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发表于 2009-3-24 08:21
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Friday, November 14, 2008Market Faces Corrective Action Following Thursday's Late-Day Surge
Market Faces Corrective Action Following Thursday's Late-Day Surge
(Note: Unless otherwise stated, the index action described below relates to the EMini futures contracts for the respective indices. Actual index action may differ slightly in terms of pattern formation, although the market bias will remain the same.)
Good day! The market surged sharply on Thursday with an intraday range of over 900 points in the Dow Jones Industrial Average that had taken it back into October's lows before sharply reversing higher into the close. The indices had struck strong resistance levels into the closing bell with three waves of buying in place and the 15 minute 200 period simple moving averages hitting intraday. This helped turn the index futures lower in afterhours trade. As I mentioned in yesterday's column, the gradual decline compared to the rally created the possibility of a 2T on the all sessions time frames. This would have meant a very slightly higher high that would serve as a trap before the downside pace increased. When I published yesterday's column, however, the indices were not yet forming this potential trap and the market continued to favor a more gradual erosion in prices.
In the end the two possibilities were were looking at combined. The index futures did attempt to head back into highs at 3:00 am ET, but they failed to penetrate the upper level price resistance. Nevertheless, this attempt alone was enough to help shift the pace of the selling as compared to that which had been in place heading into midnight and the market gained momentum on the downside on Friday morning.
Adding to the weakness on Friday was premarket data from the Commerce Department which estimated that U.S. retail sales fell by a record 2.8% in October. This was worse than the expected 2.3% decline, which in and of itself was rather dismal. Auto sales fell 5.5%, but even excluding these numbers, retail sales dropped 2.2%, remaining in record territory. The last time retail sales had fallen for four straight months was in 1974.
Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX)

There was a brief attempt at a recovery out of the bell, but by 10:00 ET the selling had resumed and the market continued lower into noon. Since the indices failed to form a true trap in the premarket action, the overall selling was still more gradual than the prior day's rally and when the market came into price support from the 15:00 bull flag on the 5 minute on Thursday it was strong enough to roll the indices over at the lows. This support zone was also the 38.2% to 50% retracement levels in the index futures and price support from prior 15 minute highs earlier in the week, so this created additional incentives for an upside correction heading into the 12:00 ET correction period.
On the Nasdaq, three distinct lows formed on the 5 minute time frame with each low breaking the previous one on downside chop following a sharper descent out of 10:00 am ET. This created the basis for a mid-day momentum reversal pattern which triggered shortly after noon when the upper end of the late-morning channel broke to the upside. This resulted in an upside bias throughout the majority of the afternoon.
Even though the Dow first hit its 15 minute 200 sma and the S&Ps followed soon thereafter, it was the Nasdaq's 15 minute 200 sma that I focused on as the main target for a larger resistance level and reversal into the final hour of trade (as posted in my live trading room). The reason is that this added time allowed the Nasdaq to form three highs on a 200 tick chart that would help shift momentum again. It held perfectly with the 15:00 ET correction period and the indices fell sharply, giving back all of their late-day gains to put them firmly back into negative territory for the day.
Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJI)

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJI) closed lower on Friday by 337.94 points, or 3.8%, at 8,630.32. On the week as a whole the Dow is down 3.5%. Intel Corp. (INTC) led the losses on Friday, down 7.69%, while Home Depot (HD) fell 7.60%, and J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM) fell 7.31%. Out of the Dow's 30 components, only General Motors (GM) and Citigroup Inc. (C) posted gains on Friday. GM rose 2%, while C rose less than 1%.
The S&P 500 ($SPX) fell 38.00 points, or 4.2%, and closed at 889.41. This week's losses in the S&P 500 came to -6.2%. On Friday the losses were led by consumer discretionary, financials, and energy. Crude oil prices fell 7% on the week. Oil futures closed at $57.04 a barrel, down $1.2 from Thursday's close.
The Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX) shed 79.85 points, or 5.0%, and closed at 1,547.14. The Nasdaq lost more than the other three indices for the week as a whole, down 7.9%. On Friday decliners outpaced advancers on the NASDAQ and New York Stock Exchange by approximately 4 to 1.
S&P 500 ($SPX)

