Feature
Market Update for the Period ending February 26, 2010
Market Condition: Long Term Bull Normal, Short Term Neutral Normal—Caution!
by
Van
K. Tharp, Ph.D.
I always say that people do not trade the markets; they trade their
beliefs about the markets. In that same way, I'd like to point out
that these updates reflect my beliefs. If my beliefs and your
beliefs are not the same, you may not find them useful. I find the
market update information useful for my trading, so I do the work
each month and am happy to share that information with my readers.
However, if your beliefs are not similar to mine, then this
information may not be useful to you. Thus, if you are inclined to
do some sort of intellectual exercise to prove one of my beliefs
wrong, simply remember that everyone can usually find lots of
evidence to support their beliefs and refute others. Just simply
know that I admit that these are my beliefs and that your beliefs
might be different.
These monthly updates are in the first issue of Tharp's Thoughts
each month. This allows us to get the closing month's data. These
updates cover 1) the market type (first mentioned in the April 30,
2008 edition of Tharp's Thoughts), 2) the five week status on each
of the major US stock market indices, 3) our four star
inflation-deflation model plus John Williams' statistics, 4)
tracking the dollar, and 5) the five strongest and weakest areas of
the overall market.
Part I: Van's Commentary—The Big Picture
I'm writing this update from New Zealand where we just finished
three workshops for our Asia clients. Several days ago in the local
newspaper, I found an interesting headline in the business section:
World Trade Had the Biggest Drop since the End of World War II. When
I'm traveling, I notice I find such articles but I don't see this
kind of news in the U.S. newspapers. And when it does show up, it is
certainly not in the headlines. Would you agree? Also, this story is
also interesting to me because bear markets don't end on this kind of
news.
Part II: The Current Stock Market Type Is Now Normal Volatile
Bull to Neutral Trend
Again, we're right on the fence between market types, but the market
didn't get any worse during the month of February. Over the last two
months the SQNTM for 100 days has moved back from strong bull to
normal and now back to bull. The 50 day SQN has moved from strong
bull to bear and back to neutral. Last month, the ATR as a
percentage of close was quiet, but now it has moved to the normal
volatility range. I'd be very, very careful under these conditions.

Let's look at what's happening in the three major US indices. The
next table shows the Dow, the S&P 500, and the NASDAQ over the
past five weeks and over the last few years.

You'll notice that the Dow is down 1% after an 18% climb in 2009.
The S&P 500 is down 1% after being up 23.45% in 2009. And the
NASDAQ is down almost 20% after being up 43.89% in 2008. However,
the second half gains in 2009 were huge after big losses in the
first quarter. Watch our market type closely because I doubt if much of
2010 will be bullish.
Notice that the overall market as measured by the S&P 500 and
the DOW is lower than it was at the close of 2004. And the NASDAQ is
only slightly higher than it was at the close of 2004.
Part III: The Strongest and Weakest Market Components
By this time, most of you understand how we track the relative
strength of the various ETFs representing the economy of the entire
world. I publish this model once a month. Ken Long, who developed
the algorithm we use, publishes a similar report every weekend at
www.TortoiseCapital.com. Ken uses his data as a framework for
trading a number of his systems.
The February 26th data are given below.
The areas in green are strongest (those areas are more than one
standard deviation above the mean); those in yellow are the next
strongest (above the mean up to 1 standard deviation). Those below
the mean are in brown, and those more than one standard deviation
below the mean are in red. I've taken out all the double leveraged
funds from my database, which means that the top and bottom funds
are not devoted entirely to those groups.
The overall market is relatively weaker than it was at the end of
January. China is the only country that is green,
though it is still weak. China's slight uptrend in the last month
helped its score because the most recent month's performance is
heavily weighted in this algorithm. No other country is green,
confirming a general downward trend.
Particularly weak countries include Spain (28), Austria (34),
Germany (39), Taiwan (39), and Emerging Europe (39). Weak currencies
include the British Pound (33), the Euro (39), and the Swiss Franc (41).
From a sector standpoint, utilities (42) are on the weak side.
Relatively strong areas include consumer discretionary, metals and
mining, retail, REIT, semiconductors, media, and the DOW transports.
I wouldn't consider any of those as investment worthy; they
are just the best sectors of a generally weak bunch at the moment.
The next chart shows performance for commodities, real estate,
bonds, and the strongest and weakest of all non-leveraged ETFs.
There's an interesting mix on this table with nickel and biotech on
top with oil, coal, steel, and real estate also being areas of
relative strength. The weakest areas are natural gas, broadband,
global energy, Spain and Italy. Interest rate products moved from
relative strength last month to relative weakness this month after
the Fed's announcement about increasing the discount rate.
What currently stands out to me is the absence of any month to month
trends. We used to see strong areas stay strong for many months. Now
the strongest areas are that way for a single month and right now
nothing is very strong.
Part IV: Our Four Star Inflation-Deflation Model
The US economy (and much of the world economy) is in a credit
contraction mode. While the quantity of money in the economic system
may be higher as a result of massive government infusions, its
movement around the economy—the velocity of money—has slowed
significantly in the last year. What's causing this? The personal
savings rate is way up, people and companies are trying to pay down
debt, and overall bank lending is in steep decline. Six or seven
years back I thought we were in for an inflationary bear market, but
the slowing velocity of money makes that scenario less likely for
now.
