12/20/2010 8:03:14 AM
Expected quadruple witching volume left the major indexes little changed...
Recommendation:
Take no action.
Daily Trend Indications:
- Positions indicated as Green are Long positions and those indicated as Red are short positions.
- The State of the Market is used to determine how you should trade. A trending market can ignore support and resistance levels and maintain its direction longer than most traders think it will.
- The BIAS is used to determine how aggressive or defensive you should be with a position. If the BIAS is Bullish but the market is in a Trading state, you might enter a short trade to take advantage of a reversal off of resistance. The BIAS tells you to exit that trade on "weaker" signals than you might otherwise trade on as the market is predisposed to move in the direction of BIAS.
- At Risk is generally neutral represented by "-". When it is "Bullish" or "Bearish" it warns of a potential change in the BIAS.
- The Moving Averages are noted as they are important signposts used by the Chartists community in determining the relative health of the markets.
Current ETF positions are:
In cash.
Daily Trading Action
The major index ETFs opened mixed and took off to the downside at the open. The selling abated and the major indexes were all headed higher before 11:00am. That buying continued through the remainder of the session except for the final hour, which again saw selling dominate trading action. The Dow and S&P-500 were able to see some buying in the final minutes to help them to finish fairly flat. The Russell-2000 (IWM 78.02 +0.24) gained nearly one third of one percent and the Semiconductor Index (SOX 411.44 +2.73) gainer about two thirds of one percent. It is in a trading state. The Bank Index (KBE 24.88 +0.29) moved up more than one percent and looks ready to leave its trading state to rocket higher. The Regional Bank Index (KRE 25.18 +0.03) closed flat but looks ready to continue its uptrend. The 20+ Yr Bonds (TLT 93.24 +1.67) gained most of two percent as buyers pushed prices up to resistance and then sellers moved it back a bit with TLT to entering a trading state. NYSE volume was heavy with 1.670B shares traded. NASDAQ volume was heavy with 2.419B shares traded.
There was a single economic report of interest released:
- Leading Economic Indicators (Nov) rose +1.1% versus an expected +1.2% rise
The Leading Indicators were revised down from 0.5% to 0.4% for October. The report was released a half hour after the open.
The U.S. dollar gained 0.4% with the dollar easing off the intraday high through the afternoon which allowed equities to rise.
Implied volatility for the S&P-500 (VIX 16.11 -1.28) fell seven percent and the implied volatility for the NASDAQ-100 (VXN 17.31 -0.94) fell five percent. Both the VIX and VXN have no achieved their lowest closes since April, just before the last significant move lower.
The yield for the 10-year note fell fifteen basis points to close at 3.33. The price of the near term futures contract for a barrel of crude oil rose thirty-two cents to close at $88.02.
Market internals were positive with advancers leading decliners 5:4 on the NYSE and by 9:8 on the NASDAQ. Up volume led down volume by 7:4 on the NYSE and by 13:10 on the NASDAQ. The index put/call ratio fell -0.17 to close at 1.21. The equity put/call ratio rose +0.02 to close at 0.51.
Commentary:
Friday was the monthly was a quadruple witching day when stock index options, stock index futures options, stock options, and single-stock futures options expire on the same day. This leads to higher volume as traders work to square positions. Friday was no exception to this. In addition, the major index ETF's all paid their quarterly dividends as well, which often leads to exaggerated volumes.
All the major indexes are in uptrend states and look set to challenge overhead resistance on Monday. We are at a period of the year where volume tends to lighten as traders take time off for the holidays in this holiday shortened trading week. The stock exchanges will be closed on Friday, Christmas Eve and many traders will leave early on Thursday. The period between then and into the first couple of trading days in January tends to be seasonally strong with an effect known as the Santa Claus rally.
We believe the market could rally into early next year but we remain in cash as we wait for confirmed topping action. If we were already long, we would remain long here but it doesn't make sense to enter the market when a top could erase all the gains and then some, coming swiftly and biting deeply.
We hope you have enjoyed this edition of the McMillan portfolio. You may send comments to mark@stockbarometer.com.