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Weekly Stock Market Commentary 11/15/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

$SPX broke out to new highs, and that is bullish, but severe overbought conditions still exist.

$SPX has support at 1750-1770, the range it traded in for a couple of weeks.  Also, there is further support at 1730.      Equity-only put-call ratios are on buy signals, but are in extremely overbought territory.

Breadth has been relatively weak for some time now. For example, $SPX is making new highs, but cumulative breadth is not. Thus, a negative divergence has arisen.

$SPX likely to test the 1800 level

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Wednesday was a very powerful, bullish day.  It mirrored the action of last Friday: S&P futures were trading down sharply before the NYSE open, but once that market opened, it was off to the races on the upside all day long.  Last Friday was a 30-point reversal day from low to high.  Yesterday was a 24-point upside reversal.  Those are huge moves, especially in light of the fact that actual volatility has been so low lately.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 11/8/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The broad stock market, as measured by the Standard & Poors 500 Index ($SPX) was seemingly impervious to an increasing overbought condition.  But today after moving to new highs, the buyers finally ran out of gas, and the market reversed downward sharply.  The negative trend should last for at least a short while.

The equity-only put-call ratios have been the lone bullish holdout.  But now, the weighted put-call ratio has given a sell signal.

The Option Strategist Newsletter Volume 22, No. 20 Preview

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market is once again overbought, and we have done more research into what we hope will be effective systems for taking advantage of these conditions.  Most of the article is devoted to creating a trading system around the “modified Bollinger Bands,” but market breadth and volatility are “overbought,” too.  A recommendation is made on page 4.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 11/1/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Stocks can go down, and it now looks like they will.  The market, as measured by the Standard & Poors 500 Index ($SPX) continued to rise at a dizzying pace until the Fed meeting ended on Wednesday. Now stocks are taking on a more bearish tone.

Typically, the market pulls back to at least the 20-day moving average in these situations, and usually overshoots that target. Currently, that 20-day moving average is at 1725.

Modified Bollinger Band Sell Signal Registered

By Lawrence G. McMillan

For some reason, traders seemed to take the benign Fed meeting announcement as negative.  At least they sold after the meeting ended.  That’s the fourth time this year that a Fed meeting has induced selling, and in the previous instances, the selling continued for a while – weeks, in some cases.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 10/25/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

From mid-morning just two weeks ago (October 9th) through Tuesday's close, the Standard & Poors 500 Index ($SPX) rose 115 points. That is impressive, but the advance has been so swift that it has created a number of overbought conditions that are on the brink of becoming sell signals. $SPX has support at 1730 and 1700.

Equity-only put-call ratios have rolled over to buy signals.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 10/11/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The volatile moves this week have given rise to a number of new trading signals. Since some are in conflict with others, one has to make a choice as to how to approach them.

$SPX sold off sharply and recovered sharply and is now more or less where it was just over a week ago. An $SPX close above 1695 would likely pave the way for another attempt at the all-time highs of 1730, which is also resistance.

Upside Potential in Short-Term Buy Signals (SPX)

By Lawrence G. McMillan

...The speed of this market is being accurately reflected in our indicators, I believe. What seemed to be an extremely bearish environment just a couple of days ago, now appears ready to reverse to buy signals in at least some areas. Since the equity-only put-call ratios remain on sell signals, it does not appear that an overall “all clear” will be sounded, but there is upside potential in these short-term buy signals – should they be confirmed...

Bearish forces are building

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The broad market is rather schizophrenic right now. On Friday, the prevailing attitude seemed to be “I better buy now before Congress settles this thing and the market explodes.” On Monday, it was more like “I better sell now, because I’ll be able to buy later as this thing drags on” (“This thing” being the Congressional deadlock over the budget and the debt ceiling).

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