Weekly Market Summary: Failed Sell-Offs, Failed Rallies

 | Apr 19, 2015 12:58AM ET

h3 Summary

Failed sell-offs lead to failed rallies. This has been the recurrent pattern for the past four months. There is unlikely to be a sustained move higher until there is a more complete sell0off lower. Risk remains to the downside.

Stocks rose strongly a week ago, then promptly fell back lower this past week. This has become a regular pattern in 2015. For the week, SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY) and the Russell 2000 lost 1%. The NASDAQ 100 (NDX) lost 1.6%.

Overseas, Europe fell 2.2%. Emerging markets were the relative strength winner, losing only 0.4%.

Crude gained more than 8%. It has now risen 5 weeks in a row.

The set-up coming into the week was this: the indices were at the top of their recent range and not yet overbought. As we said then, a test of strength was at hand, as bullish markets become and remain overbought while trend-less ones fail at moments like these.

In the event, the markets once again failed.

Our bottom line remains as follows: failed sell-offs lead to failed rallies. This has been the recurrent pattern for the past four months. There is unlikely to be a sustained move higher until there is a more complete sell-off lower. Risk remains to the downside.

This pattern is most easily seen on the weekly time frame. RSI became overbought during the prior multi-year run higher (yellow shading, top panel); since December, every rally has failed with lower momentum. But, instead of resetting with a larger sell-off, the dips have been short and shallow (pink shading). This has produced a trend-less market.