Paper Economy - A US Real Estate Bubble Blog

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

The Almost Daily 2¢ - Twin Peaks?

Following up on a prior post, take a look at the trend and most recent state of the S&P 500 index and compare it to the last major bear market conditions that followed the dot-com bust.

There is a host of very interesting technical similarities (which are noted below) that may indicate that we have entered or are just about to enter another bear market where on average the S&P 500 index retraces 20 – 30% from its prior peak.

It’s important to keep in mind that, at best, a bear market can be viewed as a transition into an period where there is a prolonged bias to sell into strength resulting in a successive series of lower highs yielding a clear downward trend.

At worst, there are periods (days or weeks) where particular stocks and the index as a whole will crash hard.

Study the following image (click for very large and clear version) of the S&P 500 index from 1995 to today then read below for the technical blow by blow.

Notice that I’ve updated the chart to reflect the fact that yesterday the 50 day moving average broke through the 400 day moving average signaling a second “cross of death” that I will term the “cross of far more death“ for all future posts.

Notice also, that I’ve added both the “effective” federal funds rate and an overlay indicating the period of the last recession.

As you can see, entering the last bear market, the Fed cut rate significantly taking it from 6.5% at the start of the bear market to 1.25% in the trough.

It’s important to note that although the Federal Reserve’s response was dramatic, the market still resulted in an over 48% decline.


THEN (1998 – 2000 Top)

  • A. October 1998 – S&P 500 gives early warning sign by crossing its 400 day simple moving average (SMA). Notice also that the 50 day SMA breached the 200 day SMA.
  • B. October 1999 – S&P 500 gives a second signal by crossing its 200 day SMA after a solid twelve month expansion. 50 day SMA touches the 200 day SMA.
  • C. Three prominent but decelerating peaks set up the top.
  • D. Between second and third (last) peak S&P 500 index breaches 200 day SMA. After the final peak S&P 500 index breaches the 400 day SMA.
  • E. 50 day SMA heads down fast and crosses the 200 day SMA. (Cross of Death)
  • F. 50 day SMA crosses 400 day SMA. (Cross of Far More Death)
  • G. 200 day SMA crosses 400 day SMA.
NOW (Today’s Top?)

  • A. June 2006 – S&P 500 gives early warning sign by crossing its 400 day SMA. Notice also that the 50 day SMA breached the 200 day SMA.
  • B. March 2007 – S&P 500 gives a second signal by falling near its 200 day SMA after a solid nine month expansion. 50 day SMA similarly depressed.
  • C. Three prominent but decelerating peaks set up the top.
  • D. Between second and third (last) peak S&P 500 index breaches 200 day SMA. After the final peak S&P 500 index breaches the 400 day SMA.
  • E. 50 day SMA heads down fast and crosses the 200 day SMA. (Cross of Death)
  • F. 50 day SMA crosses 400 day SMA. (Cross of Far More Death)
  • G. TBD

Needless to say then next few weeks will be white-knuckle time…

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5 Comments:

  • Thanks for the analysis. Very interesting. I just happened to put a few bucks in SDS on Friday. It's up a nice amount; hopefully I'll have the patience and/or discipline to hold on if this market is going to steadily decline.

    Watching the Asian market go down right now. Can't be good for Wednesday.

    By Blogger Tyrone, at 2:43 AM  

  • Moin Sold,

    what an excellent chart!

    What happened to all the experts especially on bubblevision going nuts on "don´t fight the Fed"....

    SCHADENFREUDE!

    By Blogger jmf, at 8:15 AM  

  • Tyrone,

    Ill continue updating this chart but keep your eye on the S&P 500 movements below the 50 day simple moving avg (SMA).

    If the thesis is correct (i.e. that the components of the S&P 500 are experiencing a classic bear market sell-off) the index itself should continually rally up to the 50 SMA then "bounce off" or marginally cross and self off again.

    Each subsequent sell-off will set a lower low.

    I think SDS is a good pick.

    JMF,

    Thanks!

    I'm starting to believe that all the wacky "bottom talk" and slogans like "don't fight the fed" are simply a ruse so that the retail trader gets stuck holding the bag.

    Wall Street is disingenuous.

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 10:16 AM  

  • Can you explain the second graph for us, please....thanks!

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 3:21 PM  

  • Tyrone,

    Sorry.. I've been meaning to add an explanation of that one.

    The main take away from this type of technical analysis is that the market has internal trend physics and momentum that, if analyzed carefully, can help in determining how things may play out in coming weeks months etc.

    So, that said, the lower chart simply states the obvious when it comes to "down" days vs "up" days.

    During a Bull market, there are generally more "up" days (index closes higher) then "down" and during the Bear market there are more "down" than "up".

    The lower chart shows an "inverse" of the an up-down index.

    The inverse is arbitrary.. I wanted the market plunging to look like expansion... just to help visualize the "strength" of the downturn.

    So creating the index is simple...

    If the close was "up", I subtract 1 (remember its inverse) if the close was down I add 1.

    As you can see from the chart we are now seeing an increase in down days (the index is starting to turn up) which is another good sign that a fundamental change has taken place in the market.

    Again, this chart simply states the obvious but I think it is very useful in seeing the "sell" vs "buy" bias present in the market.

    Also, the trend line is polynomial and is there just for reference.

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 3:58 PM  

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