First, the Dow is still trading above an upward-sloping long-term average. The uptrend remains intact despite the longest spell of downside action in five decades. Impressive.
Also, note where it’s coming from…
The Dow started the month trading more than 10% above its 200-day moving average – the upper limits of this year’s range.
Whether discussing a run of consecutive down days or the percentage move above a long-term average, extreme readings revert to the mean.
We’ve already witnessed it in price and should witness it again when the 50-year storm lets up. And when it does, melt-up conditions will return.
But buyers must step in now, not next week, and certainly not after the holiday break.
Mark your calendars! The Santa Claus rally starts on December 24.
Breadth Stinks!
Every time the market comes under pressure, pundits begin discussing market breadth (the number of stocks participating in the uptrend).
It’s no secret: Participation is deteriorating beneath the surface as the number of stocks sinking to fresh lows outnumber the issue gracing the new highs list.
Unfortunately, many use this information to pump fear.
Today, more S&P 500 stocks closed red than any other day this year…
The bullish breath regime is over…
The Hindenburg Omen has triggered…
It’s all true. Market breadth has been particularly bad as 97% of the stocks in the S&P 1500 (large, mid, and small-cap indexes combined) posted negative returns mid-week.
But as ominous as it all sounds, the bull market has been here before…
Check out the broad-market Russell 3000 Index advance-decline line (the number of advancing minus declining stocks) with the single-day percentage change in the lower pane:
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