Is The Correction Over?

 | Sep 18, 2021 09:44PM ET

On Friday the SPDR® S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY) saw heavy trading as 118.4 million shares changed hands with volume up +71.5% higher than the typical daily trading average of 69.06 million shares. This quarterly phenomenon takes place on the 3rd Friday of March, June, September and December, with stock market participants closing out futures and options contracts ahead of expiry, resulting in heavy trading volume amid printing of a potential bullish divergence between price and relative strength in the ultra near term.

The S&P 500 (SPY) closed modestly lower Friday finishing down -1.3% yet only down just -0.57% for the week or losing (SPX) -$25.59 points for the week and down -1.98% for the month so far or $-89.69, with the benchmark up +18.06 and YTD.

Oftentimes when we see heavy trading in the SPY exceeding 110 million shares changing hands in a day, that usually results in a turning point for the market—an initiation impulse or an exhaustive impulse. Although, one last shake out is certainly viable before the benchmark recaptures the widely followed 50 MA.

What is concerning, however, is even though the market is approaching a short term oversold level, SPY did close below the Chandelier exit in the last couple minutes of trading Friday. Failure to recapture that level in the next couple sessions could weigh heavily on the market in the near term with the 200-day moving average a long way down.

Whether Friday marked an initiation impulse or exhaustive impulse will reveal itself in the next few sessions.