5 Facts Tell Us To Be Open To More Upside In Stocks

 | Sep 01, 2016 06:01AM ET

Charts Can Assist With Bullish And Bearish Probabilities

A reader of this post may come away with the impression the author has a bullish bias. However, the charts below, in the end, could also be helpful in identifying increasing bearish probabilities. We will look at hard evidence using price, retracements, trendlines, consolidation boxes, and moving averages.

Keep in mind, price, retracements, trendlines, consolidation boxes, and moving averages help us track the market’s current interpretation of all the fundamentals (earnings, valuations, Fed policy, the election, etc). Therefore, the facts and charts help us monitor all the inputs that impact the value of our investments.

The Charts Say What They Say

The charts say what they say and show what they show regardless of our personal views or biases. The only question is are we open-minded enough to see the charts as they are, rather than how our personal bias might want them to be?

What are the observable facts telling us right now?

The weekly chart of the NYSE Composite Index shows that 10,301 acted as resistance in October 2007. Since revisiting that level back in 2013, the market has made it clear, via price action, 10,301 remains important.

The facts we have in hand lean bullish as long as price remains above 10,301. Conversely, bearish odds will pick up if the market fails to hold the key level. We learn something either way. The NYSE Composite Index was trading at 10,782 on August 31, 2016.