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If nothing else, then the next few days will make or break the current upmove
in the equity market. Either the advance will feed on itself in conjunction
with -- and reaction to -- all of the government-generated news, programs,
and monetary support designed to lift the economy out of its deep recession,
or, alternatively, will reveal itself as a classic, sharp recovery rally that
turns out to be a massive Bull Trap prior to another vicious downleg.
Right now, my work is telling me that although the situation feels like the
former, I should treat it like the latter-- and prepare for a resumption of
the dominant bear market perhaps in a matter of hours. We shall soon find out.
Looking at the 4-hour chart of the S&P 500 e-mini futures contract, the
combination of Friday morning's upside break of a significant 1-month down
trendline at 849.50 and the prospect of government action on the stimulus plan
and TARP 3 in the upcoming hours/days propelled the index sharply higher towards
a possible confrontation with a very important prior rally peak established
on January 28 at 876.00.
My pattern and momentum work argue for still higher prices in the index and
its corresponding ETF, the S&P 500 Depository Receipts (AMEX: SPY).
However, all of the action off of the January 20 low at 797.50 remains countertrend,
which when complete should usher in a very nasty downside reversal and resumption
of dominant downtrend weakness.
But first things first: Where are the next upside targets from where a peak
and downside pivot reversal might occur? Target #1 at 859-862 was met on Friday.
Target #2 at 869-873 was touched during the final hour of trading; however,
no selling pressure emerged.
Upside continuation Sunday evening into Monday morning that stalls in the
870-873 area, followed by a decline that breaks 858, will be initial indication
that the upmove is exhausted. If no such sell-off unfolds, then I will be setting
my sights on Target #3 at 883-886, which will imply a hurdle of the 1/28 at
876 and continuation to 883-886 prior the anticipated downside reversal.

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