We Haven’t Seen A Market Top Yet

 | Oct 15, 2014 06:49AM ET

While I color myself concerned about the selling taking place in stocks, I do not think we have seen the top, not yet at least.

It never ceases to amaze me how fast the sentiment changes in the market. We go from cheering on new highs to people already looking for an 1987-type crash. Don’t get me wrong, it makes my uneasy when I read an article in GQ where the author, while writing about stripes, throws in lines like: “Button up one of the bolder striped shirts out there and you’ll be ready to do more than push stocks” or “built for mergers, acquisitions.” You rarely want to see references to Wall St in non-financial publications and while this one was subtle it still stood out. There are many pieces of data that show retail investors have come back stocks and even men’s magazines are taking their cue.

There’s been a lot of discussion about whether we have seen the peak in the stock market and if we are about to see a repeat of 2007. Business Insider has been running stories about the anonymous twitter user who may have called the top even though we are down just 7%, which is less than the corrections we saw in 2010, 2011, and 2012.

While I can understand the similarities between the prior peak and the current price action, I do not think we’ve seen enough deterioration in breadth and momentum in order to be confident that the S&P 500 will not make a new high in the coming weeks.

In late-September I showed the divergences that were taking place in the Advance-Decline Line (breadth) and the Relative Strength Index (momentum) and how they were acting as negative symptoms that could send prices lower. While they were in fact diverging, they had not separated from the equity market to the same degree as prior market tops.

A different example is the following chart showing the S&P 500 components relative to their respective 52-week high and low. The more stocks that are closer to their own 52-week low, the farther down the line falls. You can see that at the 2007 high, the divergence was much more pronounced than the small separation we have today. Before the small decline in July and August of ’07 we saw this indicator diverge just like it’s during right now. I’ll show why this may be important later on.