Tag: s&p 500
Why Investors Want 50% Of Stocks Above 200-Day Moving Average
My broad stock market analytical approach is comprised of three main steps: Price, Market Breadth and Investor Sentiment.
First off is price. If you ask...
This Week’s Stock Market Rally Fueled By Growth Stocks
The recent stock market decline has seen the Nasdaq and Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQ) selloff sharply, as growth stocks stumble. But the selloff may...
Lumber’s Biggest Price Reversal In 30 Years Adds To Market Concerns!
Lumber Futures Prices versus S&P 500 Index Performance Chart
One unsung market indicator is the price of lumber. It is a key indicator of the...
U.S. Stock Market Rallies, But Red Flags Exist
The S&P 500 Index INDEXSP:.INX rose 1.05% but it continues to have a strongly bearish intermediate posture according to the Market Forecast technical indicator.
Tuesday's...
Investors Should Watch Junk Bonds While Waiting For Stimulus Bill
Yesterday Mish talked about watching the Junk Bonds ETF (JNK) to see if the Fed would continue supporting high risk companies. Â
Today JNK had an...
Will Nasdaq 100 Price Reversal End The Correction?
Trading was getting ugly on Monday when the broader stock market decided to reverse course, lead higher by the Nasdaq 100 Index INDEXNASDAQ: NDX...
S&P 500 Index Breaks Support, New Downside Targets Emerge
S&P 500 Index Futures Trading Chart (September 21, 2020)
As I noted in my September 20 report to clients, “if we see weakness that breaks...
Stock Market Finds Support At Measured Move Targets
Coming into Monday, we shared price targets on the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) and NASDAQ 100 ETF (QQQ).
Based on the measured move from the...
U.S. Equities Decline Continues As Volatility Spikes
Stock market futures are lower as we begin trading on Monday and for the new week. This follows a third straight week of declines...
Implied Volatility Cycles Point To Turbulent October For Stock Market
Today's article takes a quick look at implied volatility cycles to forecast future turbulence in the stock market, particularly in October.
In the chart below...