The Technically Bullish Case For Equities

 | Mar 22, 2022 04:27PM ET

In late January, we said the S&P 500 Index was expected top. Recent price action has caused us to revise that bearish position. We now have a near-term bullish scenario.

A really valuable aspect of Elliott wave methods is that they show you how far price can reasonably go before you need to revise your analysis and maybe reposition your trades. We're seeing some indications our earlier bearish forecast might be wrong for the near term, so we wanted to present the technical case for a moderately bullish view going into late spring.

And as always, we'll identify what kind of price behavior would suggest that our new, moderately bullish scenario is itself wrong. Being unbiased is another valuable part of Elliott wave.

In our little branch of technical analysis, the most important price advances usually consist of five waves – three up interspersed with two down. Among those waves, downward wave number four often represents the moment of "maximum fear" that a reversal or downward breakout will take place. This sometimes coincides with the moment of "maximum fear" in some aspect of real-world events.

In terms of market sentiment, the current moment fits the "maximum fear" profile that often precedes the final rally in a sequence. Today, we make the case that SPX can climb to a moderately higher high during the next two or three months, even though it probably won't stay up there for very long.

The weekly chart shows a revised upward count out of the "COVID panic" fourth wave that ended in early 2020. It treats the current decline as a similar fear-based event, just one order of magnitude smaller than the earlier one. In this scenario, price can reach one last moderately higher high in a climb we would label as wave (v) of [v].