Entering text into the input field will update the search result below

Ross Aldridge In Las Vegas Nevada Charts See Big Market Correction In 1st Quarter 2015

Jul. 08, 2014 5:19 AM ETSKF
Please Note: Blog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors.

Ross Aldridge in Las Vegas Nevada reviews the certainty of a 10-15% correction in stocks for first half of 2015!

After contributor Jeff Coxx disclosed Jeffery Saut position for Raymond James we concur with the inevitable correction that is awaiting. With no short sell squeeze to offset the lack of the bulls conviction this correction is a necessary evil for the DOW to make it to 18,000 by 2016.

The fall of 2014 is starting to look a lot like the fall of 2011, according to one Wall Street strategist who sees a sharp stock market slump lurking over the next couple of weeks.

Though he is otherwise strongly bullish, Jeffrey Saut, chief market strategist at Raymond James, believes a run higher that has been virtually unabated for the past two years now faces a major challenge.

In 2011, as now, the major averages hovered around psychological barriers. In 2011, it was a sort of gravitational pull lower for the S&P 500 (^GSPC), which peaked at 1,356 then began an aggressive slide to 1,100, a level it would crack in early October before making a bottom shortly thereafter.

In this case, the S&P 500 is flirting on the upside with 2,000, the Nasdaq (^IXIC) has held above 4,000 since April and the Dow industrials (Dow Jones Global Indexes: .DJI) index has eclipsed 17,000. Citing corroborating opinions from Marketfield Asset Management and Thackray's Seasonal Investment Guide, Saut sees the market heading into a summertime swoon that has been replicated before.

Recall, the (S&P 500) peaked the second week of July (2011) at ~1356 and began to slide. That slide accelerated in late July into early August, culminating with the psychological low of August 9 at 1,100. From there the SPX was range-bound between roughly 1,120 and 1,220 until its undercut low (below the psychological low of 1,100) of October 4, 2011 at 1075. At that point the bottoming process was complete with the SPX never experiencing anything more than a 10 percent decline. In fact, since the 10 percent pullback of April through June 2012, there has not been even a 10% drawdown.

Saut sees the market's "internal energy readings" at levels around the summer of 2011, and believes investors should take heed as that period saw an 18 percent slide before steadying and leading to the current rally.

He joins a chorus of other market pros calling for a correction-predictions that all have been proven wrong. The market is up 27 percent since its last meaningful pullback in 2012.

I am making a "call" for the potential of the first decent pullback of the year to begin in mid-July or early August; and am recommending culling non-performing stocks from portfolios to raise cash. If said decline fails to materialize, we can always recommit the cash to more favorable situations because longer-term I believe this secular bull market has years left to run.

Saut does not believe the summer stumble will be as bad as the one in 2011. Rather, he expects the decline to be more in the 10 percent to 12 percent range "albeit within the construct of a secular bull market that has years left to run."

To back up his near-term thesis, though, he also noted that the 1965 market bears resemblance to current trends, both in market patterns and in geopolitical disturbances in the news cycle.

If you study the last two cyclical bull moves, both of them ended in either one of two ways. They either failed to better a number like 2000, or they made a peak-a-boo look above a similar number. In either event, this feels more like a crescendo to me rather than the start of a new leg to the upside.

Conclusion: Ross Aldridge in Las Vegas Nevada concurs with a 10-15% correction for the stock markets. It appears that we had to cross the 18,000 psychological level before the correction could begin.

Disclosure: The author has no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

Seeking Alpha's Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

Recommended For You