Is The Bull Market Over In Europe?

 | Jul 09, 2015 08:15AM ET

The bearish scenarios of a similar or worse stock market crisis than the one we lived in 2008-2009 are now emerging again. The sharp drop in the Chinese stock market combined with the possibility of an exit from the Eurozone for Greece and its repercussions, are the major fears and risk aversion reasons for traders around the globe. The DAX index has already lost nearly 15%, IBEX lost nearly 13%, MIB lost 13%, EUSTOXX lost -13% since last April. More optimistic analysts believe that this is just a big correction following the rally that worldwide indices made since October 2014, and also believe that once the Greeks come to an agreement with their lenders, the market will normalize and resume its longer-term up trend.

I will try and look at this from a technical stand point, as objectively as I can. European indices have made an important top in April. So a break above this top will be a huge bullish signal. Trend is bearish for the short and medium-term, while the longer-term trend is now being challenged.

So what is common among all these indices? The decline in all indices is not impulsive. The price action among all major indices is of an overlapping nature, thus corrective. All indices are around important Fibonacci ratios relative to the rise from October 2014. DAX is near its 38% retracement.