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Overbought situations are now reaching extreme levels (SPX)

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Stocks had a small change to their regular pattern yesterday: they didn’t close at the day’s highs.  However, they did open slightly lower and then rallied strongly into mid-day.  After that there was modest selling, but a late rally kept most of the day’s gains intact. $SPX is now in a bit of a rarified situation.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 5/9/13 (SPX)

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market continues to make new all-time highs for most of the major indices, including the Standard and Poors 500 Index ($SPX). The speed of the advance has accelerated in recent days, after minor resistance at $SPX 1600 was overcome.

1600 and 1550 are both strong support levels. There has been enough publicity about the 1600 support level that, if it were broken, some sharp accelerated selling would likely take place.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 5/3/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Individual indicators are bullish in their own right, but price (i.e., the chart of $SPX), is without a doubt the number one factor for consideration.  There is support in the 1575-1580 range -- generally in the area of the lows of the past couple of weeks.

Equity-only put-call ratios are both on buy signals.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 4/26/13 (SPX)

By Lawrence G. McMillan

A week ago, a correction was underway, but the bulls were having none of that, and $SPX support held in the 1540 area for the third time in the last two months. The correction measured about 60 $SPX points, which is small considering how much the index is up this year, but it had the effect of relieving overbought conditions and paving the way for new buy signals on some of the indicators.

Negative Market Signals Are Building Up

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Wednesday was an ugly day for the market, and it didn’t have the convenient excuses that Monday did.  It was just plain old selling.  There was a modest rally at the end of the day that lifted prices off of their worst levels.  Overnight, S&P futures are little changed in Globex trading. $SPX continues to hold above the 1540 support level (Wednesday’s low was just below 1544).  That is the only positive indicator for the bulls right now.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 4/12/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The broad stock market, as measured by the Standard and Poors 500 Index ($SPX) continues to make new highs almost every day. $SPX finally moved above its 2007 intraday highs, and so it (and the Dow $DJX) are trading at prices never seen before.

$SPX clearly established 1540 as a major support level, as it has rallied strongly and sharply off that level twice in the last month.

Equity-only put-call ratios continue to be heavily distorted by protective put buying.

No Resistance Ahead for the S&P 500 (SPX)

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The market continued its upward march from the lows of Friday morning, right after that negative unemployment report.  New closing highs were made, and it looks like this morning will finally bring about a new intraday high on $SPX, which is the last “hurdle” left from the 2007 highs.  S&P futures are up about 5 points in Globex trading, and so that implies $SPX itself would open somewhere near 1579, which would be a new intraday high.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 4/5/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market has had a bit rougher time this week.  Our indicators are turning bearish now, and if there is a breakdown in $SPX, a full-blown correction should be underway.

This brings up the matter of whether or not the recent $SPX breakout to new all-time highs (and the Dow's as well) was a false breakout. I would not grade the recent breakout to new highs as truly false unless $SPX falls below support at 1540-1545.

A Tale of Two Markets: Negative Divergences Appear

By Lawrence G. McMillan

There were seemingly two stock markets yesterday.  By that I mean that the big-cap stocks that have led this rally continued to do their thing, driving $SPX and the other major indices to new all-time highs.  But there is a lurking problem that is perhaps coming to light: breadth was negative yesterday!  I can’t recall $SPX being up 8 points, yet both “stocks only” and NYSE-based breadth being negative, but that’s what happened yesterday.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 3/29/13

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Thankfully, the Standard and Poors 500 Index ($SPX) has finally closed at a new high, exceeding the market from October, 2007. Now that that's out of the way, perhaps we can go back to trading. Thursday's action was an upside breakout, and above that there is no resistance, per se, since prices have never traded that high.   However, traders are often wont to sell at round numbers, so 1600 on $SPX may represent a resistance level.

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