The market is still at risk of an attempt to push slightly lower by the end of the year, although the third test of lows created the holding pattern we had been expecting into the weekend. The lows from 2002, however, are quite close and can still act as a magnet. The best pattern at this zone of support that would lead to a stronger bounce into next year would be a decent pull off this third low into about the 50 day simple moving average, followed by another strong breakdown into the larger monthly support from 2002 in the S&Ps and Dow. This would then form a 2B on the weekly time frame. This retest will often come in the form of two waves of selling.
posted by Toni Hansen @ 7:39 PM 0 Comments 
Key Earnings Announcements for Nov. 17-21
Monday, November 17, 2008
Before: COV, DHT (?), LOW, NSSC, ORBK, RTLX, TGT
During: -
After: CNTF, CTRP, IMCL (?), JMBA, KONG, SGK, NCTY, XFML
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Before: ARM, CMED,GIGM, HD, MWRK, SOL, SKS
During: -
After: DY (?), JBX, LZB, PSUN, PVH
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Before: BJ, EV (?), LDK, MENT, ROST, TSL, TWB
During: -
After: CYBX, DBRN, EGLT (?), GYMB, HOTT, INTU, LTD, LDG (?), MW, PETM, PLNR, SMTC, TK (?), WGOV
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Before: AGYS, STST (?), BKS, BONT, BRC, CTR, PLCE, DKS, EJ, FRE (?), GME, GCO (?), GRB (?), GSIG (?), HP, ITWO (?), IDEV (?), IUSA (?), LTXX (?), LULU (?), MPR, NWY, PTRY, PSCO, PPC (?), SBH, SCHS, SCBL, SSI, SMRT, STP, SCMR, BKE, TDG, WTSLA, YGE (?)
During: -
After: ARAY (?), ARUN, ADSK, BRCD (?), JRJC (?), CHRD, CPWM, DELL, DDS (?), DITC, FL, GPS, HIBB, HRAY, JCG (?), CRM, ZUMZ
Friday, November 21, 2008
Before: ANN, CSIQ, HNZ, SJM, KIRK
During: -
After: ANSV (?)
posted by Toni Hansen @ 2:17 PM 0 Comments 
Economic Reports and Events for Nov. 17-21
Monday, November 17, 2008
8:30a.m. Nov NY Fed Manufacturing Index: Previous: -24.6.
9:15a.m. Sep Industrial Production: Previous: -2.8%.
9:15a.m. Sep Capacity Utilization: Previous: 76.4%.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
7:45a.m. ICSC Chain Store Sales Index For Nov 15: Previous: -1.0%.
8:30a.m. Oct Producer Price Index: Previous: -0.4%.
8:30a.m. Oct PPI, Ex-Food & Energy: Previous: +0.4%.
8:55a.m. Redbook Retail Sales Index For Nov 15: Previous: -1.2%.
9:00a.m. Sep Treasury International Capital Flows: Previous: $900M.
1:00p.m. Nov NAHB Housing Market Index: Previous: 14.
5:00p.m. ABC/Wash Post Consumer Conf For Nov 15 Previous: -50.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
8:30a.m. Sep Consumer Price Index: Previous: 0%.
8:30a.m. Sep CPI, Ex-Food & Energy: Previous: +0.1%.
8:30a.m. Sep Housing Starts: Previous: -6.3%.
10:35a.m. Nov 14 US Energy Dept Oil Inventories
11:00a.m. Nov 14 API Oil Industry Report
2:00p.m. Oct FOMC Minutes
Thursday, November 20, 2008
8:30a.m. Initial Jobless Claims For Nov 18 Week: Previous: +32K.
10:00a.m. Oct Conference Board Leading Indicators: Previous: -0.3%
10:00a.m. Nov Philadelphia Fed Business Index: Previous: -37.5.
10:00a.m. DJ-BTMU Business Barometer For Nov 8: Previous: -0.7%.
Friday, November 21, 2008
No economic events are scheduled for today.
posted by Toni Hansen @ 2:13 PM 0 Comments 
Thursday, November 13, 2008Market Snaps Back After Testing the Year's Lows
ood day! After closing at the day's lows on Wednesday, the index futures traded in a range throughout afterhours trade. They bounced back and forth well into mid-day trade on Thursday. Ahead of the open the Labor Department announced that filings for jobless benefits rose yet again last week to 516,000. This is the highest levels since September 2001. The four-week average hit its highest level since March of 1991 at 3.89 million. In other news, imports dropped a record 5.6% in September while exports fell 6%. This further points towards the recession which is now underway with trade declining across the board.
Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX)

