A Bearish Chill As Indices Break Down, Indicators Hit Multi-Year Lows

 | Oct 12, 2014 12:59AM ET

T2108 Status: 13.5% (2nd day of 3rd oversold period in last 8 trading days, a new 38-month closing low!)
T2107 Status: 31.7% (a fresh 34-month low!)
VIX Status: 21.2 (intraday high was a 22-month high)
General (Short-term) Trading Call: Here we go again! Continue reducing shorts, aggressive traders should have added to positions when VIX cracked the new high, conservative traders can continue to wait until T2108 exits oversold conditions. See below for more details and explanations.
Active T2108 periods: Day #2 under 20% (2nd day of oversold period), Day #14 under 30%, Day #20 under 40%, Day #22 under 50%, Day #24 under 60%, Day #66 under 70%

Commentary
“Here we go again. Except THIS oversold period looks ominously different” – this is what I said in the last T2108 Update , and it turned out to be even more appropriate than I was expecting. Sellers are firming their grip on the market and causing technical damage that may take a very long time to repair without fresh, positive catalysts. There are at least two very obvious and clear observations anyone active in the stock market can make. No complicated analysis is required to see a bearish chill developing as the major indices break down decisively and as fear accelerates.

The S&P 500 (SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY)) slammed right into its 200-day moving average (DMA). It probably avoided a breakdown just because sellers ran out of time before the close. The lower low is the first since February of this year, and it officially breaks the primary uptrend. The lower low in February was the first since the S&P 500 last broke down below its 200DMA in November, 2012. The uptrend defined by the 200DMA is in grave danger.

The S&P 500 slams into is most critical test since the 200DMA last cracked in Nov, 2012

The NASDAQ has already broken its primary uptrend as it suffered the hardest brunt of the selling on Friday (October 10th). While the S&P 500 lost 1.1% on the day, the NASDAQ did one better with a whopping 2.3% loss.

No picture-perfect retest of the 200DMA this time. Instead, a clean breakdown.

QQQ and SPY have moved together much of the year.

The VIX appropriately soared, increasing 13.2% to 21.2. Somehow, it managed to pull back below recent highs.