Fed Speculation Over, Where Are Stocks Headed Next?

 | Sep 23, 2013 08:31AM ET

After last Wednesday’s (September 18) surprise Fed announcement on economic policy (no tapering), all the main stock market immediately indexes sprinted to fresh multi-year or all-time highs.

However, that afternoon’s bullish knee-jerk reaction faded quickly, causing both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average to wipe out all their Fed-day gains (and then some) just two days later.

Nevertheless, although last Friday’s bearish reversal created false breakout patterns in the S&P and Dow, both the small-cap Russell 2000 and NASDAQ Composite showed substantial relative strength to the broad market that day (both indices only surrendered a fraction of their Fed-day gains).

Furthermore, since last Friday was a quadruple witching day, we are suspicious of the validity of last Friday’s market weakness (we are always suspicious of all price action on quadruple witching days).

All Mixed Up
Given the mixed signals generated by the whipsaw price action of September 18 and 20, combined with the price divergence among the major indices, investors and traders understandably may be scratching their heads right now.

As such, let’s bring some clarity into the situation by simply looking at the basic technical chart patterns of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 Index, small-cap Russell 2000 Index, and NASDAQ Composite Index.

Last Friday’s bearish reversal completely wiped out Wednesday’s (Fed day) strong advance, thereby creating false breakouts to new highs in both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones.

Below, this is shown on the weekly charts of Dow Jones Industrial Average SPDR ($DIA) and S&P 500 SPDR ($SPY), two popular ETF proxies for the Dow and S&P: