Thursday, September 5, 2013

Thursday's Market 09/05/2013

The SPX opened virtually flat this morning, but quickly resumed its march higher, as the market rose to 1659. From there the index traded in a narrow range, dropping to 1654.55 by late morning. The SPX rose from that point to 1658 just before the last hour of trading. The index then slipped into the close, dropping below the previous low to 1654.49 just before the close.


It appears that today’s high of 1659.17 completed a 5 wave sequence from the 1633.41 low. The SPX looks to be in the third wave down from that high, which would indicate some further down side may be ahead. Short term support is at 1651, 1648, and then 1640.

Given my outlook for a move to 1745, it is also possible for the three waves down to be part of a complex correction. If this turns out to be the case, I would expect a move to the 1669 resistance area before a pullback.

 While the very short term direction of the SPX is difficult to discern at the moment, I am still looking for higher prices, with 1745 as my first target. At this point, only a break below 1627 would change this.



Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Wednesday's Market 09/04/2013

After opening slightly higher than Tuesday’s close, the SPX dipped briefly into negative territory before moving higher once again. The index climbed steadily to 1655.72 by mid-afternoon, before finally taking a breather. The SPX pulled back to 1652.51, then bounced back to 1655.35, before pulling back again to 1651.22 before the close.


Yesterday I presented three scenarios, of which the first one was the SPX holding above 1633, and then eclipsing yesterday’s 1651.35 high. I noted that if this scenario played out, I would expect the index to test the 1709, and possibly surpass it.

The larger scenario I presented yesterday was that the SPX was forming a semi-inverted corrective wave from the 1687 high. For this scenario to be correct, the SPX cannot surpass that 1687 high. I also noted that the current wave structure from the 1627.47 low pointed to a minimum target of 1693 for this wave. Given today’s action, it appears that 1693 would be the next minimum target, which would nullify the semi-inverted corrective wave scenario. The optimal target for this wave would be 1745, which makes a different scenario most likely.

As those who have followed me may remember, I had been looking for a minimum target of 1776 for the wave from the 1560 low. That would complete an entire 5 wave sequence from the October 2011 low of 1074.77. Using the optimal target of 1745 for this wave, it is possible to extrapolate a 5 wave sequence from 1560.33 as 1709.24-1627.47-1745-1680-1773. This fits quite nicely with my 1776 target.

On a shorter term horizon, the initial move to 1641.15 this morning appears to be a wave 1 from yesterday afternoon’s 1633 low. The SPX then completed an inverted corrective wave that went 1637.16-1655.72-1652.51-1655.35-1651.22. This also completed right at the 1651 support level. If this count is correct, the SPX should continue higher at this point. Resistance is at 1669, and then 1685. Support is at 1651, and then 1621. A move below 1634 would put this count in jeopardy, and a move below 1627 would invalidate it.



Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Tuesday's Market 09/03/2013

The day started off as expected, with the SPX gapping up at the open, and then continuing higher, stopping right at the 1651 resistance level. The index spent much of the remainder of the day giving back most of its gains. The SPX dropped steadily to 1633, and then moved higher into the close, reaching 1641 before pulling back slightly.


I had indicated in my last post that the SPX had likely completed a semi-inverted corrective wave Friday at 1628.05. This would result in a strong move higher, which occurred this morning. From that high, the SPX completed a 5 wave sequence to the downside, which completed at 1633.41. There were a couple of surprising things about today’s action, which I will now explain.

On August 16th, I posted this chart, which outlined a likely path for the SPX:


The entire post can be found here, http://5wavemodel.blogspot.com/2013/08/fridays-market-08162013.html, but essentially showed a semi-inverted corrective wave, such as we saw on Friday, from the 1687 high. This wave would have the SPX moving lower from 1709 to either 1651 or 1621, then rally to 1685, which would be followed by a final move lower to end between 1560, and 1542. This is one of several possible scenarios, but after the appearance of the semi-inverted corrective wave on Friday, which indicated a strong possibility of a rally to the 1685 level, this scenario once again seemed most likely.

As I said, the SPX would have to rally to near the 1685 level to project a final wave to 1560-1542. Today I was looking for a move up to 1645, followed by a small pullback, which would then target 1685. The first surprise today was that the initial move carried to 1651. The next surprise was that the ensuing correction seems to have ended at 1633. If the pullback to 1633 was wave 4 from 1627, wave 5 would project to a minimum of 1693, which would exceed the limit of 1687 necessary for this larger corrective wave scenario. Given the 1651 high, this corrective wave should carry below 1632.

The SPX is now at a point of decision, and what happens here should give an indication of what is to come. If the SPX holds above 1633, and then rallies above 1651, it seems likely that the index will test the 1709 high, and surpass it. If the SPX pulls back to 1632-1628, and then rallies above 1651, I would expect a rally to 1685, and then, possibly a decline to 1560-1542. If the SPX breaks the 1627 low before getting above 1651, 1542 might be an optimistic target.

At this point I would be inclined to expect a further rally, with 1685 being a good target level. I will, however be keeping a close eye on 1627.

I believe I have pointed this out on at least one other occasion, and the larger wave structure is not exactly analogous, but the decline from 1422 in April 2012, featured a drop to 1357.38, followed by a semi-inverted corrective wave which carried the SPX back to 1415, before a precipitous drop to 1266.74.