History says this is bullish, but...

10/13/11

Stocks rallied strongly for most of the day yesterday but some late selling took about half the early gains away by the close. Despite the reversal, it was yet another triple digit gain for the Dow as it close up 103-points.

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For the TSP, the C-fund gained 0.99% yesterday, the S-fund was up 1.41%, the I-fund jumped 1.80%, and the F-fund (bonds) lost 0.17%.


The S&P 500 is making its way through resistance areas like a hot knife through butter, but it has become quite overbought and making new multi-month highs this week would be quite a feat.

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Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk

The Nasdaq managed to trade above the 200-day EMA again, but slipped below it before the close. This is where it should find some problems and not being a seller here would look silly in hindsight, should the market pull back from here. Just like it would have seemed silly not to buy at support earlier this month, but hindsight trading is easy. The question is, can the market and the Nasdaq make new highs or will it pullback from the top of the range again?

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Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk

I am posting this chart of the Dow just to show that it too is battling a major resistance level.

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Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk

All of this overbought / over extended talk sounds good and could cause the market to pause, but the fact is that we have had a long 3+ month consolidation, and that could be all the bear market is going to get out of investors.

In the short-term, the market is extended and historically yesterday's action says we should see a pullback. According to sentimenTrader.com:

"There have been 8 times the S&P gapped up like it did today, rallied at least +1% more, then fell back at least -1% into the close. 6 of the 8 sported negative returns over the next 3 days."

But looking out further, although rare, the recent action has been an historical bullish juggernaut.

"Longer-term, the rally we've seen has obviously been impressive. It's also very rare. There have only been five other times we've seen a similar performance since 1928.

"What we're looking at is any other time the S&P rallied 9% or more off of a 52-week low, managing to stage at least a 7-day rally with no -1% days mixed in.
"Going forward, each of them tacked on more gains during the next month, averaging +4.1%. The only failure to mark a major low was in April '01. All of the others were very important market bottoms."

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Chart provided courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

This is not a great sample size but that tells us how rare this recent rally is. It's tough to argue with the numbers, although there are no guarantees and I'm guessing that Europe wasn't seeing a series of countries on the verge of bankruptcy as we are seeing today. We'll see.

Thanks for reading! We'll see you tomorrow.

Tom Crowley


The legal stuff: This information is for educational purposes only! This is not advice or a recommendation. We do not give investment advice. Do not act on this data. Do not buy, sell or trade the funds mentioned herein based on this information. We may trade these funds differently than discussed above. We use additional methods and strategies to determine fund positions.
 
Tom "Chicken Little" Crowley, please take your chart's and plant them somewhere so that maybe in this new market environment you may go out next spring and see that you and "cool hand" have grown a pair! Or two, (then you could share them) and stop leadind younger , or perhap's newer TSP participant's into the trap of not learning to trust their own instinct's that they develope using multiple other outside info source's as well just their plain ol' ball's. The sentiment survey system and "cool" hands system produced in '09 to '10, but so did used car sale's. Anyone can gain during boon time's, but you and your (-) "the market is falling" ( and you are alway's a day late with your commentary, as well as a week early with your "prediction's" of the next impending plummet). So please either stow the chart's or stop leaving old folk's "skeered" outlook and commentary on the tsp talk site. Because without new blood( a.k.a. youthful, brash, BALLSY participant's/contributor's), the tsp and the stock market as we know it, is deeeeeeaaaaddddD.
 
xarmy87 -

If you haven't noticed, Tom and Coolhand are pretty popular around here. Before the frequent bloggers wake up and light into you, I just want to say that I welcome various perspectives. If you have insight that could help us "younger" TSPers make money in today's market, I'm all ears. Why don't you start an account talk thread and help us learn?:)
 
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Hmmm, seems like a drive by to me...

Funnier yet, is the last line... :laugh:
 
Now thats funny. See what happens when you don't lock your doors at night.:nuts:
 
Some folks just take things out of context. Fact is, I'm hardly afraid to invest in this market, I just prefer to manage my various accounts in different manners. None of us should assume we see things the same, because we don't. Risk tolerances are different as are retirement timelines.

My blog isn't meant to tell anyone what they should be doing. It's only a perspective I offer that most people use in conjuction with other data. It's hardly a stand-alone system. That's what some folks fail to understand.

There's nothing "easy" about investing. Buy and hold may sound easy, and in some ways it is, but it's still no guarantee one will have the retirement they expect when they get to that point in their lives.

Every financial professional out there will tell you that the market can be a hazardous place to put your money and that you could incur losses irrespective of how you chose to manage your account.
 
xarmy87;bt4172 said:
Or two, (then you could share them) and stop leadind younger , or perhap's newer TSP participant's into the trap of not learning to trust their own instinct's that they develope using multiple other outside info source's as well just their plain ol' ball's. The sentiment survey system and "cool" hands system produced in '09 to '10, but so did used car sale's. Anyone can gain during boon time's, but you and your (-) "the market is falling" ( and you are alway's a day late with your commentary, as well as a week early with your "prediction's" of the next impending plummet).
Welcome to the board. I'm intrigued by your "plain ol' balls" system, but I think I will keep sentiment in my arsenal.

2007 thru yesterday...
101311a.gif


But seriously, you young folks out there should be taking more risk. He's right about that.
 
"So please either stow the chart's or stop leaving old folk's "skeered" outlook and commentary on the tsp talk site. Because without new blood( a.k.a. youthful, brash, BALLSY participant's/contributor's), the tsp and the stock market as we know it, is deeeeeeaaaaddddD. "

He-he,
OK Birchtree Jr, how many times do we have to tell you...stay off of Dad's computer (lol).
 
Birchtree;bt4183 said:
Honestly, it's not my fault. Why is everybody always pickin on me.

[video=youtube;EaGKxAgCguU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EaGKxAgCguU[/video]
 
dpmp;bt4186 said:
There is a gap up occurred on Monday (08 Oct), gap range: 1155 - 1178.
You mean Oct 10? It may have gapped open in the morning, but it looks like it was filled intra-day. I am not seeing it. Can you explain? Thanks.
 
Right, I don't see an open gap. 10/7 high was 1171.40 and Monday's 10/10 low was 1158.15. They overlap.
 
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