The market actually bounced a bit following the sour data, which was at least met with relief that it had not been worse than expected. The bounce was only enough to establish an equal move on the 5 minute time frame though, and not enough to break the larger range along the lows that had been in place since just after the previous day's close. Following the opening bell, the indices continued to range along lows with the 15 minute 20 period simple moving average holding as the upside intraday resistance.
The indices did not try any slightly lower lows during the afterhours and premarket congestion, so this prevented the index futures from rounding off at the lows and reversing course into the morning. The result was a continuation of the bearish bias that had been in play throughout past several days. The range finally gave way to that bias shortly after noon. The selling continued until the indices touched down at the zone of the previous day's lows.
This third test of lows led to some slightly lower lows for a second time on the daily charts in the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 futures. The pace was not strong enough, however, to allow them to break at this time. Since the downside momentum into the lows was about the same as the previous rally off them into the upper end of the daily trading range the market held the lows which hit at the same time as the 13:00 ET correction period.
Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJI)

Once the rally was underway, it gained momentum very quickly. The indices broke through their 5 minute 20 period simple moving averages after only forming a 3-bar continuation pattern. This break soon took the indices back into the morning's opening price zone at the 14:00 ET correction period. A very minor correction off this resistance was followed by another strong continuation which broke the indices through the 5 minute 200 sma and 15 minute 20 sma with very little hesitation at all.
This second move higher continued into the previous afternoon's mid-day highs. This resistance zone was also the 5 minute equal move zone in the Nasdaq. A second correction lasted a bit longer than the first, pulling into the 5 minute 20 sma support at about 15:00 ET. A third and final intraday move followed in the final hour of trade, taking the indices to their 15 minute 200 sma resistance levels into the closing bell. This was also the zone of Tuesday's highs, providing a double dose of resistance at the end of the day which prevented the index futures from continuing the rally for the remainder of trade afterhours on Thursday.
S&P 500 ($SPX)

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJI) closed higher on Thursday by 552.59 points, or 6.7%, at 8,835.25 after trading in a range of over 900 points intraday. The gains were led by Chevron Corp. (CVX), which rose 12.53%. Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) rose 12.34%, while Home Depot (HD) climbed 12.27%, and Alcoa Inc. (AA) rose 10.13%. On the losing end were General Motors Corp. (GM), down 4.22%, and Citigroup Inc. (C), which fell 1.97%.
The S&P 500 ($SPX) rose 58.99 points, or 6.9%, and closed at 911.29 with energy, financials, and materials leading the gains which extended to all 10 of the S&P's industry groups. The Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX) rose 97.49 points, or 6.5%, and closed at 1,596.7. Crude oil hit a new low on the year of $54.67 a barrel, but reversed mid-day with the rest of the market and closed at $58.24 a barrel, up $2.08, or 3.7%.
I am expecting a more choppy session in Friday's trade as a result of the strong extension on the 15 minute time frame Thursday afternoon. I suspect that the week's lows will continue to hold into the weekend, but the market is favoring more of a correction off the afternoon highs into Friday. The potential is there for a 2T with a slightly higher high fiven the current momentum action. This would allow for a stronger move lower intraday on Friday, but as of 2:00 am ET the bias is more in favor of a more gradual erosion.
posted by Toni Hansen @ 10:56 PM 0 Comments |
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