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Is it a bear
market, or is it a bull market, that is the question.
On one hand
Europe is obviously in a recession. China is slowing dramatically, and the US
economy is clearly in ‘stall mode’ at best, and slowing rapidly
at worst. That alone would suggest that a bear market has begun.
On top of
that, the S&P broke through its daily cycle trend line today (although it
did manage to rally back before the close).
 
A break of
the trend line usually indicates that the daily cycle has started its decline
into a cycle low. If this turns out to be the case, then this cycle would
have topped on day 21 which gives it quite a few days to move down into the
cycle bottom. (Average daily cycle length trough to trough is about 35 to 40
days). If it does turn out that the cycle topped on the 21st day then there
is a strong chance of testing the June lows at the next daily cycle bottom.
As a matter of
fact I think if we break below the June 25th half cycle low it will indicate
that the intermediate cycle has topped and we should break below the June
bottom if not during this daily cycle then probably a sharp break below that
level during the next daily cycle.
On the other
hand, there are quite a few bullish signs that are popping up.
For starters,
this is an election year. Does anyone really think that the politicians won't
pull out all the stops to try and keep the economy and markets inflated up
until the election?
Next, the
advance-decline line managed to make a new high even though the S&P was
still 3% below its 52-week high. As Jason Goephert
at sentiment trader.com has pointed out, this has almost always
lead to new highs. As a matter of fact, Jason noted
that since 1940 there have been 13 similar occurrences and all but one led to
the market making new highs within 3 months, on average within 18 days of the
advance-decline line breakout.
 
Another
positive is that the CRB's rally out of its three year cycle low appears to
be consolidating in a bull flag in preparation for another leg up. If stocks
are caught in a bear market then the CRB should be rolling over rather
quickly.
 
Oil is also
resisting the short-term weakness in the stock market and appears to be
consolidating the initial $10 thrust off its intermediate bottom, and
preparing for another leg up.
 
A different
but related vein of thought is the US dollar index. Today was the 16th day of
the dollar’s daily cycle (average duration 18 to 28 days). This being
the case, it's getting late enough in the cycle that the dollar should start
to move down again any time now. A major concern for bears would be any move
lower by the dollar as risk assets tend to trade inversely.
An even
bigger concern is dollar sentiment. It is currently at levels that have
generated intermediate tops almost without fail in the past.
 
Chart courtesy of sentiment trader.com
The fact that
we still haven't seen a left translated daily cycle out of the dollar makes
me think that the dollar still has an intermediate decline ahead of it. This
week will be the 17th week in an intermediate cycle that usually runs 18 to
25 weeks and there's a good chance this sentiment extreme is going to force
an intermediate top as soon as this daily cycle runs out of steam.
A possible
negative is the fact that gold seems unable to gain any upside traction in
this new intermediate cycle. If the CRB has formed a three year cycle low why
isn't gold generating any upside momentum?
If gold were
to drop below $1547 it would indicate that a left translated daily cycle is
in progress and as many of you know a left translated daily cycle often
indicates that the intermediate cycle has topped as well.
Another
negative is the fact that mining stocks as represented by the GDX ETF did
move below their prior daily cycle bottom. The one small sign of hope is the
reversal Thursday, which if it holds above the May lows could indicate that
miners are just moving through a 1-2-3 reversal, and this was the #2 test of
the lows.
 
Of course we
won't know whether this is in fact what is happening until miners either
break below the May bottom or move back above the June high.
For the
bulls, the S&P needs to move above $1375, the CRB must generate another
leg up, and gold must make a higher high by reclaiming the $1622 level. These
are the bullish lines in the sand.
The bears
need to see the stock market drop below the half cycle low of $1310, the CRB
must break downwards out of the consolidation, and gold has to drop below
$1547.
I think the
appropriate position for traders at the moment is to stay in cash until we
see which one of these lines are going to be crossed first.
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