Could the Dow be heading for a new yearly high?

Aug 15, 2012, 04:49

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The question must be uppermost in the minds of many traders, as it is with me: could the Dow push through my tramline for a new yearly high? The market is only a hundred or so pips off making that high. And I find that startling.

Despite the well-known turmoil in the eurozone; the very weak economic recovery in the US – with real estate still depressed; the marked slowdown in China; not to mention the gargantuan mountains of debt almost everywhere you look (except for many cash-rich large cap companies); the markets are knocking on the door to new highs.

How is this possible? Is the stock market signalling full economic recovery ahead with the cash pile of companies being put to productive use? We know that markets tend to be one step (or more) ahead of events, so this is entirely possible.

Or is it that markets have got it all wrong and are buoyed up by baseless hope that more quantitative easing (QE) will keep the rally alive?

How to keep track of sentiment

These forces are responsible for the deep polarisation in today’s markets.

One way I keep track of sentiment is via the AAII http://www.aaii.com/ survey of ‘mom and pop’ US investors – and this is the latest result:

BullsBearsNeutral
Week ending 8/8 36% 27% 36%
Change in week 6% -8% 1%
Long-term average 39% 30% 31%

There has been another very large swing to the bullish camp with a net move of 14%, following the rally to the 13,200 area. Isn’t it wonderful what a sustained rally does to sentiment?

But even with this swing, the percentage of bulls still remains lower than the long-term average. As a measure of the confusion out there, the neutral camp is larger than the long-term average.

This is the process: As traders notice the market moving up, they become more bullish as more join the herd until the situation becomes unstable. I liken it to a ship where people rush to one side and then finally the last person capsizes it.


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What does this tell us about the Dow?

Sadly, I have found no mathematical measure the tipping point of sentiment that can be applied universally. I have to make a judgment of when there are too many bulls and combine this with my trading methods.

But what I take from the AAII results is that the market may well be ready to turn.

I believe yesterday was significant in that the S&P poked to a new high, unaccompanied by the Dow.

So let’s turn to the charts:

Dow Jones spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

This is my tramline pair I have been using and the market is close to the upper line. The trading over the past few days has been confined to a trading range of about 100 pips or so, so let’s take a close-up look:

Dow Jones spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

The market has been trading between my ‘roof of resistance’ and the ‘shelf of support’ for over a week, providing much food for frustration to short-term traders. That is why I have been out of the market, waiting for signals.

And I may have one very soon! I mentioned the S&P making a new high yesterday – here are my lovely tramlines on the S&P chart:

Dow Jones spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

Yesterday’s rally carried exactly to the upper line and is this morning challenging the lower one. A break here would be very significant and would point to the likely start of the move down I have been expecting.

Short-term traders may be looking to short the S&P on this break, or in the case of the Dow, to place sell stops just below the shelf of support, or even upon a break in the S&P as trigger event.

How to prepare for a sharp move

On Monday, I discussed some of the Elliott wave implications of a possible upward break into new highs. Now if yesterday was indeed the top, I will breathe a sigh of relief, as that would keep intact my original Elliott wave labels for the Dow and keep my forecast for big moves down in place.

At some stage, the market will break out of its current range, and the move could be explosive. If so, then if without a position, jumping on board would be like trying to catch a tiger by the tail.

Trader tip: If you believe a sharp move is imminent, waiting for confirmation could lead you to take a position at the wrong time –just before a large counter-trend move that could stop you out. We have all been in this situation. I like to take early positions often before I have the full facts and sometimes, I get stopped out a few times before getting it right.

A more conservative trader may wait for full confirmation and place much wider stops. It is horses for courses.

• If you’re a new reader, or need a reminder about some of the methods I refer to in my trades, then do have a look at my introductory videos:

The essentials of tramline trading
Advanced tramline trading
An introduction to Elliott wave theory
Advanced trading with Elliott waves
Trading with Fibonacci levels
Trading with 'momentum'
Putting it all together

• Don't miss my next trading insight. To receive all my spread betting blog posts by email, as soon as I've written them, just sign up here . If you have any queries regarding MoneyWeek Trader, please contact us here.

Comments (16)

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  • 1. mr

    (15 August 2012, 05:12PM)  Complain about this comment

    I appreciate that analysis, John, not least because I've been sitting & waiting for clues before entering the market again. So frustrating to see the market up & down on rumour & counter-rumour. Still, Mrs Merkel is back next week so something will change!

    I cannot yet get Elliot wave theory and may never do so but I can still take your analysis and use it in support of my usual trading methods.

    Today is the first day in a while that the Dow has stayed well within the 13100-13200 range so confusion appears to hold the balance right now!

  • 2. Paul Wilkin

    (15 August 2012, 05:55PM)  Complain about this comment

    I can't "get" Elliott wave theory either but have been expecting the Dow to fall for some time as there doesn't seem to be any reason for it to rise and waiting for your next email for clues. We appear to be in reality disconnect, it rises on bad news because of hopes of stimulus and it rises on good news!
    Thanks again for your superb analysis.

