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FBN Warns Not All Pullbacks Are Created Equal
Via FBN Securities' Jeremy Klein,
In a secular rally, pullbacks will inevitably arise. Market participants, though, should not view all drops in the same light. In addition to the differences in the depth of the collapse, the magnitude of the changes of critical investor sentiment statistics may differ greatly. Hence, identifying a potential trough with the use of a nondiscretionary quantitative trigger may not prove reliable. Nevertheless, recognizing the amount of aggression contained within each selloff can be invaluable in forecasting a fortuitous buying opportunity.
I identified fourteen material declines for equities since July 2007. Traders did not have the ability to short a common stock prior to this date. I leveraged the following technical indicators for the study: average session range, range as a percentage of index level, average monthly NYSE closing TICK, average monthly NYSE intraday TICK, the number of TICK readings below -1,000, average miles driven, miles driven as a percentage of index level, ratio of miles driven to range, open interest in the futures over the past week, volumes in the E-Minis, notional value transacted in the E-Minis, and relative performance between the Russell 2000 and S&P 500.
Unsurprisingly, the drops associated with the financial crisis and the sovereign credit downgrade of U.S. debt ranked as the most violent over the period investigated. I actually assess the slide that climaxed in August 2011 as more extreme than the beating share prices received in the wake of Lehman’s bankruptcy albeit this distinction is nothing more than splitting hairs. While painful at the time, pullbacks such as the one that resulted from the fiscal cliff negotiations or the “taper tantrum” were mild in comparison.
Assessing the current retracement is a difficult prospect as we may have yet to reach its terminus. Based on the initial sentiment statistics, the decline has more similarity to the aforementioned historic collapses. Specifically, this most recent selloff scored highly in nearly all categories including the mileage driven, session ranges, the TICK averages, notional volumes, and the scale of underperformance exhibited by smaller capitalization names.
However, I do not anticipate that we have stumbled upon a full blown bear market but suspect that a bottom still sits in front of us. The lack of any upward inertia in the open interest figures supplies me confidence in such an assertion. At a minimum, institutions create 165K contracts over the previous five days when suffering from rapidly falling share prices. Moreover, this metric usually climbs above 250K on these occasions and peaked at roughly 950K for the August 2011 correction. Using the preliminary data from yesterday, the corresponding number computes to only 99K.
Consequently, portfolio managers have stubbornly refused to throw in the towel.
I maintain that most firms desperately cling to the hope that the broader indices will enjoy a breathtaking rally as the calendar moves toward Christmas. Reducing one’s exposure would constitute a forfeiture of the year such that investors who have struggled in 2014 are loath to lower their risk. Thus, capitulation gets delayed which allows me to reiterate my bearish outlook even as the S&P 500 dipped to within 25 bps of my official target on Monday.
The macro data remains quiet until tomorrow to accentuate the impact of earnings which starts to build momentum this morning. The usual swath of money center banks will provide their results over the coming days while INTC will hog the headlines tonight. Although I do not expect a poor reporting season, the Fed has gifted corporate executives an excuse for any shortfall with its concerns over the strengthening dollar. Any help from these announcements will therefore be modest at best.
S&P 500 Cash Key Technical Levels
Support: 1874.00/70.00, 1868.00/65.00, 1862.25/60.00, 1850.50, 1846.00/44.00, 1816.25 , 1800.00
Resistance: 1887.25, 1892.25, 1905.00, 1909.00, 1912.00, 1929.00, 936.00/37.00, 1938.50/1942.00, 1959.25
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Buy the dip bitch!
Oil majors are looking mighty tempting now... May be too early though. The Fed must continue monetizing at some point - and when our bluff is called or confidence in the dollar is lost, big oil will continue to supply the world's fuel.
If one MOAR dog gets Oboela then the shits gonna hit the fan
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Virtually every major bank including the CBs and IMF have told you its overvalued.......ya better listen......they know they made it that way and theyre tellin you they're gonna take your head off
Exactly. Everything is a Black Swan until you go back through the last year of foreshadowing.
I don't think too many people are in a 'rallying' mood. Too much happening geopolitically and economically this time around to spur any kind of upward swings like we've seen in the past. I think people are really starting to get it now. This drop in crude is also going to start showing it's teeth soon.
You're right. With the end of QE, with weakening global growth, with oil taking a drunken swan dive off the second floor landing, and all of that plus geopolitical tension, ebola, etc., stocks are supposed to rally based on...what exactly?
Those who are hoping for a Santa Claus rally this Christmas are apparently not paying attention to the headlines. If we really have 10,000 new ebola cases per week by December, Christmas will not be coming this year.
If Santa catches Ebola the malls will be empty. Bullish for AMZN, baaad for the boxes. Toss in a possible shift in Congress in November and now you're cooking with gas (or not, if you're Ukraine).
Hoo Hoo Ho!!!
He wants to draw conclusions based upon an analysis that ignores everything that happened before July 2007...
HA HA HA HA HA
...it's a joke, right?
What a choice !
Swiss or Afghan .
https://www.academia.edu/8770864/Swiss_and_Afghan
Wealth Creators make it Swiss AND Afghan .
Buy these fukn dips,
they will all soon print more chips,
the only question is who first blinks -
Draghi, Yellen or the Chinks?
None of the above.
Nothings going to be printed before the G20 meet in December.
May as well be never for this market.
70 days @ -100 per day on the Dow and -15 on the S+P.
wow - from the same guy who predicted an epic victory at Gallipoli?
Necronomy is fine. Market unexpectedly crashing on schedule.
Please, all this hair pulling and gnashing of teeth of a small dip in a run that has lasted since March 6, 2009. Wake me up when we drop down to 6,626, because nothing has changed since then.
This year the 28th of October falls on a Tuesday.
s&p bottom: 1650 imho
The central banks will just print up more fiat, send it to difficult-to-identify standins, and buy stocks to halt the natural collapse. Same as always these past 5 years.
what about 1770 in Feb