Stocks: Concerning Evidence Continues To Surface

 | Aug 06, 2014 02:21AM ET

Evidence Questioned Monday’s Rally

After the S&P 500’s 14 point gain Monday, we noted not much had changed from a weekly trend perspective. Tuesday’s session reaffirmed that hypothesis. From Bloomberg :

U.S. stocks resumed a selloff, wiping out yesterday’s rebound and sending benchmark indexes to the lowest levels since May, as energy shares tumbled and concern increased over escalating tensions in Ukraine. “There was a feeling among traders that yesterday’s rally didn’t have sustainability,” Michael James, a Los Angeles-based managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities Inc., said in an interview. “People came in today unimpressed with yesterday’s strength so we were sitting on wobbly legs even before this chatter around Ukraine came out.”

Good News, Bad News

For investors, the good news is the longer-term outlook has not taken a hit yet. For example, the S&P 500 as of August 5, 2014 is shown on the right side of the image below. The present day is in much better shape than a very high risk profile market, such as the one shown on the left side from 2008. The bad news is the recent drop below the 50-day moving average (in blue) increases the odds of further corrective downside in equities. The current market has more of a “possible stock market correction” profile, rather than an “imminent bear market” profile. Keep in mind, as outlined in detail on August 1, stock market corrections can feel like a bear market. Price dropping below the 50-day is one of many examples we could cite as observable evidence of a declining tolerance for risk.