Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Wednesday's Market 09/11/2013

The SPX opened to the downside this morning, slipping to 1680.90 before bouncing back to 1683.29. Another dip took it to 1678.70, just above the 1678.29 Wave 4 low I had mentioned yesterday was a critical level to watch. From there the index moved steadily higher, topping at 1688.13. Another dip took the SPX down to 1685.09, before a final push higher into the close took the index to 1688.59.


Although on the surface this appeared to be a fairly typical trading day, it is noteworthy for several reasons. The SPX fell to 1678.70, but remained above the critical 1678.29 level, which means my current count has not been invalidated. The index also rose above 1687.18 May 22nd high. This means that the semi-inverted corrective wave, which would have indicated a move down to below 1560, is no longer applicable. This does not mean the market cannot go down, of course, simply that the given scenario no longer is possible. Lastly, the SPX did not enter the 1690-1697 range that would likely have completed both a 5 wave sequence from both 1654.45, and 1627.47.

Looking at the wave structure from 1683.77, which I see as Wave 3 from 1654.45, it now looks like the SPX has completed a complex corrective wave from that point, to today’s 1685.09 late afternoon low. This is unusual since Wave 2 was also a complex wave. Normally only wave 2 OR wave 4 is complex, but rarely both. If this is indeed the case, it has the effect of raising the upper limit for wave 5 to 1708. This would be above the upper limit of wave 5 from 1627 as I currently have it. If the wave from 1654 does complete above 1700, it would open the possibility that the wave from 1627 is also undergoing a complex wave 4, even though wave 2 was a complex wave. If so, the market could undergo a small correction, and then target Wave 5 from 1627 at 1745, the other target level I have been mentioning. This seems to fit quite nicely.

If this works out, the SPX should put in a near term top between 1700 and 1708, undergo a pullback that should hold above 1668, and then move up to 1745.

1678.29 remains a critical level, as a drop below that could mean the SPX has made a short term top. The probabilities now favor a move to new highs, with a target of 1745. That, of course, is not the same as saying that the market cannot go down. The SPX has now risen over 60 points from the 1627.47 low, and some short term indicators are now in overbought territory. Support is at 1685, 1669, and then 1651.

It would be nice to see new all-time highs, as that would increase even further the probability of an additional move higher, it looks like that confirmation signal may have to wait. At the moment I would look for at least a short term high from 1690 to 1708. Exactly where that top occurs may give further insight into the longer term outlook and wave structure.



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