Can The Equity Market Bullish Momentum Continue Into 2015?

 | Dec 23, 2014 02:14AM ET

In March 2009, both the Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (ARCA:DIA) and the S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE ARCA: SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY)) bottomed out, a culmination of the infamous 2007/2008 financial crisis for US equity markets.

“The accumulation and then the repayment of debt basically drives every economic cycle there is. And right now we have probably explored the envelope of mortgaging our future earnings.”— Paul Tudor Jones, "Trader - The Documentary", 1987

DIA traded as low as $64.78 in that month, whereas SPY traded as low as $67.10; from then onwards, neither index has looked back, and one of the greatest bull markets in US stock history has ensued.

On Friday, DIA closed at $177.65 and SPY closed at $206.52. Yesterday, DIA closed at $179.36 and SPY closed at $207.47. To say that these indexes have had quite the run over the past six years is self evident.

Bullish momentum is undeniable - every single downturn is seen as a buying opportunity and prices ferociously rebound after sell offs to reclaim highs, to such an extent that the SPY traded as high as $212.97 on 12/18 , albeit briefly, when what can only be explained as black box trading programs rushed in a frenzy to scoop it up.

What we must ask ourselves at this juncture, now that 2015 is upon us, is can this truly continue unabated? History has demonstrated that it simply cannot.

Although traders should not concern ourselves with calling tops and bottoms, risk versus reward is nonetheless a consideration in our decision making process, and there are some signs which should cause us to pause when deciding whether to enter the markets long at these levels for an extended period of time.