and in fact, the high of the year:

QQQQ daily chart:
139.142.147.218

4-year weekly QQQQ chart:
139.142.147.218

In fact, it was a high that had not been reached since December 2002, and has not been approached or exceeded since.

Once again, just as we saw for the extreme bullish reading in the advance/decline indicators, after that extreme bullish reading in the TICKs, it was all downhill after that.

My conclusion is that based on market internals the index has again reached a bullish extreme and reversal to the downside is imminent. This occurs in the midst of a medium-term correction that began on the first trading day of this year. That means it is unsustainable, and reversal to the downside will occur very shortly.

This is not an absolute interpretation, since market internals must be interpreted within the context of the general market trends. So, the interpretation would be different if this occurred in the context of a strong, heavy volume rally within a medium-term and long-term uptrend. Under those conditions, such extreme bullish readings could be sustainable, and the volatilities could also easily reach considerably lower extremes. Indeed, you can see that the reaction of the index to the extremely bullish advance/decline readings was somewhat different in December than it was in January, and that is because the short-term trend was still up, and the medium-term correction had not yet begun either. But that is not the current situation at all. Now, we are in a long-term uptrend, medium-term downtrend, and short-term uptrend.

This supports my previous reasons for believing that a reversal to the downside is very imminent. This could begin as early as Monday (after the retail buy orders are filled, they've suckered in all the designated bagholders they can, and the professionals have taken their short positions---in fact, this very event may be the catalyst, since taking short positions requires selling). Or, it might begin Tuesday. I can't see the current short-term relief rally lasting any longer than that, particularly given the heavy resistance that lies only about 1% above the closing price for QQQQ of $37.75 on Friday.

So QQQQ has about 1% (more or less) rally left in its sails IMHO, then the slide to test lower support will begin.

T