This Is The Big Question For The SPX…

Rally, Rally…Sell-off

The market’s ascent in recent weeks is nothing short of impressive, albeit in
a manner in which I have ever traded.  Despite being in this business for nearly
10 years, I have not seen a rally which is so tepid, from a trading standpoint. 
Perhaps this is how markets trade after a three year clock cleaning, I simply do
not know.  Position wise it has been good, trading continues to be an exercise
in patience or better phrased an opportunity to extend your time frame a bit in
order to ride out the trend which is accompanied by significant “noise”
intra-day.

Yesterday’s action was best played from a slightly longer time frame,
although I will be the first to admit I did not, on the long side at least. 
There were several time where you could have re-established or added to longs
based purely on the 5-minute charts of the S&P’s and in particular the
banking/brokerage sector.

I will say that trying to fade yesterday’s gap was not possible.  When the
market opened it seemed like a logical thing to do:

1.  Most stocks and the futures opened well outside their upper Bollinger
Band.

2.  The S&P’s traded right into resistance at 970.

These two pieces alone were a great recipe, unfortunately there was just not
enough selling pressure to make the trade play out. Goldman Sachs had big bids,
nearly 300 contracts, when the S&P’s came within the 970 level.  Eventually
everyone got the picture, even Merrill Lynch joined the party, if you ignored
it, you got leveled.

The best trade, which I did take and called out in the Trading Room was a
short in Wal Mart (WMT). 
WMT had been a laggard all day, and simply
using the same technical set-up that we would on HVT,
I simply looked at the WMT 5-minute chart
and knew that if the S&P’s were to break the 970 level I would be in good
shape.  I did not expect the sell-off to be so deep, but I was not complaining.

It reinforces the idea of being flexible without throwing out perfectly good
strategies.  By reducing share size and extending time frame, I was able to take
advantage of a good set-up.

Longer term, the monthly S&P cash is beginning to send a clear signal.  The
chart below shows that the neckline has been breached, the big question now is
will it close the month above it in order for a true technical hurdle to have
been cleared?

I did not have enough time to complete my thoughts on
the dollar as I had said.  I suspect that Wednesday’s column will contain my
thoughts.

Support/Resistance
Numbers for S&P and Nasdaq Futures

S&Ps Nasdaq
986 1226
984 1200
977 1189
972* 1174-1175*
965* 1165
952 1160*
945 1146-1148*

As always, feel free to send me your comments and
questions.

Dave