Despite Rate Cut Win, Short-Term Pull-Back Likely In Coming Weeks

 | Jul 15, 2019 06:37AM ET

h3 Current Position of the Market
  • SPX: Long-term trend – Final long-term phase on the way? How much longer, is the question.
  • Intermediate Trend – The continued strength has muddied the water and we may have to wait until August/September before the intermediate trend becomes more clear.
  • Short-term trend – 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.
h3 Market Overview/h3

The Fed’s de facto announcement that it would cut-rate sat its July 25th meeting got in the way of minor cycles having an immediate effect on prices. But it is only expected to delay an anticipated correction by a few days because the primary -- albeit still minor but more important -- cycle likely to impact the stock market is still ahead of us. How much of a correction it will bring about remains to be seen since the steady increase of the SPX with minimum retracement has resulted in almost nil price congestion. But if the Point & Figure chart does not produce a count, we can look for the 2950 level to be a potential target.

More important will be what we do after that correction. The cycle is expected to make its low a few days before the date of the announced rate cut; so what do we do next? Rally, and sell on the news after creating a larger top for a larger correction, or keep the bull market going? I have repeatedly stated that larger cycles were due to bottom in August-September, so my expectation is for a larger correction. We’ll have to wait until the FOMC meeting takes place, and observe what the market does afterward.

In the meantime, the market action of the past few days has created mild negative divergence at the daily and hourly time frame in the SPX. Nothing convincing! And IWM is still lagging. But the strength in DJIA last week was impressive! So it’s a mixed bag, at best, for now. We should get a truer technical picture after 7/25.

Technical Analysis (Charts appearing below are courtesy of QCharts.)

SPX daily chart

I only posted the top portion of the daily SPX chart so that we can see more clearly the trend lines that have been drawn. All dashed trend lines are parallels to the original and current channel lines. It has been my experience that they best represent trend line support and resistance for price action. I think that if you examine this closely, you will find that this is fairly obvious. Currently, the price action is being squeezed into a narrow channel of blue dashed parallels and is pulling away from the channel top on each successive new high. The purple parallels are now providing resistance at a slightly lower level. This detailed analysis maybe boring to some, but it reveals what the market is really doing and provides advance warning of a trend change. In spite of the bullish effect on the market resulting from the expectation of a rate cut on the 25th, traces of deceleration are still evident as minor cycles should finally be able to exact a minor retracement from the index over the next few days.

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But is that all that it will be? A more ominous warning is coming from one of the most basic technical tools, the advance/decline indicator which is located at the bottom of the chart, and which I have enlarged so that we can see more clearly what it is doing. After the December low, this indicator had an unusual show of strength, surging to a level not seen since early 2016 which was the beginning of an extended uptrend in the index. Fast forward to today, and the A/D index appears to have run out of steam. If you look at the pattern it has made since the initial surge, every time that it has declined steadily to this level while SPX made higher and higher highs, a pattern which created strong negative divergence to the price, it was soon followed by a penetration below the zero line at the time that the price index reversed course. There is no reason to expect that this time will be different. So let’s keep a close eye on the A/D indicator since a move below the zero line looks imminent.

While the near-term looks reasonably easy to forecast, the intermediate term is still murky, but it should become much clearer over the next few weeks.