Market Outlook: January 11, 2013

 | Jan 13, 2013 03:11AM ET

Market Outlook

For the week ending January 11, 2013, the SPX was up 0.4%, the Russell small caps were up .2% and the COMP was up 0.8%.

We remain waiting for a test of model support in determining future market direction. Support can be tested in one of two ways, through a pullback or sideways price consolidation. Whichever method the market chooses, support will be tested. And it is at that test of support where the market will show whether a long will trigger or resumption of the previous downtrend.

There are either buyers or there are not. It's really that simple. There is no sense trying to speculate beyond that test. It will come. We just need to be patient waiting for confirmation. It is worth noting the weakness in the Russell the latter part of the week as compared to large caps. This increases the probability of a pullback into support versus a sideways test.

Support for next week is roughly 1448-1452 on SPX, 861-865 on RUT and 3065-3085 on COMP.

We continue to profile USD/JPY as an exhaustive move, though there may still be another thrust higher. Support is roughly 86 per the daily chart. Failure to hold support sets up a probable move to 82-84 per the weekly and monthly charts. A pullback in this currency pair will pressure Treasury yield lower as well as risk in general.

Asset Class Correlations
For the week ending January 11, 2013, the EUR was up 2.1%, copper was down 1.1%, 30 year yield was down 6bp and the Aussie Dollar was up 0.5%.

As of Friday's close copper was failing model support and would trigger short in the coming sessions with a close below 3.58. What's interesting about this failure of support on Friday is that copper was down 140 bp on the session amid a weak USD.

The multi-month divergence with equity and the EUR, AUD, copper and 30-year yield remains. As a result equity may show greater relative weakness as part of any future asset class convergence. Therefore, using any of these asset classes as a directional indicator may likely produce false signals.

There is also a noticeable divergence with the 5-year Treasury break even as shown below.