Follow-Through Selling On T2108’s Warning

 | Mar 06, 2015 06:50PM ET

T2108 Status: 49.1%
T2107 Status: 47.9%
VIX Status: 15.2 (faded from highs again to close below the pivot point)
General (Short-term) Trading Call: Bearish given S&P 500 close below 2085. Staying bearish until new all-time high or oversold.
Active T2108 periods: Day #95 over 20%, Day #54 above 30%, Day #34 over 40% (overperiod), Day #1 under 50% (underperiod) (ending 23 days over 50%, and 15 days over 60%), Day #1 under 60%, Day #165 under 70%

Commentary
The date was February 3rd when T2108 skipped an entire 10 percentage point range going from 49.1% to 62.2%. The move was so powerful that I began to expect the beginnings of an extended overbought rally. Instead, T2108 made no more progress, and the S&P 500 (SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY)) trickled ever higher making one half-spirited all-time high after another. Instead of an extended overbought rally, we got an extended waiting period over during which T2108’s behavior kept me from changing the bearish trading bias.

The date was January 5th when T2108 skipped an entire 10 percentage point range going from 50.6% to 38.8%. At the time, the S&P 500 broke down below its 50DMA for the second time in 3 months. I supplied a bevy of bearish individual stock charts. I prepared for an S&P 500 retest of 200DMA support and oversold conditions. Instead, the index sold off just one more day before continuing along its chopping range for another 5 weeks. That chop included two days where the S&P 500 made fresh marginal closing and intraday lows for 2015.

I provide this context because T2108 has made another dramatic move. T2108 skipped right through the 50s again but this time to the downside, moving from 60.3% to 49.1%. This is a very bearish move, but the recent history prevents me from over-extending the bearish implications of the drop. Friday’s move could be yet another prelude to a quick change in direction for the S&P 500, especially with 50DMA support close at hand.

Nevertheless, the index closed below my bearish dividing line of 2085, so I am sticking to my earlier stated rule. Over the last few days, I have been firmer in my warnings because T2108 absolutely refused to respond to the S&P 500’s sluggish creep higher. Today’s 1.4% drop on the S&P 500 provided convincing follow-through to those warning signs .

The S&P 500 takes a sudden tumble toward 50DMA support

The index and T2108 are now singing the same bearish tune. The index definitively closed below my 2085 dividing line for changing my trading call from mildly bearish to bearish. I did not buy any put options on ProShares Ultra S&P500 (ARCA:SSO) because I wanted to wait for a confirmed close. In fact, I sold my put options on Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) (CAT) as the stock broke down below $80 for the second time during the day. The stock traded below its lower-Bollinger® Band (BB) for the third day in a row, so I think it could bounce sharply at any moment. Moreover, the post-earnings low is barely a point away. Since my CAT put options are a hedge on SPY bullishness, I no longer need to hold them as I turn outright bearish – there are many other better targets out there with a lot more downside risk.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

With my last batch of call options on ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures (ARCA:UVXY) expiring on the day, I bought a fresh round near the day’s open. It was a timely purchase, and I decided to hold them given the bearish move on the S&P 500. I will likely lock in profits on the next move downward and prepare to focus on SSO positioning. The volatility index, the VIX, surprisingly faded into the close even as the S&P 500 closed on its low of the day. In other words, the bears have not yet won any important victories from the technical perspective.