Sector Detector: Another Resistance Level Turning Into A Launch Pad

 | Feb 07, 2013 03:23AM ET

Well, Punxsutawney Phil didn’t see his shadow on Saturday, so the weather forecast is positive. However, investors having their own version of Groundhog Day at Dow 14,000 and S&P500 1500 are still trying to decide whether to retreat to safety in anticipation of a severe market pullback. Weakness on Tuesday seemed like the start of a correction, but alas the bulls would have none of that.

Technical consolidation rather than a steep correction is still the M.O. Although bulls are struggling to turn yet another resistance level into a new launching pad, we have seen this dance before numerous times since mid-November—and really since the Fed quant easing programs launched the March 2009 V-bottom. The all-time intraday high for the S&P500 at 1576 (and 1565 closing high) sure seem to be in play for 2013 as some market commentators are thinking we have entered a secular bull market.

Of course, the ongoing Federal budget negotiations and looming sequester deadline on March 1 are the proverbial elephant in the room. But another possible fly in the ointment was pointed out by Mark Hulbert on MarketWatch on Wednesday when he noted that insiders are aggressively selling shares at an alarming pace. He says the last time the weekly sell-to-buy ratio was worse was in late July 2011, just before the debt-ceiling debacle and resultant U.S. credit rating downgrade. As you recall, the Dow eventually fell 2,000 points.

The S&P500 SPDR Trust (SPY) closed Wednesday at 151.16 as it continues a slow technical consolidation since breaking out above tough psychological resistance at 150. The 50-day simple moving average has held after crossing bullishly through the 100-day SMA. Oscillators RSI and MACD have been slow to cycle back down from overbought, while Slow Stochastic is flat-lining at the neutral line.