Saturday, November 20, 2010

S&P 500 index levels telling you if/when the pullback's over, plus world index charts: Tony Caldaro's Objective Elliott Wave update

When Tony Caldaro noted in an update Tuesday or Wednesday evening that the pullback to S&P 500 level of 1173 was 54 points compared to the previous pullback of 89 points, I commented in a tweet that both numbers are Fibonacci numbers (well, 54 or 55, pretty close!). Then the market bounced handsomely after the bullish bear trap which I pointed out in real time in a tweet. I can't always call them out real-time, but it's great to know that Tony Caldaro's pivot levels work intraday and day-by-day even when the bigger picture isn't in tight focus. Currently, there's a possibility the pullback is complete ... And a possibility it isn't ...! Tony addresses that by describing the levels that will let you know either way. So whether or not you're familiar with Elliott Wave analysis, you should get some good information from his weekend update. Let's take a look at specifically what Tony is saying (thanks again Tony!) this weekend in his website (always in the links list at right, and via the feed there too) at http://caldaro.wordpress.com/:
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the ELLIOTT WAVE lives on
November 20, 2010
weekend update

by Tony Caldaro


REVIEW

The equity market started the week by extending the pullback, and then rebounded to end the week nearly unchanged. Economic reports for this past week were mostly positive. On the negative side were the NY FED index, weekly MBA mortgage applications, housing starts and weekly jobless claims. The BEA leading indicator led the positive economic reports, along with retails sales, the PPI/CPI, the Philly FED, industrial production, business inventories, building permits, and the weekly WLEI. The monetary base and the NAHB housing index remained steady.

For the week the SPX/DOW were +0.05%, and the NDX/NAZ were -0.05%. Asian markets lost 2.4%, European markets gained 0.7%, the Commodity equity group gained 0.6%, and the DJ World index was off 0.2%. Bonds were -1.3%, Crude lost 3.5%, Gold was -1.1% and the USD gained 0.4%. Next week's holiday shortened week will be highlighted by Q3 GDP, the FOMC minutes, and Durable goods orders.

LONG TERM: bull market

It was just two weeks ago the SPX made a new bull market high at 1227. This new marginal high, the previous high was SPX 1220 in April, ran into short term resistance at this level and the market pulled back into this week. This is quite normal for advances in bull markets. The weekly RSI was quite overbought and the pullback sets up the potential for a common negative RSI divergence on the next series of new highs. The weekly MACD continues to move higher, suggesting the July-Nov uptrend remains intact. We continue to count this uptrend as Major wave 1 of Primary wave III, in an ongoing five primary wave bull market.

While the US SPX index was making new bull market highs, other indices around the world were also making new bull market highs as well. This is a global event. We selected a few of the 15 major indices we track and post their charts below.

First we display the DJ World index. Notice the wave pattern from the March 2009 low remains exactly the same as the SPX.

Next we display England's FTSE. Again the same five wave pattern into the April 2010 high, a correction, and then new bull market highs. Also notice the similar patterns of the weekly RSI and MACD.

Third is Canada's TSX. This is one of three foreign indices we track in the Commodity equity group. In this chart you will observe a slight deviation of the Primary wave II corrective pattern. It was an irregular flat that started in Jan 2010. Yet again, after the July low new bull market highs.

Fourth on our list is India's BSE (Sensex). This bull market pattern also started in March 2009. Yet notice how different it is in its wave structure. Each country's equity market unfolds with its own specific pattern. Recently the Sensex challenged the its all time bull market high and was turned away on this first attempt.

Last we present Hong Kong's HSI. This bull market started right after the worldwide asset liquidation in October 2008. Again, a slightly different bull market pattern making new bull market highs.

While many foreign markets move in slightly different wave patterns during global bull and bear markets. Most get into sync with each other when the long term trend is about to change. Currently, many continue to unfold in their own specific patterns suggesting the global bull market has plenty of time ahead of it. To review all foreign indices we track using OEW, go to the charts on pages 7, 8 and 9 using the following link:http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Favorites.CServlet?obj=ID1606987.

