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Weekly Commentary 3/2/2012

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Perhaps the first crack in the armor of this slow-motion bull market occurred this week, after Ben Bernanke spooked the market with his contention that there wouldn't be further easing.

The $SPX chart is still bullish.  There is support at 1340-1350, and the 20-day moving average is at about 1350.     

Equity-only put-call ratios remain on buy signals, but the weighted ratio is so low on its chart that it might be capable of rolling over to a sell signal without a lot of trouble.

Expect more volatility in March

By Lawrence G. McMillan

MORRISTOWN, N.J. (MarketWatch) — As this bull market has progressed — especially the most recent leg since the early October lows of 2011 — volatility has steadily dropped. Now it has reached a point where one might reasonably consider defensive or even bearish strategies, but not until there is at least one initial break in the bullish trend.

In focus: A crack in the dam?

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Ben Bernanke doesn’t have a lot of friends these days, and he lost some of those with his statements before Congress yesterday.

Weekly Commentary 2/23/2012

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) pulled back only a little, but that was enough to alleviate some of the overbought conditions and to establish support at 1340.

Equity-only put-call ratios have begun to move sideways recently, but they remain on buy signals.

Market breadth was fairly negative from Feb 10th through Feb 15th. That was enough to alleviate the serious overbought condition that had existed in the breadth oscillators. Since then, breadth has improved again, and at this time, breadth is on a buy signal.

The important level for $SPX remains 1340

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The market had all kinds of good news hurdles to overcome yesterday, and it did a pretty good job of it.   The number of traders looking to sell when either a) the Greek agreement was reached, and/or b) the Dow hit 13,000.  Both of those occurred yesterday morning, and the market did indeed fall back.  But then it rallied later on, posting small gains for the day.  To me, that was fairly bullish action.  A microcosm of that action took place overnight as well, with the futures falling and then recovering.

Weekly Commentary 2/16/12

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Was the two-day selloff on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week enough to refuel the bulls?  It may have been.

$SPX closed at a new high for this post-October rally, although it has not yet exceeded the 2011 high at 1370.  With today's rally there is clearly strong support at 1340. which is at 1290.      

Equity-only put-call ratios are technically on buy signals. However, they edged higher over the last two days.      

In focus: Cracks beginning to show

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market has generally persisted in rising, albeit at a slower and slower pace, but it has taken on the appearance of a very tired entity. Therefore, we expect that the price correction of which we have been speaking for the last couple of weeks is at hand.

Perhaps it was precipitated by the parabolic move in Apple AAPL -0.94%   that ran out of steam today, or perhaps it is once again worried about the Greek debit crisis. In my book, the former is more worrisome to the market than the latter.

Weekly Commentary 2/9/12

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market refuses to back off. This is making TV commentators gleeful, but experienced traders are finding such one-sided action to be a bit dangerous.

Overbought market due for a correction

By Lawrence G. McMillan

MORRISTOWN, N.J. (MarketWatch) — As much as I like the intermediate-term picture, where nearly all of our indicators remain bullish, the overbought condition that has been created is reaching the stage where – if it’s not alleviated soon – it could result in a gut-wrenching drop that can wreak havoc on portfolios and, more importantly, on psyches.

Weekly Commentary 2/3/2012

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The market continues to rise, mostly in a very slow-motion fashion. Meanwhile, overbought conditions are building.  $SPX has bumped up against the 1330 level for three days in six, without being able to break through.  I would not expect any correction to violate that bullish trend line, but if it should happen, it would be a major negative factor.

Equity-only put-call ratios remain split.  The standard ratio remains on the sell signal that was generated last week.  But the weighted ratio remains on a buy signal.

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