S&P 500 Snap Back Preserves Important Bullish Trend And Support

 | Jul 20, 2014 03:20AM ET

T2108 Status: 51.3%
VIX Status: 12.1 (a 17.1% drop!)
General (Short-term) Trading Call: Hold. See below.
Active T2108 periods: Day #260 over 20%, Day #112 over 40%, Day #1 over 50% (overperiod), Day #7 under 60% (underperiod), Day #10 under 70%

Commentary
In the last T2108 Update , I managed to say all the right things to characterize the technical picture and the risks for bears and bulls. However, I managed to miss perhaps the most important signal which was what the forex (currency exchange) market was saying about Thursday’s sudden sell-off.

In “Forex Mainly Yawns As Stock Market Volatility Finally Surges Off Lows” I pointed out how the typical risk/fear plays did not manifest in the forex market in reaction to or in response to Thursday’s selling. Most importantly, AUD/JPY, the Australian dollar (Rydex CurrencyShares AUD Trust (NYSE:FXA)) and Japanese yen (RYDEX CurrencyShares Japanese Yen (ARCA:FXY)) currency pair, bounced back quickly before the U.S. market closed on Thursday. Well before it opened again, AUD/JPY had already started to trade HIGHER. The bottom-line was that Thursday’s selling did not have sufficient conditions for me to switch the trading call to an outright bearish one. Indeed, the snap back on Friday was almost as swift and vicious as Thursday’s plunge.


The S&P 500 snaps back

T2108 also surged nearly reversing all of Thursday’s losses. It closed the day at 51.3%. I was actually a bit disappointed the market did not deliver a gap down on Friday because it would have created clear quasi oversold conditions which would have finally triggered my purchase of call options on ProShares Ultra S&P 500 (ProShares Ultra S&P500 (ARCA:SSO)).

The most important development for T2108 is that the pattern of higher lows from last year’s oversold conditions remains intact. This creates a VERY bullish case for aggressive traders to, yes (sorry!), churn again to look for opportunities to go long the S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY). My choice for now remains to fade volatility, and I held onto my put options on ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures (ARCA:UVXY).

I switched the trading call to hold to basically say that whether you are bearish or bullish, you have enough reasons to hold onto your positions if you did not already get stopped out: bears should stop out at fresh all-time highs (but likely will not given what the commentary I see from various bulls), bulls should stop out if Thursday’s lows get breached. In both cases, these triggers are for risk management (of losses). The risks of churn remain high although I think we are close to a new sustained trend, perhaps after the coming week of earnings.

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The volatility index, the VIX, is the biggest source of caution for the bulls. While I think it will continue to fade this coming week, Thursday’s surge could very well FINALLY mark a bottom for the VIX. The S&P 500 can of course continue higher at higher levels of volatility, but higher volatility will likely mean buying dips rather than breakouts will remain the preferred way to get long. I may make ONE exception at the moment T2108 re-enters overbought territory.


The VIX plunges…and confirms resistance at the 15.3 pivot

I had a VERY interesting exchange on Saturday (July 19, 2014) on twitter with master “old school” technical trader Helene Meisler. She noted the impressive surge in breadth on the NYSE on Friday while another trader corrected her on the timeframe for the last time breadth was this good. I noted that when breadth was last this good it occurred during a time when it looked like the market was finally topping (I even went so far as to call a market top later that month!). Meisler made the excellent point that this time is different because of the sell-off in small-caps. In other words, the strong breadth this time around is not likely a blow-off of the last eager buyers; it is instead likely the eager rush of “bargain shoppers” stepping into the breach left by sellers.

A strong surge in NYSE breadth may indicate the beginning of a fresh rally for stocks.

Contrast this observation to a bearish thesis grasping for a reason to stay bearish.