How Crazy is this Market?

I've been reading a lot of posts by various TSPers the past couple of weeks and it's been somewhat entertaining to see what this market does to our emotions.

Some might have you believe (not necessarily on this MB) that this market is really no different than past markets. I would beg to differ.

I have been quite astonished to see the Seven Sentinels whipped around for over a year now. I'd never seen it so ineffective (relatively speaking) in the several years I'd been watching it. Sure, it's had some great calls during that time, but the whipsaws have more than neutralized any gains I might have realized. And now I find myself way down the tracker list wondering what's happening to both this system and this market.

Now, don't misunderstand me here. I don't really care where I am on the tracker, that doesn't bother me. But I do care about providing some good, proven technical analysis that each of us can use (if you're so inclined) as we see fit.

Sure, no system is perfect, I can accept that, but is this market really that different from past markets?

Since the June 7th low, the S&P 500 had dropped 13.7% from its April high during the course of trading last month. At the April apex this market was not showing any of the "classic" warning signs of an imminent large scale decline. The NYSE A/D line that the Seven Sentinels employs hit an all-time high on April 26th. You can go back more than 60 years and not find one case of the market collapsing greater than 20% without seeing internals flashing warning signs ahead of time. In this case the A/D line.

That April 26th high saw 674 stocks reach 52 week highs. Only 9 stocks that day hit 52 week lows. All told the market saw 20.7% of all stocks hit fresh 52 week highs. That's the largest percentage since 1986.

A market collapse does not begin after such incredible strength. Decades of data just doesn't support it.

So what does this mean?

Either we are witnessing something unprecedented, or the current decline is a normal (not sure that's the right word) market correction.

I also find it interesting that the Seven Sentinels have maintained a buy signal for much of the recent decline. No sell signal given. I even had 4 buys signals last Friday. Very odd indeed for this system given the depth of this decline.

Okay, the market did its usual gyration today, gapping up at the open, peaking, staging a decline, and then finishing mixed at the close.

So where do the Sentinels stand after today? Here's the charts:

NAMO.jpg

NAMO and NYMO remain on sells, but in spite of new lows last week, the 6 day EMA remains well above the previous May decline level. This is a positive divergence.

NAHL.jpg

NAHL flipped back to a sell, barely. NYHL remains on a buy, barely.

TRIN.jpg

TRIN and TRINQ both remain on buys.

BPCOMPQ.jpg

No turn yet for BPCOMPQ. It's a sell.

So we have 3 of 7 signals flashing buys, which keeps the system on a buy.

This is a big week for the market. The bulls can't wait much longer if they want to turn this market around and avoid bear market status.
 
CoolH, it's hard to play any Intermidiate system within the confines of TSP's EOD pricing. Have you crunched the numbers to see how much of a percentile difference 1 day makes? I's gander the difference between the SS & the SS under TSP could be greater than 10%
 
JTH;bt1714 said:
CoolH, it's hard to play any Intermidiate system within the confines of TSP's EOD pricing. Have you crunched the numbers to see how much of a percentile difference 1 day makes? I's gander the difference between the SS & the SS under TSP could be greater than 10%

From a historical perspective the SS would be a superior system regardless of EOD pricing. It's the volatility of the past year that has changed the game. It's not about the SS, it's about the market. An intermediate to long term system should be a good fit for the IFT restrictions we have. EOD pricing is actually irrelevant if internals could be trusted. And the point of my blog is they can't. At least not for the time being. But for years they were a great barometer and may be again if the playing field could be leveled for small investors like us.
 
CoolHand,

I think the market is news based. We hear that BP has capped the well and boom, we hear that jobs numbers are lousy and bam.

This is a long term trading range. And, the range explodes to the upside and crashes to the downside. Then it stammers along with another 5% - 10% of movement. It's hard to catch, and kinda questionable to try to do so. You miss so much on the first three days of upswing that it seems silly to trade once the pattern is set.

Then, the shark comes out of the water.
 
Its all in the basic outlook:
At the start of our mini bull last year, we all heard that if unemployment does not improve within a year or so...then that will be the end of this run. Well...we're not as bad as Reagans 1982-82 unemployment rate of near 13%...but we are stuck around 10%. Also...there will likely be some more negative Euro news in the weeks ahead...thats the news that stunted the so called good market indicators in April that hinted the S&P was headed for 1350.

Its all in the fundamentals.
Tom had a great writeup on this a month ago...with our 1st visit below the 200 day EMA. He said that if we break thru support levels at 1040-1050...then there is no firm support until we hit 900.
http://www.tsptalk.com/comments_archive/comments_6_8_10.html
Well we broke thru. Also we are about to see the "Death Cross" either Wed or Thur wot the 50 and 200 day EMA's crossing over...one of the official declarations of "The Party is Over" and Bear Market rules apply.

Its all in the politics.
November elections. Dems want to do whatever it takes to keep the recovery going. GOP wants to do everything it can to make it go the other way...into a double dip. So there is no cooperation in using gov't as a tool to help...so this economic recovery (still on its training wheels) is likely to crash temporarily.

I'll see you guys in early August when the S&P is near 890. Might buy in by then.:sick:
 
coolhand;bt1715 said:
if the playing field could be leveled for small investors like us.

Key word there, blackbox is slimming the competitive advantage...
 
JTH;bt1718 said:
Key word there, blackbox is slimming the competitive advantage...

Absolutely. That's part of the problem. Not to mention insider knowledge at the highest levels.
 
crws;bt1719 said:
what about adding a 5 day marker for news/current event bias?

News is almost a constant. News is not suppose to matter from a technical standpoint. That's why I use TA. Yeah, I talk about data points in my blog, but I don't trade off them. It's impossible.
 
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