VIX Languishes As Stocks Fight Resistance

 | Aug 23, 2012 01:53AM ET

Volume has elevated somewhat this week, as Wednesday saw more trading volume than we have seen since the beginning of the month—likely due to the release of the FOMC minutes (both in anticipation and aftermath). In any case, equity holders have been loath to sell. Mild intraday weakness continues to be met with buying.

You would think that any whiff of a disappointing economic report would send stocks plummeting, but instead, markets have held their psychologically important support levels of Dow 13,000, Nasdaq 3,000, S&P 500 1400, and Russell 2000 800 without much trouble.

Some market observers are suggesting that the worse the news the better in that economic weakness will lead to another round of Fed stimulus (QE3), and that this emboldens the bulls in a contrarian way. But I don’t think severe economic weakness is really what investors want. What has encouraged bulls is an economy that is holding up okay, just not recovering as fast as we need, and perhaps lacking in confidence (both business and consumer). In such an environment, a little stimulus is likely on the horizon.

Wednesday’s release of the FOMC meeting minutes revealed serious discussion of a possible QE3, and the initial reaction to this at 11:00 ET was a market spike (about 8 points in the S&P 500). Rather than requiring that things get really bad before acting, additional stimulus likely would be employed “fairly soon unless incoming information pointed to a substantial and sustainable strengthening in the pace of the economic recovery.” We’ll see what Chairman Bernanke has to say at the annual monetary policy conference next week in Jackson Hole. Then, the next FOMC meeting takes place September 12-13.

In any case, global investors are putting up a more confident front. Pull up charts of European equities and 10-year bond yields in at-risk places like Spain and Italy. Yields are falling through the uptrend line that had been forming since March as bondholders appear to be feeling more confident about repayment, while stocks are forming bullish patterns for many of the same reasons.

It seems that U.S. stocks are hanging around awaiting a spark to light their fire. Perhaps it will be QE3, or perhaps a breakthrough with Europe’s debt situation. However, let’s be aware that September and October can be notoriously volatile…and the impending U.S. presidential election may add some fuel, as well.

One quick comment about the polarizing rhetoric on the presidential campaign trail. Unfortunately, the past tells us that no matter who wins the election, the other side likely will be as obstructive as possible in preventing any bold initiatives from passing, much less succeeding.

Contrast this approach with private life. In a marriage, if one spouse constantly seeks to undermine the other, the marriage will collapse. Likewise, in a business, divergent opinions are welcomed and explored (often vigorously), but once a strategic direction is decided upon, everyone must get onboard to work together or it surely will lead to failure of the business in a competitive marketplace. Only in a representative democracy can one side get away with openly trying to undermine the other’s initiatives.

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The reason, of course, is that cooperating with the party in power might help them to actually succeed (heaven forbid!), which lessens the likelihood of the cooperating party winning the next election. In a business, failure of one party means failure of all, and cooperation is imperative. Blatant attempts to undermine will get you fired. Only in government will you see one side freely admit that their number one objective is to ensure the failure of the other party’s initiatives—with no repercussions.

Now, back to the markets. From a technical standpoint, many market observers continue to insist that we are way overdue for at least a minor correction to this nearly month-long unabated uptrend. Looking at the SPY chart, it closed Wednesday at 141.82 after trading above 143 on Tuesday to hit new 52-week highs. It has been trading within a bullish rising channel for about 3 months.

SPY is still dealing with technical resistance from the convergence of the top of the rising channel and the April-May highs, and in fact it has been forming a mini rising channel within the larger rising channel for the past couple of weeks. The 50-day simple moving average has crossed up bullishly through the 100-day SMA. Price still sits comfortably above the 20-, 50-, 100- and 200-day SMAs.