• 520 days Will The ECB Continue To Hike Rates?
  • 520 days Forbes: Aramco Remains Largest Company In The Middle East
  • 522 days Caltech Scientists Succesfully Beam Back Solar Power From Space
  • 921 days Could Crypto Overtake Traditional Investment?
  • 926 days Americans Still Quitting Jobs At Record Pace
  • 928 days FinTech Startups Tapping VC Money for ‘Immigrant Banking’
  • 931 days Is The Dollar Too Strong?
  • 931 days Big Tech Disappoints Investors on Earnings Calls
  • 932 days Fear And Celebration On Twitter as Musk Takes The Reins
  • 934 days China Is Quietly Trying To Distance Itself From Russia
  • 934 days Tech and Internet Giants’ Earnings In Focus After Netflix’s Stinker
  • 938 days Crypto Investors Won Big In 2021
  • 939 days The ‘Metaverse’ Economy Could be Worth $13 Trillion By 2030
  • 939 days Food Prices Are Skyrocketing As Putin’s War Persists
  • 942 days Pentagon Resignations Illustrate Our ‘Commercial’ Defense Dilemma
  • 942 days US Banks Shrug off Nearly $15 Billion In Russian Write-Offs
  • 945 days Cannabis Stocks in Holding Pattern Despite Positive Momentum
  • 946 days Is Musk A Bastion Of Free Speech Or Will His Absolutist Stance Backfire?
  • 946 days Two ETFs That Could Hedge Against Extreme Market Volatility
  • 948 days Are NFTs About To Take Over Gaming?
  1. Home
  2. Markets
  3. Other

Technical Market Report

The good news is:
• All of the major indices hit or closed at multi-year or all time highs last week.

Short term

The chart below is an update of the one shown last week. In its original form the McClellan Oscillator (MCO) was calculated by subtracting a 5% trend (39 day EMA) from a 10% trend (19 day EMA) of NYSE advancing-declining issues.

The NASDAQ composite (OTC) is shown in red and an MCO calculated from NASDAQ advancing-declining issues in brown. The MCO is calculated by subtracting a 5% trend (39 day EMA) from a 10% trend (19 day EMA) of NASDAQ advancing-declining issues. On April 11, the MCO reached its lowest level since the October low. The bounce in prices that followed took the OTC to a new cycle high while level reached by the MCO was well below the levels reached previous short term highs, a non-confirmation.

Intermediate term

In the late 1980's I found the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) would often make a run to new cycle highs while new lows were increasing.

The chart below is another update from last week showing the DJIA in red and a 10% trend of NYSE new lows on an inverted Y axis (NY NL) in brown. The indicator is down sharply while the index is at a new cycle high.

There has been a rule of thumb that says you need not worry about market risk until NYSE new lows have remained above 40 for several days. April 4th was the last time there were less than 40 new lows on the NYSE. Last week there was a high of 190 new lows on Monday and a low of 74 on Friday.

Jim Miekka writes the SUDBURY BULL AND BEAR REPORT (727-866-8682). Some time ago he developed a signal he calls the Hindenburg Omen which is triggered when the total of NYSE new highs and new lows equals or exceeds 2.8% of issues traded while the 10 week moving average of the NYSE composite is rising along with a few other criteria. There have been some false signals, but the Hindenburg Omen has signaled nearly every major market decline in the past 35 years. There was a Hindenburg Omen signal in early April that has been followed by several confirming signals since.

Seasonality

Next week includes the last 5 trading days of April during the 2nd year of the Presidential cycle.

The tables below show daily returns during the last 5 trading days of April during the 2nd year of the Presidential Cycle with summaries for both the 2nd year and all years combined.

The last 5 trading days of April are usually up, but not during the 2nd year of the Presidential cycle.

Last 5 days of April
The number following the year represents its position in the presidential cycle.
The number following the daily return represents the day of the week;
1 = Monday, 2 = Tuesday etc.

OTC Presidential Year 2
Year Day5 Day4 Day3 Day2 Day1 Totals
1966-2 0.25% 1 1.10% 2 0.03% 3 -0.81% 4 -0.07% 5 0.50%
1970-2 -2.78% 5 -0.49% 1 -2.01% 2 -2.66% 3 1.59% 4 -6.35%
1974-2 -1.72% 3 -1.05% 4 0.23% 5 0.26% 1 0.46% 2 -1.81%
1978-2 0.25% 1 0.60% 2 0.37% 3 -0.10% 4 0.51% 5 1.63%
1982-2 0.47% 1 -0.58% 2 0.09% 3 -0.40% 4 0.30% 5 -0.12%
Avg -0.71% -0.08% -0.26% -0.74% 0.56% -1.23%
 
