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Excerpted from the September 26th edition of Notes
From the Rabbit Hole. The entire report is available for free
download here (see side panel under 'Sample Issues').
The 'big picture' monthly chart of the S&P 500 continues to grapple with
the 'bull trigger' EMA 20. It could prove a costly mistake to jump the gun
on this signal; despite the tune the boom bands will play once they pick up
on it. As it stands, the monthly candle has recoiled after probing above. Upon
a successful monthly close above the EMA 20, we will keep in mind the constructive
work that would need to be done over two or three months, as in 2003 (blue
box), to confirm. We will also keep in mind that the Crash of '29 was followed
by a retrace of 50% of the Dow's decline in 1930, before all hope was eventually
lost, again.

Once again, it cannot be denied that the bulls have done a lot of good technical
work since the unsustainable lows. That is a furious up move from March and
it has left many people in the dust, and in a poor mental state, at least as
far as their market orientation is concerned.
There are positive 'big picture' signs in leading markets like Hong Kong and
China, although in the daily and weekly time frames these markets appear to
be topping out in relation to the S&P 500. This would be in preparation
for leading the next leg down into whatever comes next. It is that whatever
that will give us a signal as to whether we are going to make money or preserve
capital. After all this waiting and staying, I look forward to the coming phase,
which will define whether we are looking at a 'higher low leading to new highs
of a mini-bull in mid 2010' scenario or the 1930 model that brings on new lows
once this impetuous move exhausts itself.
To fine tune to the shorter term, let's look at the SPX daily chart. We have
a reverse symmetrical triangle and a rising wedge; two patterns that are notably
bearish. We have negative divergence by momentum indicators and a STO crossed
below 80. But we also see the supportive short-term daily EMA 20 not yet threatened
and RSI support fast approaching. There is nothing in this chart that screams
out 'GET ACTIVELY BEARISH'. An initial warning would be a loss of the SMA 50,
which would also break the wedge. Watch this closely going forward.
Dialing it out a bit, upon a break of the SMA 50 and the wedge, we look to
the upturned SMA 200 and the strong support that lay just beneath it. A rising
wedge, if it indeed breaks down, does not mean the end of the world, even though
some technicians present that way. It simply means that a good portion of the
rise encompassed by the wedge will be retraced. The 875 (strong support) area
would qualify as a solid retrace.
Meanwhile, we will anticipate an eventual test of strong support. That area
is a likely battleground that will help decide the intermediate and longer
term trends.

Speaking of rising wedges, the following weekly China-S&P 500 ratio chart
(FXI-SPY) shows that yet another week has been tacked on to the technical breakdown.
When you look at a chart like this you realize how long it can take for building
pressures to express themselves. This breakdown in the leader (FXI) vs. the
laggard (SPY) continues to pathetically cling to the underside of the wedge.
Meanwhile, market participants either have patience or ultimately pay the price.
We are about to enter week 7 of the wedge breakdown.
The lower high of July vs. a year ago, along with the MACD down trigger is
telling. A chart like this should help people tune out the noise. Back above
the wedge one can always evaluate whether or not to get bullish again. But
giving in to the upside while a bearish divergence like this remains in force
could prove very unwise. But then again, this is what makes a market, and I
consider it a gift from the market gods that many investors think technical
analysis is so much phooey.

We'll conclude the stock market section with a couple post G-20 headlines.
Enough said, contrary indicator-wise:
G-20 declares victory over crisis... --Reuters
Obama: G-20 brought economy back from brink --AP
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