S&P 500: Is This a False Upside Breakout?

 | Jan 26, 2023 11:28PM ET

The early stage of every large rally contains a break above resistance, and the early stage of every large decline contains a break below support. However, most upside breakouts are not followed by large rallies, and large declines do not follow most downside breakouts.

More interestingly, it is not uncommon for the best rallies to begin shortly after breaks BELOW apparent support and for the most significant declines to begin shortly after breaks ABOVE obvious resistance. The reason is that breaching obvious resistance/support shakes out many weak-handed speculators and, in doing so, can create a sentiment platform capable of launching a substantial move in the opposite direction.

There are countless examples of the phenomenon described above, including gold’s performance over the past several months. Last September-October, the gold price breached important and obvious support defined by the lows of the preceding two years, but the breach of support did not have bearish implications. Instead, it marked the END of a 2-year bearish trend and, in all likelihood, ushered in a cyclical bull market.

We are revisiting this topic today because the S&P 500 Index (SPX) is positioned such that it could soon generate a misleading signal in the form of a break above obvious resistance.

The potential upside breakout is associated with the downward trend line drawn on the following daily SPX chart. Every chart-watcher and his dog are paying close attention to this trend line, and many of them undoubtedly would interpret a move above it as evidence that the bear market is over.

However, the historical record suggests that the bear market won’t end until many months after the monetary trend becomes favorable, which probably means no sooner than the final quarter of this year.