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To: Return to Sender who wrote (3793)10/23/2014 4:32:19 PM
From: Jacob Snyder  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8239
 
<Long Term Market Breadth Indicators>

I'm having trouble looking at this chart, and seeing much trouble in market breadth. Yes, the peaks in new highs have been lower since the 2012 high, while the market has gone on to new highs. However, the fall-off in new highs has been modest. This slow decline in new highs could continue for years, before market breadth becomes a red flag for a market top. If the next peak in this chart gets above 700, even if it is a lower high, it indicates the bull market is intact.....for now.



Same pattern here. A series of lower highs, but the decline is modest. I've placed horizontal lines on my guess for overbought and oversold.




To: Return to Sender who wrote (3793)2/15/2018 10:25:47 AM
From: The Ox2 Recommendations

Recommended By
bull_dozer
Return to Sender

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8239
 
I modified a small subset of RtS's Nasdaq charts below. These use a 3 year scale instead of a 20 year scale (which you can reference in the linked post). Since Nasdaq has basically been leading the way the past couple of years, I thought I would focus on a few of these charts. Interesting patterns, the recent spike down in most of the bullish ratios are often indicative of a short (or possibly intermediate) term bottom.... fwiw...etc...

Long term monthly charts on so many individual stocks look like they should be putting in a top. That doesn't mean they have to do that here and now. It is worthy to note at this stage that the so many had reasonably substantial drops and appear more in rebound mode than tank mode.

With interest rates climbing and bond prices falling, the next few weeks should be very telling. Are we closer to rolling over in the equity markets or did we release enough steam to regain the bullish trends?

(note the shaded area in the first chart is the $NDX but I put another, cleaner version using QQQ as the last chart in this list)