Financial Sector Continues To Weaken

 | Jul 31, 2014 07:00AM ET

For the bulk of 2014 the Financials Sector (ARCA:XLF) has been one of the worst performers. There have been some interesting developments on the chart for this sector, and that’s what I want to take a look at today.

First up is a chart of XLF, its Volume Advance-Decline Line and the Percentage of Financial Stocks Above Their 50-Day Moving Average. These two breadth indicators can help us understand the ‘health’ of the financial sector by seeing how the underlying stocks of the sector are performing.

As we can see with the Volume Advance-Decline Line, while price has been going higher, this breadth indicator has been essentially flat as it hasn’t made a fresh high since March. As price keeps running into resistance at $23 the A-D line has begun to slightly weaken but has yet to make a lower low.

Meanwhile, the number of Financial Sector stocks that are above their respective 50-EMA has been dropping over the last couple of weeks, creating a negative divergence with price. This is a sign that each time XLF has hit $23, fewer stocks in this sector have been able to stay above their intermediate-term Moving Average.

Based on these two breadth indicators, it does not appear things look overly bullish based on the internals of the Financial Sector.