Week-In-Review: Tough Week For The Bulls

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1 SPXStocks Fail At Key Levels of Resistance

It was a tough week for the bulls. Stocks opened higher but closed near the lows for the week after failing to stay above key levels of resistance. For the past few weeks, we outlined April’s high of 2,111 in the S&P 500 as an important area to watch. Well, the market jumped above that level early in the week but closed below there by Friday. The other big level of resistance was November 2015’s high of 2,116 and the market briefly got above there on Thursday but immediately sold off and closed below that important level on Friday. Technically, that is another negated breakout which frustrates both the bulls and the bears. On the downside, we are watching the 50 day moving average (2,076) and then May’s low near 2026. In the short term, the market is a little extended and it would be perfectly normal to see it pullback a bit to digest the recent rally. The “big” level of resistance to watch remains last year’s record high of 2,134. Until we break above that level- we have to expect this sloppy and choppy sideways action to continue. On the downside, the “big” level of support remains 1810. Until either level is breached, we have to expect this sloppy action to continue. Finally, the Fed meets on Wednesday (meeting and press conference) which is the next big “data” point for investors.
Monday-Wednesday’s Action:
Stocks rallied nicely on Monday helping the Dow Jones Industrial Average and benchmark S&P 500 jump above near term areas of resistance and hit new highs for the year. Janet Yellen spoke on Monday and said Friday’s tepid Jobs Report created economic uncertainty which reduced the chance of a June rate hike. Oil stocks were front and center on Monday as oil prices jumped over 2% on fresh supply concerns out of Nigeria. On Tuesday, the S&P 500 traded at the highest level since July before it backed off and closed in the middle/to lower half of its daily range. Buyers showed up and sent oil, transportation and housing stocks higher helping them break above near term areas of resistance. Economic data was relatively light. First quarter productivity (which measures hourly output per worker) slid to an annualized rate of 0.6%, lower than the 1.0% rate reported last month. Unit labor costs which measures the price of labor per single unit of output, rose at an upwardly revised 4.5% rate.
Stocks rallied on Wednesday as the strong sector rotation we have outlined for you in recent weeks continued. On Wednesday, we saw big money flow into commodities, mainly steel, oil and gold stocks. Other sectors of the market also did well such as materials, transports, and industrials. Crude oil jumped above $51/barrel and gold prices vaulted $17 to 1264/ounce. Before the open, the World Bank downgraded its 2016 global growth forecast to 2.4% from the 2.9% forecast in January but markets largely dismissed the news. Elsewhere, the European Central Bank (ECB) began buying corporate bonds in its latest effort to stimulate markets. After Wed’s close, the WSJ reported that legendary investor, George Soros, is bearish on stocks and is trading again. The last time he did this was in 2007 and we all know what happened in 2008. 
Thursday & Friday’s Action:
Stocks opened lower on Thursday as the US dollar soared. Overnight, stocks in Asia and Europe fell over 1% as sellers showed up after a nice two week rally. After Europe closed, buyers showed up and helped the major indices rally off their lows. Remember, we had a big run since May 19 and it is perfectly normal to see the market pull back a little to digest that strong rally. In other news, The European Central Bank (ECB) began its corporate bond purchase program on Wednesday. ECB President Mario Draghi spoke on Thursday and warned of “lasting economic consequences” for the next few years because of tepid economic output. Stocks opened lower on Friday after government bond yields plunged across the globe. Friday was the first “real” day of heavy selling we have seen in weeks – we have to see if it continues.  
Market Outlook: Stocks Fail At Key Resistance
The market remains range-bound as it tries to breakout and hit fresh record highs. Economic and earnings data remains less than stellar but all that matters now- is the easy money from global central banks. As always, keep your losses small and never argue with the tape.

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    Monday-Wednesday’s Action: Stocks Successfully Test Support!
    Over the weekend, EU leaders kicked the can down the road and reschedule yet another meeting on Wednesday to tackle their onerous debt levels. Elsewhere, shares of Catepillar Inc. (CAT) gapped up after topping Q3 estimates and raised their 2012 forecasts. The news on the M&A front was healthy- shares of RightNow Technologies (RNOW) and Healthspring Inc. (HS) gapped up after agreeing to be acquired on Monday.
    Stocks fell on Tuesday and turned negative for the week as investors digested the latest round of lackluster earnings and EU leaders kicked the can down the road. Since 2008, we have been telling clients that is impossible to solve a debt crisis with more debt! However, the cognoscenti feel otherwise and as always we shall let the markets guide us.The news from the economic front was less than stellar. Consumer confidence in the U.S. unexpectedly fell in October to the lowest level since March 2009, during the “Great Recession.” Separately, the S&P Case/Shiller index of home prices in 20 major U.S. cities fell and missed estimates in August which reiterates how weak the housing market is right now.
    Stocks bounced off support (SPX 1230) on Wednesday after Germany passed a plan to expand the EU bailout measure. In the U.S., durable goods topped estimates which bodes well for the economic recovery. Durable goods rose +1.7% in September which was the largest increase in six months and topped the +0.4% estimate. In other news, mortgage applications rose last week and recovered some of the losses from the previous week as demand for purchases and refinancing rose.
    Thursday & Friday’s Action: Risk Assets Surge on EU Deal!
    Stocks soared on Thursday after private lenders agreed to a 50% haircut on their Greek debt and EU leaders agreed to leverage the hell out of their EU bailout plan. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the EFSF (European bailout fund) will be leveraged 4-to-5 times in an attempt to curb their excessive debt woes. Sarkozy also spoke with Chinese leader Hu Jintao who offered to help Europe from imploding. Economic data in the U.S. was positive, the Labor Department said weekly jobless claims came in at 402,000 which barely beat expectations. More importantly, GDP jumped +2.5% last quarter which matched estimates and bodes well for the economic recovery. Stocks were relatively quiet on Friday after consumer spending rose but incomes remained lackluster.
    Market Outlook- Confirmed Rally:
    The major U.S. averages are back in a new confirmed rally and broke above the mid-point/resistance of their 6-week bullish double bottom base. The benchmark S&P 500 index scored a proper FTD on Tuesday, October 18, 2011, i.e. Day 12, when it rallied over 2% on heavier volume than the prior session. In addition, it is important to note that the bulls scored a victory since many of the major averages closed above their downward sloping 50 DMA lines for the first time since late July! Our longstanding clients/readers know, we like to filter out the noise and focus on what matters most: market action. If you are looking for specific help navigating this market, please contact us for more information.
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