Can The Bulls Make A Stand Near Support?

 | Aug 08, 2014 10:14AM ET

Add Iraq To List Of Concerns

U.S. investors have been unsettled by Russian troops, economic concerns in Europe, and a possible shift in the Fed’s interest rate time table. If that was not enough, the term airstrikes is being used to describe possible scenarios in Iraq. From The Wall Street Journal :

The Obama administration is considering airstrikes against Islamic militants in northern Iraq in a move to protect American personnel in the city of Erbil as Islamic militants pose a growing threat to the country’s Kurdish heartland, U.S. officials said. U.S. officials described the likelihood President Barack Obama will authorize airstrikes as increasing. Airstrikes could come even before those humanitarian airdrops, or shortly afterward, officials said, emphasizing that as of Thursday afternoon, the White House had not made any decisions to strike.

Support Can Help With Countless Inputs

Given the potentially bullish implications of a strengthening U.S. economy and the long list of counterbalancing concerns, it can be difficult to make investment allocation decisions. Sometimes the simple concepts of support and resistance can help. The chart of the S&P 500 below shows the market is nearing a trendline that has provided support in the past (see green arrows). The red arrows highlight previous areas of resistance, between 1897 and 1902, that may now attract buyers near the blue arrow.