Week-In-Review: Stocks Continue To Rally As Earnings Season Begins

Stocks Rally As Earnings Season Begins

Not much changed from my comments last week. Stocks went from being overbought, to being very over-bought in a matter of a few weeks. The fact that the market refuses to fall in a meaningful fashion clearly shows you how strong the bulls are right now. Stepping back, it is important to keep a cool head and remain cognizant of the fact that the market is very over-bought and due to pullback. Buying up here, after a big move, is not prudent and it is a matter of when, not if, the market pulls back. The first important level to watch is the 50 day moving average for the major indices. Last week I noted that the semiconductor stocks ($SMH) fell while the broader markets rallied. Someone most of have been reading because, since then, Semis rallied hard and are now back above the 50 DMA line. Stepping back, the market remains very strong as we head into earnings season. Remember, in bull markets, surprises happen to the upside, not the downside. 

Mon-Wed Action:

Stocks were closed on Monday in observance of the MLK holiday. Stocks gapped up over 200 points on Tuesday but sellers finally showed up and the Dow fell around 100 points intra -day before rallying back and closing unchanged. On a daily bar, that was a negative reversal which normally marks a near term high. Instead of falling, stocks rallied hard on Wednesday after Apple (AAPL) said it will repatriate billions of dollars in overseas cash and several big banks reported earnings. The Dow jumped 322 points as investors cheered a strong start to earnings season. Accordingly to data from CNBC and Reuters, most of the companies that have reported earning so far have beat estimates.

Thur & Fri Action:

Stocks were mixed to slightly lower on Thursday as the market paused to digest its recent (and very strong) gain. Morgan Stanley (MS) reported stronger-than-expected earnings which capped off a bullish start to earnings season from the big banks. So far, most of the big banks rallied after reporting earnings which is a bullish sign. Separately, some people were concerned about a government shut down. Congress has until Friday night to avoid a shutdown. Historically, a government shutdown leads to a short-term pullback for the market. Stocks were quiet on Friday as the market waited to see what would happen in D.C. with respect to the government shutdown. The official deadline is Friday at midnight.

Market Outlook: Bulls Are Strong

The bulls are back in control and the market remains very strong. As always, keep your losses small and never argue with the tape. We’ve All Hit A “WALL” Before. Learn How To Break Your Mental Walls & Accomplish Your Goals…Learn More Here

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    Stocks ended lower for the week but managed to stay near their respective 50 DMA lines which is an encouraging sign. The benchmark S&P 500 index sliced and closed below its 50 DMA line on Thursday which is not ideal. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the tech heavy Nasdaq composite managed to stay above their respective 50 DMA lines. Once all the major averages violate their respective 50 DMA lines, the rally will end and the bears will have regained control of this market. Looking forward, the next level of resistance is their respective 2011 highs.
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    At 2pm EST, the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s June meeting were released and showed that Fed officials did not rule out QE3. Stocks sold off after a short-lived initial bounce on the news. Shortly after the Fed minutes were released, Moody’s rating agency downgraded Ireland’s debt rating to junk which sent stocks lower. Finally, Alcoa (AA) officially kicked off earnings season after Monday’s close when they released their Q2 results. Needless to say, it will be interesting to see how the major averages react to earnings over the next few weeks.
    Before Wednesday’s open, China said its gross domestic product (GDP) slowed to a rather strong +9.5% last quarter. This was slightly lower than Q1′s strong reading of +9.7% but slightly higher than the Street’s +9.4% expectation. It is important to note that Beijing has been rather vocal in their attempts to curb inflation and their red-hot economy. In the U.S., Ben Bernanke made it abundantly clear that the Fed is willing to step up and ease monetary policy (i.e. QE 3) again, “if needed.” This sent the dollar lower and a slew of dollar denominated assets (i.e. risk assets) higher. On a rather sad note, a series of bombs rocked the financial district of Mumbai, killing at least 21 people and injuring 141 in what most believe to a terrorist attack.
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    Market Outlook- Uptrend Under Pressure:
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