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Weekly Stock Market Commentary 3/13/15

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The market, as measured by the Standard & Poors 500 Index ($SPX), had been laboring at new highs, near 2120. Then, last Friday it broke down below support at 2090, which turned the chart bearish.

Equity-only put ratios curled upwards late last week and gave confirmed sell signals on both the weighted and standard ratios. See Figures 2 and 3.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 3/6/15

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The market has gone dull after making new all-time highs. The chart of $SPX remains bullish, in that it remains above support.

Equity-only put-call ratios remain bullish as well. They continue to decline on their charts, yet they are not so low as to be considered overbought.

Market breadth has been a problem for some time now. Both breadth oscillators rolled over to sell signals this week, and both remain there at this time.

More On $VIX Crossovers

By Lawrence G. McMillan

We have written about crossover signals from the CBOE’s Volatility Indices in the past.  In particular, we want to present research on sell signals generated when $VIX rises above $VXV.   But first, we want to update the statistics on the systems that we have presented previously, with regard to these crossovers.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 2/27/2015

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market continues to move higher, albeit at a very slow pace. That makes the $SPX chart bullish, of course, and it will remain bullish as long as $SPX holds above support. The highest support level is the 2090-2100 range that $SPX traded in last week.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 2/20/2015

By Lawrence G. McMillan

$SPX has finally broken out to new all-time highs and has maintained that status by closing above the old highs for four consecutive days. That's the bullish news. The less-than-bullish news is that the breakout is not being confirmed with any resound by some of the other indicators. However, as long as $SPX remains above the 2065 support level, the bulls are in charge.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 2/13/15

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The Standard & Poors 500 Index ($SPX) has finally broken out of the 1990-2065 trading range that had contained it for nearly two months. The breakout was not easily achieved, nor is it uniformly confirmed by all of the other indicators, but it is in place.

As for support, there should be ample support at 2065 and at several levels below that, all the way to the bottom of the trading range, at 1990.

Is The “New” $VIX Better?

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Last October, the CBOE changed the way it calculated $VIX – or, as the CBOE put it, the methodology was “enhanced.”  The change was a logical and necessary one, in that weekly options were used in the calculation, where applicable. $VIX is a 30-day volatility estimate, and it had always used the two nearest series of $SPX monthly options.  They were then weighted to produce a 30-day volatility measure.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 2/6/2015

By Lawrence G. McMillan

The stock market has had a strong week. Even so, $SPX remains within the general confines of the 1990-2065 trading range, on a closing basis. We still await a breakout from that range in order to establish an intermediate-term trend.

In something of a surprise, both equity-only put-call ratios rolled over to buy signals after Tuesday's trading this week. The computer programs that we use to monitor these charts were right on top of this new signal.

Weekly Stock Market Commentary 1/30/2015

By Lawrence G. McMillan

Market volatility has remained high, and we can expect these high levels of volatility to persist.

Even with this volatility, the chart of $SPX is still in a trading range. Once again -- for the fifth time this month -- 1990 has proven to be support. To say that 1990 is an important level would be an understatement. If it gives way, a much more bearish situation would develop. On the upside, there is resistance at 2065.

Concurrent $VIX Spike Peak Buy Signals

By Lawrence G. McMillan

...An astute subscribers noticed that, last week, another $VIX “spike peak” buy signal was setting up. $VIX had risen more than 3.00 points, measured with closing prices, from Jan 9th to Jan 13th (two trading days later).  Moreover, $VIX then dropped sharply this past Monday, January 20th, triggering a second signal while the first one was still “open.”  

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