Week-in-Review: Bears Return After A 6-Week Hiatus

Stocks Finally Pullback

It was an ugly week on Wall Street as the bears returned from a short six week hiatus. Stocks fell hard last week, erased the last three weeks worth of gains, fell over 3.5%, and snapped a 6-week win streak. It was the largest weekly decline for stocks since August and the action suggests the bears are getting stronger, once again. Last week we wrote, “The S&P 500 has rallied for six straight weeks and remains very extended to the upside. The major indices opened higher but closed in the lower half of their weekly ranges which is normally a sign of short term fatigue. The market is way overdue to pullback and the key going forward is to analyze the health of that pullback.” At this point, this is not a “healthy” pullback and the only chance the bulls have is to defend the 50 DMA line for the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow Jones Industrial Average. If that level is breached, we expect the market to test- and then take out August’s low. To be clear, until the action improves, this is the time for defense, not offence. The big news last week came from retailers. A slew of high profile retail stocks plunged after reporting crummy numbers and slashing guidance. Clearly, this bodes poorly for the Q4 holiday shopping season.

Monday-Wednesday’s Action: Stocks Fall

Stocks fell hard on Monday as global economic woes hurt stocks. China’s said exports fell -6.9% in October, missed estimates and was the fourth consecutive monthly drop. Remember, China is an export based economy so the fact that exports are down clearly illustrates tepid demand from the rest of the world (global economy). In other news, the organization of economic cooperation and development (OECD) cut their forecast for global growth again, reflecting a weak demand. Shares of Priceline Group ($PCLN) gapped down $138, after reporting Q3 results.
Stocks ended mixed on Tuesday after shares of Apple Inc (AAPL) fell over 3%. Credit-Suisse ($CS) published a report that indicated the tech giant has cut its orders for iPhone 6s components by as much as 10%. This dragged a slew of other Apple suppliers lower on the news. ($CRUS, $BRCM, $AVGO, $SWKS, etc). Export prices, excluding agriculture, fell by 0.3% in October after sliding by 0.5% (revised from -0.6%) in the prior reading. Wholesale inventories rose by 0.5% in September after an upwardly revised 0.3% increase (from 0.1%) for August.
Stocks were quiet on Wednesday as the bond market was closed in observance of the Veteran’s Day Holiday. Overnight, economic data from China was mixed. Industrial output grew by +5.6%, the slowest growth since 2008 which missed estimates for +5.8%. It was also slower than last month’s reading of 5.7%.In the U.S., The big news came from Macy’s ($M). The stock gapped down over 15% at one point after reporting Q3 results and lowering earnings and sales guidance. Last month, shares of Wal-Mart ($WMT) plunged after the largest retailer in the world lowered guidance as well. Other retailers are also under-performing as shares of Men’s Wearhouse (MW) plunged nearly 70% since June!

Thursday-Friday’s Action: Sellers Remain In Control

Stocks fell hard on Thursday which was the first day of heavy selling on Wall Street since September. The head of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, said he’s prepared to increase QE  (print more money) at their December meeting. A slew of Fed officials spoke and largely reiterated their recent stance that they are reading to raise rates if the data improves. Stocks fell hard on Friday after more retailers reported disconcerting news. Shares of Nordstrom (JWN), Fossil Group ($FOSL) and Party City ($PRTY) all gapped down after reporting crummy numbers and lowering guidance. U.S. retail sales missed estimates which confirmed what these larger retailers have been telling us for months, the consumer is weak.

Market Outlook: Aging Bull Market

This bull market is aging by any normal definition and will celebrate its 7th anniversary in March 2015. The last two major bull markets ended shortly after their 5th anniversary; 1994-2000 & 2002-Oct 2007. The fact that easy money is here to stay (for now) is all that matters. Everything else is noise. Eventually that will change, but for now the bulls remain in control. As always, keep your losses small and never argue with the tape. If you want exact entry and exit points in leading stocks, or access more of Adam’s commentary/thoughts on the market – Join FindLeadingStocks.com.

 

Similar Posts

  • Stocks Edge Higher; Look Past Sour Housing Data

    Market Action- Market In A Correction; 28-Week Rally Ends
    All the major averages sliced below their respective 50 DMA lines on Thursday, March 10, 2011. Thursday, March 17, 2011 marked day 1 of a new rally attempt which means that the earliest a possible follow-through day (FTD) could emerge would be Tuesday, as long as Thursday’s lows are not breached. That said, the window is now open for a new FTD to emerge which will confirm the current rally attempt. However, if Thursday’s lows are breached, then the day count will be reset and odds will favor lower prices, not higher, will follow. It is important to note that the recent ominous action reiterates the importance of raising cash and playing strong defense until a new FTD emerges. If you are looking for specific help navigating this market, please contact us for more information.
    Don’t Miss Out!
    Have You Seen How Our New Site Can Help You!
    Visit: www.SarhanCapital.com Today!

  • Nasdaq Retreats; Other Major Averages Advance

    Stocks remain strong as investors digested the latest round of economic data. The benchmark S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, NYSE composite, mid-cap S&P 400, small-cap Russell 2000 and small-cap S&P 600 indices all enjoyed fresh recovery closing highs! The current rally is in its 44th week (since the March 12, 2009 follow-through day) and on all accounts still looks very strong. In addition, most bull markets last for approximately 36 months, so the fact that we are beginning our 10th month suggests we have more room to go. December’s jobs report will likely set the stage for the next near term move for the major averages but until support is broken (50 DMA lines for the major averages), this rally deserves the bullish benefit of the doubt.

  • Stocks End Higher on Mixed Economic Data

    Looking at the market, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and benchmark S&P 500 index both closed near their respective resistance levels as they quietly consolidate their recent gains in lighter pre-holiday volume. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite continues to lead its peers as it managed to hit another 2009 high on Wednesday.
    Remember that the S&P 500 plunged -58% from its all time high in October 2007 of 1,576 to its March 2009 low of 666. Since then, the market has rebounded over +65% but still remains -29% below its all-time high of 1,576. In addition, the index has retraced nearly -50% (455 points) of its decline (910 points) which is a popular Fibonacci level used by many technical analysts. Normally, markets rebound approximately 50% before resuming their prior trend (which would be down in this case). Longstanding readers of this column know that we do not predict the future. Instead, we remain open to any possible scenario that may unfold and interpret what we see happening by remaining objective and carefully analyzing the tape (price and volume) each day.

  • Stronger Dollar Sends Stocks Lower

    The US dollar dominated the headlines on Thursday, and sent a slew of dollar denominated assets lower (mainly stocks and commodities). The major averages continued pulling back from important resistance levels and appear to be headed for support (just above their respective 50 day moving average lines). Until either support or resistance is breached, expect this bracketed (sideways) action to continue.