S&P 500 Analysis: The Market’s Next Move After The Sell-off

 | Feb 21, 2018 07:35AM ET

h2 2017 was a stellar year for the stock market, but an inevitable correction started to hit the market at the end of January. Here is our “no nonsense” technical analysis for what may be coming next.

With its best year since 2013, the benchmark S&P 500 Index jumped 19% in 2017.

The S&P 500 then kicked off 2018 with an impressive 7.4% gain through January 26.

But even the healthiest of bull markets do not go straight up without significant corrections along the way.

The start of February was the reckoning, as the S&P plunged 10.1% (from Jan. 26 peak to Feb. 8 closing low).

Stocks have bounced off their lows since then, but now must contend with massive overhead supply (resistance) from the sell-0ff.

Continue reading to discover what the charts are indicating for the market’s next move in the near to intermediate-term.

h3 The Big Picture — S&P 500 Weekly Chart/h3

Stocks staged a substantial comeback last week, following a nasty two-week decline off the highs.

The sell-off caused the S&P 500 Index ($SPX) to slice through major support of its 10-week and 40-week moving averages (similar to 50-day and 200-day MAs on daily chart).

The decline also caused an ugly, wide-ranged bar to form on the weekly chart, which should now act as overhead resistance (see horizontal line on the chart below).

In addition to the prior high, the 10-week moving average is also acting as resistance — remember that former support levels become new resistance after the support is broken.

On the weekly chart of $SPX below, note that major resistance is in the 2,735 to 2,765 area: