Anatomy Of A Stock-Market Turn

 | Aug 26, 2014 04:45PM ET

Catch-22 Data Hits Tuesday

Before we begin to examine the recent bottom in the stock market, investors were greeted with an eye-popping nugget of economic data Tuesday morning. From Reuters:

The Commerce Department said on Tuesday durable goods orders, items ranging from toasters to aircraft that are meant to last three years or more, jumped 22.6 percent last month after an upwardly revised 2.7 percent increase in June. July’s increase was the largest on record and far outpaced economists’ forecasts for a 7.5 percent advance.

While the record spike in durable goods was heavily impacted by aircraft orders and there were some concerning items in the report, a 22.6% gain is a 22.6% gain. The never seen before print on the economy falls into the good news/bad news category. The good news is the economy appears to be moving away from a tepid state. The bad news is today’s report will spark chatter about the Fed possibly pulling their first rate hike forward.

Risk Is About Probabilities

A reasonable standard for “how much to invest” is based on the probability of producing successful outcomes. Charts can help us monitor and assess investment probabilities. For example, the weekly chart of the S&P 500 below shows a period with a very poor risk-reward profile.