EWG Germany ETF Hits Key Inflection Point

 | Jun 23, 2021 05:01PM ET

I constantly read that investors should be diversifying into the European markets largely because Europe's recovery is lagging the U.S., which means the Continent will have the benefit of tremendous tailwinds (from the U.S.), especially as increasing numbers of Europeans get vaccinated.

At least that is the theory, if not the expectation for Europe's economy and markets.

While the analysts and strategists promoting the above viewpoint might be 100% correct, my near- and intermediate-term technical work suggest strongly that the pundits could be overly optimistic.

My daily chart of the iShares MSCI Germany ETF (NYSE:EWG) – which is the engine of Europe – shows that the June decline from its all-time high at 36.49 into last Friday's (6/18) low at 34.29 (-6%, or twice as deep as the correction in SPY) has pressed into the area of both the dominant intermediate-term up trendline off the March 2020 low, which cuts across the price axis in the vicinity of 34.50, and the up-sloping 100 DMA, now at 34.16.