  • 3. Rob

    (15 August 2012, 06:30PM)  Complain about this comment

    Perhaps the US stock markets are being held up by the money which has been flowing out of european sovereign debt? Out of the frying pan and into the fire and all that but it has to go somewhere that is perceived to be the safest place. It's a very scary time.

  • 4. Bronco Bill

    (15 August 2012, 06:37PM)  Complain about this comment

    I'm with you John its hard to call this one. A decent move is coming going by how narrow the Bollinger Bands are on my chart.
    As of today, any move above the top band at 13212 and any move below the bottom band at 13120 could be worth following for a few days at the very least.
    We're also now in the window of the new moon on Friday which often coincides with a strong continuation or change in direction.

  • 5. smlaing

    (15 August 2012, 06:55PM)  Complain about this comment

    Big info not due till september. The market awaits a catalyst. I expect a move up on the technicals very soon. There's a steeper tramline pair from 25th July which will be hit tomorrow. We'll then see if it's relevant.

  • 6. susan

    (16 August 2012, 01:56AM)  Complain about this comment

    Hi John, thanks for another great article. I do enjoy reading them. I'm with you 100% on your analysis. I too have been bewildered by it all and decided a few weeks ago to stay out. As you mention, taking up a position when the move comes, is extremely difficult. I have been caught out on that one before. I believe that we are due an explosive move downwards and will be getting in with my position, below the support line tomorrow morning. Look forward to your next article. Kind Regards

  • 7. mr

    (16 August 2012, 09:46AM)  Complain about this comment

    It seems to me that the key questions are:

    1) Are the markets currently discounting all the potential bad news?
    answer: no because they were clearly discounting them a lot more a few weeks ago

    2) Are the markets fully discounting the potential benefits of stimulus measures around the world?
    answer: probably not

    Allowing for the fact that markets are never rational it seems quite possible that they will rise further when the stimuli are in place (whatever that means) and will then realise we are, as yet, no further forward and return to the levels pre-Draghi promise, maybe then slowly picking up with the global economy.

    In other words I haven't a clue what to do right now other than nothing!

  • 8. Bronco Bill

    (16 August 2012, 11:14AM)  Complain about this comment

    At quiet times like this is how I was taught to place your bets.
    On my 2hr chart the Bollinger Bands are very narrow and running parallel. I've placed a buy order above the top band and a sell order below the bottom band so I hope to catch what should be a decent move with the BBs nipped up as they are.

  • 9. Bob

    (16 August 2012, 11:16AM)  Complain about this comment

    An article/part of an article about how wide the stop should be when placing an order below/above support or resistance would be appreciated. As always, interesting reading. For those interested in Elliott Wave, Euro/USD seems pretty textbook at the moment.

  • 10. IJ

    (16 August 2012, 02:44PM)  Complain about this comment

    At Rob. A couple of factors going against your reasoning: 1) volume has been incredibly light and dominated by "algos" - this does not speak of a big asset allocation shift; 2) European stock indexes, particularly the periphery, have in fact outperformed the US massively in this latest rally (why would investors pull money out of European sovereign debt into riskier European equities?). I believe, like John, that hope of easing (particularly by the ECB) is the primary driver of the rally (with said algo trading and career risk the co-pilots.) It's interesting then that peripheral sovereign debt (i looked at long-dated Spanish and Italian govt bonds), arguably the most direct beneficiary of any ECB easing, is not participating. Either these are a screaming buy, or stocks are a screaming sell. I opt for the latter, but have no view on when!

  • 11. mr

    (16 August 2012, 03:59PM)  Complain about this comment

    My only observation right now is that the Dow & FTSE are diverging, ie Dow is only 20 or so below recent highs but FTSE is 45 below its recent high as I write.

  • 12. Bronco Bill

    (16 August 2012, 05:52PM)  Complain about this comment

    Cant help wondering but with Greece due to run out of money again next week etc etc and whatever the outcome will and could this be the triggerof the big move in the markets that we've all been waiting for and talking about ??

  • 13. mr

    (16 August 2012, 06:11PM)  Complain about this comment

    Dow almost on upper tramlines - day & 60 min.

    A good shorting opportunity v soon...

  • 14. Bob

    (17 August 2012, 04:01PM)  Complain about this comment

    This baby is going down... just a matter of time.... It has only been pumped up so high as the banks have tried to sucker in retail investors....

    IMPO you would be mad to enter this market now.

  • 15. IJ

    (17 August 2012, 04:10PM)  Complain about this comment

    I agree Bob, but when? Technically speaking though, is double top the last line of defence here for the bears? Seems 3rd-wave thesis has been negated by yesterday and today price action?

  • 16. mr

    (17 August 2012, 04:37PM)  Complain about this comment

    Interesting that the FTSE continues to lag the Dow or diverge from it.

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