Monday Morning Outlook: Analyzing the Risks to the Bullish and Bearish Case

Technical support, a wild-card Fed, and a mixed bag of sentiment

by Bernie Schaeffer with Beth Gaston Moon 11/19/2007 6:55 AM


Happy Thanksgiving! Has the holiday crept up on all of us so soon? Indeed, we're in for a lightly traded, abbreviated holiday week. And thanks to a significant jump higher last Tuesday coupled with modest gains on Friday, we're able to give thanks for a positive week in the markets. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) ended Friday 1% higher for the week, the Nasdaq Composite (COMP) gained 0.4% compared to the previous week, and the S&P 500 Index (SPX) edged up 0.3% for the week.

While things have been rough-and-tumble for the markets of late, there are still some critical support levels that have proven their worth in recent days. The S&P held above the 1,450 level, site of short-term chart support (though the index was strongly rebuffed at the 1,490-1,500 region). The Dow closed the week above the 13,000 millennium mark after Monday's dip beneath this threshold. The S&P 100 Index (OEX) has failed to breach the 670 level, which contained pullbacks in late August as well.

And most significant is the 80-week moving average on the S&P, which appears to be beckoning during the market's down days. A move to this trendline –currently perched near 1,415 – would basically put the index even (or slightly negative) for the year and could drastically reduce the complacency that continues to linger on some fronts. I can't shake the feeling that we might not be able to declare "rock bottom, time for a turnaround" until this trendline is paid a visit.

Additionally, there are some sentiment indicators that haven't yet reached the levels I'd hope to see at a true bottom. Aside from a brief peek above the 30 mark last Monday, the CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX) hasn't shown the kind of panicked spike we saw in mid-August that preceded a market recovery. And in early October, the VIX never did manage a solid move below its 32-week moving average; the less than bullish implications of this phenomenon has been pretty well confirmed by the market's behavior in the past few weeks. I'll confess that it is not enjoyable for me to admit that I had not been paying too much attention to this factor, but the light of day is always better than the darkness. And with the benefit of the light of day, I wonder if we're going to need a VIX spike (and move above 30 again) before we can achieve a solid bottom.

I also imagine we may need to see more climactic levels of volume on the S&P Depositary Receipts (SPY), the likes of which we saw in August, when nearly 550 million shares changed hands on the exchange-traded fund (ETF) in one session. The largest single-day volume we've seen so far during this pullback was 374 million. Needless to say, we're not likely to manage a climactic volume level during a holiday week.

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