
Market Direction: BEARISH alert
issued 11/23/2018
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The Dow and S&P 500 are on the brink of exiting a stock market correction.
A new year, a new market. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 appear in position to exit
correction territory if a multiday rally on risk assets continues apace.
The Dow DJIA, +0.39% and the S&P 500 SPX, +0.41% marked a fourth straight gain,
at least partly attributed to optimism around three days of talks intended to
resolve a protracted dispute around tariffs between China and the U.S., and
growing signs that the Federal Reserve is ready to dial back what has been
perceived as an aggressive rate-hike path.
It was concerns over trade and
rising rates, and worries that global growth was receding with the U.S. was on
the verge of a recession, that shattered investor confidence, and drove the
stock market down from an autumn peak.
Anxieties around those matters,
however, have subsided somewhat, with the Dow knocking on the door of exiting
correction, at least by one measure.
A correction is usually defined as a
drop of at least 10% from a recent peak. Some market-technician purists believe
that an asset must put in a new high to officially emerge from a correction
phase, while Dow Jones’s data group views an exit from that phase after it
gains 10% from the correction low. Read more about market corrections
The Dow needs to close at or above
23,971.42 to emerge from correction, by that measure.
The S&P 500 would need to climb
to 2,586.21 or above, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
Thus far, the Dow has climbed 9.57%
from its Dec. 24 low, while the S&P 500 has gained 9.95% from that
Christmas Eve low, when stocks put in the worst trading action on the trading day before Christmas on
record.
Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite
Index COMP, +0.87% is up 12.3% from its Christmas Eve
nadir, but that index remains squarely in bear-market territory, usually
defined as a decline of at least 20% from a bull-market peak. The index would
need to climb another 7.7 percentage points to break out of a bear market,
which it entered on Dec. 21.
Wednesday marks Nasdaq’s 12th day in
bear market and it would surpass the March 2009 bear market for the Nasdaq
which ran 14 days. That bear market lasted from March 3 to March 23, 2009.
March 9, 2009 was the bear low, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
Gains for equities also come as oil
futures CLG9, -1.01% LCOH9, -0.80% viewed as a so-called risk asset
like stocks, broke out of a bear market, gaining 20% from
their Dec. 24 nadir. Oil and stocks have moved in tandem recently, amid worries
about economic expansion throughout the globe contracting, exacerbated by
tensions around U.S.-China trade.
Both stocks and oil are approaching
trades above their 50-day moving averages, which is seen by some industry
participants as a further sign that a bullish trend is trying to reestablish
itself (the S&P 500’s 50-day moving average is at 2,637.24, compared with
its close on Wednesday at 2,584.96):
Bespoke Investment Group in a
Wednesday research report noted that since World War II there have only been 12
other declines of 15% or more within the span of three months that were
immediately followed by a rally of 10% or better in 10 trading days or fewer.
On Wednesday, the release of minutes
from the Fed’s December rate-setting meeting, helped to underline the view that
the central bank is no longer in a hurry to raise interest rates,
which, arguably, produced the stiffest headwinds for financial markets.
Wall Street, however, may find new
worries afoot as a partial government shutdown is set to enter a 19th day, and
is already the second-longest in 40 years.
The all-time lows since our initial
recommendation to go SHORT
this market. Here is how the markets have performed:
Stock Market
Direction Recommendation (11/23/2018)
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Dow
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down 2,573.42 points a 10.60% gain
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12/26/18
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Nasdaq
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down 748.81 points a 10.79% gain
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12/24/18
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S&P 500
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down 285.98 points a 10.86% gain
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12/26/18
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Related Link: http://www.stockmarket-direction.com/
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