Chart Of The Day: European Stocks Are All About Price

 | Jan 16, 2018 06:31AM ET

The financial market has become increasingly complex. See our Opening Bell for more on that. In this post we will discuss the conflicting signals coming from Europe's leading stock average, the STOXX 600.

Fundamentally, the market narrative is that European stocks declined yesterday on a rising euro – expected to hurt European exports – and advanced today on a weakening euro – expected to boost exports.

Technically, yesterday was part of profit-taking on a 3.5 percent move in 6 days. The sharp, rapid move is called a flag-pole, and the price halt occurs when un-participating traders notice the sudden momentum and want a piece of the action in stocks, which they buy from early-bird traders who already held the stocks before the move, and now want to cash out.

This dynamic is indicated by the volume. Notice, that when the dynamic changed from ranging to trending the volume began rising but that the highest volume was actually during the formation of the pennant. If the pennant’s range was because of a lack of interest, volume would subside, as there would be less activity. However, the volume only increased, which shows that activity increased. That supports the bullish outlook – that there are more buyers into the new move than sellers out of the prior move – for a pennant (same as flag) within a rising trend.