S&P 500: Surprising Bullish Divergence

 | Aug 03, 2015 04:19AM ET

T2108 Status: 37.5%
T2107 Status: 387%
VIX Status: 12.1
General (Short-term) Trading Call: Neutral
Active T2108 periods: Day #195 over 20%, Day #3 over 30% (overperiod), Day #10 under 40%, Day #50 under 50%, Day #67 under 60%, Day #266 under 70%

Commentary
The important turn-around in the stock market that I described on Tuesday, July 28, 2015 continued one more day as the S&P 500 (via the SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY)) managed to break above its 50-day moving average (DMA) yet again. The Federal Reserve once again delivered calm, solace, and comfort to financial markets even as the latest statement on monetary policy provided no clues on the timing for lift-off for interest rates. The S&P 500 stalled over the last two days.

The S&P 500 is back to its chopping ways

Interestingly, while the S&P 500 closed marginally lower to end the week, T2108 had a VERY strong day. T2108 closed up a startling 10.2%! This was a very surprising bullish divergence. I could not casually identify what group of stocks did so well to cause T2108 to diverge so strongly from the index. The NASDAQ closed flat after fading from its highs. Ditto for the Guggenheim S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (NYSE:RSP). Notably, the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (ARCA:IWM) closed up 0.6%, but this hardly seems enough to drive such a strong move for T2108. Even T2107, the percentage of stocks trading above their respective 200DMAs, had a strong day with a 4.5% gain. If the market experiences buying follow-through today, I will consider it a confirmation of a definitive bullish bias and turn for the market.

One huge caveat impeding the path of bullishness (the trading bias is neutral) is the extremely low level of the volatility index. The VIX is scraping at recent lows, and I have a hard time believing the VIX will stay this low for much longer given recent history.

The volatility index is back to recent lows – but for how much longer?

As a precaution, I went back to my favorite hedge: Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT). The stock delivered my big gain of last week with an aggressive buy of call options. Now, CAT is back to its normal role serving as a hedge to bullishness. The chart below still suggests CAT found a bottom, so I am not expecting a lot of (short-term) downside from here – perhaps a retest of the low in the case of a fresh market sell-off.