Now that was fun! It seems that whenever one side
gets too comfortable, the market throws in a day that tests the resolve of both
sides. Today was such a day. The Bears took the early lead, starting the day
off with a gap down, and then continuing to move the SPX lower, until it
reached 1607.85. A small bounce took the index back to 1610, but the selling
took hold once again, and the SPX dropped back near the 1600 level, settling at
1601.06. That was all the Bulls needed to get started, pushing the SPX back up
into positive territory for the day in just over an hour. This move brought the
SPX to 1615.64, where the Bears tried to move the market lower. They succeeded
to a point, dropping the index to 1607.38 before the Bulls came back. They
moved the SPX to 1615.94, just taking out the previous intra-day high. Another
push down took the SPX to 1609.38, which fell short of the 1607.38 low. The
next move higher stopped short of both previous intra-day highs, stopping at
1615.49. However, just as it looked like the SPX might finish positive for the
day, the index dropped precipitously in the last half hour most notably in the
last few minutes of trading. This drop took out the two previous intra-day
lows, but stopped short of the early morning 1601.06 low, at 1606.24.
From Thursday’s 1620.07 high, I was anticipating a
zig-zag like move lower, and given Thursday’s drop to 1611.94, and subsequent
rebound, I was expecting this pattern to end near 1608. The initial drop to
1607.38 looked the completion of this pattern, but the drop through that level
to 1601 fell outside my model’s parameters for that count, and started to
indicate a more bearish count. However, the drop from 1620 to 1607 actually
completed in a 5 Wave sequence, with the rebound to 1610, and drop to 1601
actually completed the pattern I was looking for, albeit at a slightly lower
level than anticipated. This completed the inverted corrective wave from 1589
that I spoke of yesterday, and most likely marks a near term low.
From that point things got very interesting.
First, the SPX completed a 5 Wave sequence up to 1615.64. This was followed by
a series of sequences, 1607.38-1615.94-1609.38-1615.49, and finally the move
down to 1606.24. Notice that from the 1615.64 high (and yes, some snicker at my
choice of time frames, and affinity for precision), the SPX fell to 1607.38.
The index then made a slightly higher high at 1615.94, followed by a higher low
at 1609.38. The next high fell short of both the 1615.94, and 1615.64 highs.
This was followed by a move down that ended lower than the 1607.38 low, but
remained above the 1601.06 low. This appears to be a classic semi-inverted
corrective wave, with the 1606.24 low satisfying my model for this wave, although
the range was extremely tight. This development could point to a very bullish
scenario, at least in the short term.
In the very near term, this wave structure points
to a target near the 1631 price level that I have previously mentioned. Moves
from this structure are usually swift, and I would be looking for something
like 1621-1616-1631 to complete the 5 Wave sequence from 1601.
The second thing to keep in mind is the count from
the 1560 low. I had been expecting 1631 to complete 5 waves from this low, but
it is now more likely that 1631 will mark the completion of only Wave 3. Since
Wave 2 from 1560 was a complex corrective wave, the rally to 1615.64 most
likely cannot be Wave 3, since it too was followed by a complex corrective
wave. In the vast majority of instances only one corrective wave in a sequence
can be complex. This would point to a continuation of the move from 1560 beyond
the 1631 level.
I apologize for getting extremely technical, but sometimes
I feel it necessary. If you made it to this point, I thank you, and offer this
alternate version. I believe 1601.06 will hold for some time. The next move
should be higher, something like 1621-1616-1631. 1631 will then be Wave 3 from
1560, and after a small pullback from that point, the SPX should move higher
once again to complete 5 Waves from 1560.