Is The Bull Dead?

 | Oct 15, 2018 02:21AM ET

Current Position of the Market

S&P 500: Long-term trend – Has the bear market started?

Intermediate trend– The correction has turned into a short-term debacle which may not be over.

Analysis of the short-term trend is done on a daily basis with the help of hourly charts. It is an important adjunct to the analysis of daily and weekly charts which discusses the course of longer market trends.

Market Overview

When I warned to be cautious about the September/October seasonal weakness, I had no idea that it would turn into a 229-point debacle for the S&P 500. Although it was 110-points short of the January plunge, the timing of this selling spell is a greater cause for concern. Going into January 2018, there were expectations that we were more than ready for wave 4 of the uptrend which started in January 2016, but as we approached the end of the year, it was the top of that 3-year bull phase that we were anticipating. So, has it arrived? Has wave 5 (from Jan. 2016) fallen a little short of its 3000 projection?

The simplest way to make that determination is to see if the trend line drawn from the 1810 level has been violated. As of Friday, of the four indexes we follow only iShares Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) had closed decisively below that trend line. S&P 500, so far, only breached it, and closed above with Friday’s rally, as did Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq 100. Furthermore, as we will see later on, these last two indexes have two separate trend lines to consider, which makes this simple form of analysis a little more complicated. Absolute confirmation would come when the S&P 500 wave 4 low of 2595 has been broken. This would require extending the current decline by another 120 points.

Chart Analysis (The charts that are shown below are courtesy of QCharts)

S&P 500 daily chart

A week ago Friday, S&P 500 came to rest on trend line #3 and I mentioned that, so far, the correction was not a very big deal. After this week, I certainly can no longer make that claim! I had also mentioned that before the index gave us a serious warning that the bull market had ended,it would have to break all three trend lines, with #1 giving us the final clue. As you can see, it was breached on Thursday but Friday’s price closed well above it. Similarly, the 200-dma was also breached but not broken. 2700 should be the first important former low to break after the trend line. Closing below it would be a minimal expectation for a major sell signal to be given. Until it is, we should give the market the benefit of the doubt that it remains in a bull phase,and “doubt” is probably the correct word to use.

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To prove that it is still capable of reaching the 3000 price projection, the index would have to jump through several hoops! The most immediate one will be to overcome the resistance level which starts at about 2800. That resistance essentially continues all the way to the top. I believe that the only way the 2941 high could be overcome would be for S&P 500 to create a congestion pattern capable of producing a count measuring nearly 300 points. Whether this phase of the correction completes at this level or lower, it will be followed by a countertrend rally which, if we have started a bear market, will fall short of the former high when it reverses.

As of Friday, the daily momentum and breadth oscillators were not giving the slightest hint that the correction is complete and that the index was ready to resume its uptrend. Consequently, the odds of seeing lower prices are very good.