MEDIUM TERM: uptrend high SPX 1227

After completing five Major waves up from the March 2009 bear market low at SPX 667. Primary wave I completed in April 2010 at SPX 1220, and the market entered a three month Primary wave II correction ending at SPX 1011. Since then the market has been in a confirmed uptrend, now in its fourth month, and we are tracking this advance as Major wave 1 of Primary wave III. Our expectations for this uptrend, when we projected a potential scenario for the rest of the bull market in September 2010:http://caldaro.wordpress.com/2010/09/26/spx-bull-market-projection/, has been for a six-month uptrend, ending in January 2011, at around the OEW 1313 pivot. Thus far our projection remains on track in time, but price has a lot of work to do on the upside to reach that target. Technicals remain good. Eight of the nine SPX sectors remain in uptrends, and 12 of the 15 foreign markets remain in uptrends as well.

The internal wave structure of this Major wave 1 uptrend is unfolding in five Intermediate waves: Int. wave one Aug10 at SPX 1129, Int. wave two Aug10 at SPX 1040, Int. wave three Nov10 at SPX 1227, and Int. wave four may have bottomed this week at SPX 1173. Intermediate wave two was a relatively complex pullback lasting about three weeks, declined 89 SPX points, and was oversold twice on the daily RSI. The recent Intermediate wave four was a simple structure lasting only about a week, declined 54 SPX points, and hit oversold once on the daily RSI. We have alternation between the two pullbacks.

SHORT TERM

Support for the SPX remains at 1187 and then 1176, with resistance at 1222 and then 1240. Short term momentum ended the week slightly overbought. After double topping at SPX 1227 on tuesday Nov 9th, a negative RSI hourly divergence appeared and the market started to pullback. The SPX could not clear the OEW 1222 pivot range. This pullback lasted one week and bottomed when the SPX hit 1173 just before the close this past tuesday. After several attempts to rally on wednesday the market gapped up on thursday, hit SPX 1200, and then pulled back. This turned the short term OEW charts positive for the first time in over a week. On friday the market worked its way back to SPX 1200 and closed there. This suggests that Intermediate wave four ended on tuesday at SPX 1173. We upgraded the count form a tentative "green" labeling to a "purple" wave labeling.

During the four day week ahead the SPX needs to hold the OEW 1187 pivot range, (+/- 7 pts.), to keep this count in effect. Overhead resistance is minimal until the OEW 1222 pivot range is reached. Once this pivot is cleared we could get quite a rally into year end. While we can not rule out of retest of the SPX 1173 level, probabilities suggest it was the low for Int. wave four. Should the market turn lower there is good support at the 1168 and then the 1146 OEW pivot. Once the market clears SPX 1207 it should be on its way higher. Best to your trading!

FOREIGN MARKETS

Asian markets lost 2.4% on the week. India's BSE confirmed a downtrend.

European markets gained 0.7% on the week. Spain's IBEX remains in a downtrend.

The Commodity equity group gained 0.6% on the week. Brazil's BVSP confirmed a downtrend.

The DJ World index remains in an uptrend and lost 0.2% on the week.

COMMODITIES

Bonds are in a confirmed downtrend and were -1.3% on the week. The 10YR rate has risen from 2.33% to 2.96%.

Crude lost 3.5% on the week as it struggles to hold onto its uptrend.

Gold lost 1.1% on the week and appears to be in a downtrend, yet unconfirmed.

The uptrending USD gained 0.4% on the week. The downtrending EURUSD was flat, while the now downtrending JPYUSD lost 1.3%.

NEXT WEEK

A busy economic week ahead all condensed into just two days due to the Thanksgiving holiday on thursday. On tuesday, the first revision to Q3 GDP, Existing home sales and the FOMC minutes. Then on wednesday, Personal income/spending, PCE prices, Durable goods orders, the weekly Jobless claims, UofM Consumer sentment, New home sales, and finally the FHFA housing price index. Traders will likely take both thursday and friday off after that two day 1-2 punch, and volume will be light on friday. The FED has nothing scheduled for next week. Best to your week and upcoming Holidays!



CHARTS:http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Favorites.CServlet?obj=ID1606987

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