Stock Markets In Deep Oversold Territory

 | Jan 02, 2019 12:54AM ET

AT40 = 11.9% of stocks are trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs) (oversold day #11)
AT200 = 12.4% of stocks are trading above their respective 200DMAs
VIX = 23.2
Short-term Trading Call: bullish (with caveats all over again)

Commentary

After some much appreciated relative calm, financial markets went right back to wild gyrations. The year 2019 started with poor economic news from China, a gap down in U.S. stocks, a spirited and bullish rally from the bottom, a serious revenue warning from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), and then a flash crash in currency markets with the Japanese yen (FXY) surging and the Australian dollar (FXA) plunging.

The latest warning from China started back on December 30th when the country reported its worst Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) in almost three years. At 49.4, the PMI is back in contraction territory. Today, the Caixin Media and IHS Markit PMI confirmed the fall in the PMI by falling from 50.2 to 49.7. The Caixin was last this low May 2017. In a risk-off move, the Australian dollar sold off and the yen strengthened. At the time of writing, a little over three hours after the U.S. markets closed for trading and less than an hour to go for Asian trading to begin, both currencies went into flash crash mode. The charts below are close-ups for capturing the (current) extent of the extremes. At the extreme intraday low both AUD/JPY and AUD/USD traded at prices last seen coming out of the throes of the financial crisis.