As you can see from the long term numbers below, gold is way up from
a few years back, but there's no strong multi-year trend visible in
the CRB or the materials ETF (XLB). Conversely, financials (XLF) are
half of what they were just three years back. On a long term
basis, these indicate we do not have inflation….yet.
Date |
CRB/CCI |
XLB |
Gold |
XLF |
5-Dec |
347.89 |
30.28 |
513 |
31.67 |
6-Dec |
394.89 |
34.84 |
635.5 |
36.74 |
7-Dec |
476.08 |
41.7 |
833.3 |
28.9 |
8-Dec |
352.06 |
22.74 |
865 |
12.52 |
9-Jan |
364.5 |
21.06 |
919.5 |
9.24 |
9-Aug |
415.49 |
29.81 |
955.5 |
14.7 |
9-Sep |
430.67 |
30.94 |
995.75 |
14.94 |
9-Oct |
452.69 |
29.34 |
1,040.5 |
14.05 |
9-Nov |
492.22 |
32.5 |
1,175.75 |
14.66 |
9-Dec |
484.42 |
32.99 |
1,104 |
14.4 |
10-Jan |
465.29 |
30.14 |
1,078.5 |
14.18 |
10-Feb |
478.32 |
31.5 |
1,118.3 |
14.68 |
We'll now look at the two-month and six-month changes during the
last six months to see what our readings have been.
Date
|
CRB
2
|
CRB
6
|
XLB2
|
XLB6
|
Gold2
|
Gold6
|
XLF2
|
XLF6
|
Total
Score
|
|
Lower
|
Higher
|
Lower
|
Higher
|
Higher
|
Higher
|
Higher
|
Higher
|
|
FEB
|
|
+1/2
|
|
+1/2
|
|
+1
|
|
-1
|
+1
|
Again, the model shows us moving towards deflation. For some time,
The Elliot Wave Theorist newsletter has been predicting a huge
deflationary wave ahead of us. A two month move from +2.5 down to +1
certainly suggests we are moving in that direction.
Part V: Tracking the Dollar
Month
|
Dollar
Index
|
Dec 00
|
104.65
|
Dec 01
|
109.51
|
Dec 02
|
101.48
|
Dec 03
|
86.21
|
Dec 04
|
80.10
|
Dec 05
|
85.65
|
Dec 06
|
80.89
|
Dec 07
|
73.69
|
Dec 08
|
80.69
|
Dec 09
|
73.82
|
|
|
Mar 09
|
83.84
|
Apr 09
|
82.43
|
May 09
|
78.89
|
Jun 09
|
77.02
|
Jul 09
|
76.73
|
Aug 09
|
75.19
|
Sep 09
|
74.63
|
Oct 09
|
73.56
|
Nov 09
|
73.15
|
Dec 09
|
73.82
|
Jan 10
|
74.28
|
Feb 10
|
80.36
|
The dollar has been going up for the last four months partly because
of the seasonal weakness in the Euro. As I mentioned last month, the
Euro typically starts going down in December and that can last into
the spring. And Europe has been hit by much worse economic
conditions than the United States. The PIIGS debt situation has also
been weighing heavily on the Euro with Greece getting much of the
current attention.
General Comments
I'd like to point out here that while I've said that we've been in a
secular bear market since 2000, Dow Theory basically says that the
real bear market started in 2007. In 2007 the DOW passed 14,000 to
hit a low of only 6747.05 last year. There is a lot more of the bear
market to come.
In these monthly articles, I try to give you a general update about
market conditions and when they might be changing. That being said,
please don't rely on these updates to guide your trading. This
article is no substitute for you having a system of your own that
signals good exit points. Furthermore, you should never open a
position in the first place without knowing when to get out. That's
a fundamental axiom for trading and investing. You could consider
this update as a way to help you decide when to change what systems
you trade based on the market type changes.
Additionally, you should know how your system will perform under
various market conditions. If you haven't heard this before or the
other ideas mentioned above, read my new book Super
Trader, which
covers all of this, so you can make money in any kind of market.
Crisis always implies opportunity. Those with good trading skills
can make money in this market—a lot of money. There were lots of
good opportunities in 2009. Did you make money? If not, then do you
understand why not? The refinement of good trading skills doesn't
just happen by opening an account and adding money. You probably
spent years learning how to perform your current job at a high skill
level. Do you expect to perform at the same high level in your
trading without similar preparation? Financial market trading is an
arena filled with world class competition. Additionally and most
importantly, trading requires massive self-work to produce
consistent, large profits under multiple market conditions. Prepare
yourself to succeed with a deep desire, strong commitment, and the
right training.
Until the March update, this is Van Tharp.
About
Van Tharp: Trading coach, and author, Dr. Van K.
Tharp is widely recognized for his best-selling books
and his outstanding Peak Performance Home Study
program— a highly regarded classic that is suitable
for all levels of traders and investors. You can learn
more about Van Tharp at www.iitm.com.
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