1986-2 0.52% 4 0.21% 5 -0.23% 1 -0.57% 2 -1.53% 3 -1.60%
1990-2 -0.21% 2 0.33% 3 0.12% 4 -0.73% 5 0.50% 1 0.00%
1994-2 0.53% 5 1.14% 1 0.47% 2 -0.34% 4 0.29% 5 2.09%
1998-2 -0.66% 5 -2.61% 1 0.63% 2 1.08% 3 0.91% 4 -0.65%
2002-2 -0.98% 3 0.02% 4 -2.91% 5 -0.42% 1 1.89% 2 -2.39%
Avg -0.16% -0.18% -0.38% -0.20% 0.41% -0.51%
 
OTC summary for Presidential year 2 1966 - 2002
Averages -0.43% -0.13% -0.32% -0.47% 0.49% -0.87%
% Winners 50% 60% 70% 20% 80% 40%
MDD 4/29/1970 7.72% -- 4/29/2002 4.24% -- 4/27/1998 3.25%
 
OTC summary for all years 1963 - 2005
Averages -0.22% 0.00% -0.03% 0.10% 0.38% 0.23%
% Winners 53% 49% 70% 60% 72% 58%
MDD 4/29/1970 7.72% -- 4/30/2004 6.32% -- 4/29/1999 4.66%
 
SPX Presidential Year 2
Year Day5 Day4 Day3 Day2 Day1 Totals
1930-2 -0.12% 5 0.20% 6 -2.40% 1 -0.12% 2 0.69% 3 -1.76%
1934-2 -0.55% 3 -1.37% 4 0.09% 5 -0.83% 6 -2.33% 1 -4.99%
1938-2 -2.45% 2 1.20% 3 -3.08% 4 0.10% 5 -0.82% 6 -5.03%
1942-2 0.26% 6 -0.40% 1 -0.93% 2 1.87% 3 0.66% 4 1.47%
 
1946-2 -0.59% 4 0.22% 5 0.86% 6 -0.11% 1 0.21% 2 0.59%
1950-2 0.00% 2 -0.39% 3 0.56% 4 0.56% 5 0.61% 6 1.34%
1954-2 0.36% 1 -0.43% 2 0.00% 3 1.51% 4 0.28% 5 1.73%
1958-2 0.79% 4 0.51% 5 -0.32% 1 -0.51% 2 1.02% 3 1.50%
1962-2 -0.10% 2 -1.10% 3 -0.97% 4 -1.12% 5 -1.60% 1 -4.89%
Avg 0.09% -0.24% 0.03% 0.07% 0.11% 0.05%
 
1966-2 -0.21% 1 -0.10% 2 -0.25% 3 -0.69% 4 -0.08% 5 -1.32%
1970-2 -0.33% 5 -1.58% 1 -1.46% 2 1.92% 3 -0.35% 4 -1.80%
1974-2 -1.64% 3 -0.81% 4 0.68% 5 -0.20% 1 0.34% 2 -1.63%
1978-2 1.52% 1 0.91% 2 0.19% 3 -0.99% 4 1.01% 5 2.63%
1982-2 0.52% 1 -1.06% 2 -0.63% 3 -0.96% 4 0.27% 5 -1.86%
Avg -0.03% -0.53% -0.29% -0.18% 0.24% -0.80%
 
1986-2 0.11% 4 0.11% 5 0.33% 1 -1.06% 2 -2.07% 3 -2.58%
1990-2 -0.21% 2 0.51% 3 0.27% 4 -1.14% 5 0.51% 1 -0.07%
1994-2 -0.25% 5 1.13% 1 -0.19% 2 -0.61% 4 0.40% 5 0.49%
1998-2 -1.05% 5 -1.93% 1 -0.13% 2 0.88% 3 1.57% 4 -0.66%
2002-2 -0.71% 3 -0.15% 4 -1.39% 5 -1.01% 1 1.08% 2 -2.18%
Avg -0.42% -0.07% -0.22% -0.59% 0.30% -1.00%
 
SPX summary for Presidential Year 2 1930 - 2002
Averages -0.24% -0.24% -0.46% -0.13% 0.07% -1.00%
% Winners 32% 42% 37% 32% 68% 37%
MDD 4/30/1938 5.00% -- 4/30/1934 4.91% -- 4/30/1962 4.80%
 
SPX summary for all years 1928 - 2005
Averages -0.58% 0.19% 0.00% 0.25% 0.60% 0.45%
% Winners 40% 50% 65% 60% 65% 70%
MDD 4/28/1937 4.48% -- 4/30/1973 4.12% -- 4/27/1933 2.65%

Conclusion

Anything is possible and the market could keep moving to new highs all year. However, last weeks highs were unconfirmed by all of the breadth indicators and seasonally the high for the year usually occurs about now.

I expect the major indices to be lower on Friday April 28 than they were on Thursday April 21.

Last weeks negative forecast was a miss all of the major were indices up.

This report is free to anyone who wants it, so please tell your friends.They can sign up at: http://alphaim.net/signup.html. If it is not for you, reply with REMOVE in the subject line.

 

Back to homepage

Leave a comment

Leave a comment