The Bull Is Back... But Will It Stay?

Summary

  • On Tuesday, the market broke out to all-time highs, but had failed to hold on to that level until a late surge on Friday.
  • With the markets trading on VERY light volume on Friday, combined with short-term "sell signals" forming, and pushing more extreme overbought conditions, it is too early to completely remove all risk management controls in portfolios.
  • While the "bull market" is indeed back with the break out to new highs, the question is "whether it will stay."

On Tuesday, the market broke out to all-time highs, but had failed to hold on to that level until a late surge on Friday. The breakout to "all-time highs" is something we have been discussing over the last several weeks both here and for our RIA PRO subscribers with Technology leading the charge.

Currently, XLK is on a "Buy" signal (bottom panel), but that signal is "crazy" extended.

However, the good news is that four sectors have broken out to all-time highs and technology is one of them. This is suggesting the overall market will break out to new highs as well.

However, while that break to the upside was indeed bullish, the market remains very confined to a rising consolidation pattern and failed to close above the intraday all-time highs from last September. With the markets trading on VERY light volume on Friday, combined with short-term "sell signals" forming, and pushing more extreme overbought conditions, it is too early to completely remove all risk management controls in portfolios.

Another reason not to completely throw "caution to the wind" is the market only requires roughly a 0.40% move in one direction or the other to break out of this very tight compression range.

The good news is a breakout, and a successful retest, to the upside will most likely lead to a continued move higher over the next month or so.

The not-so-good news is a confirmed break to the downside would result in a short-term correction ranging between a 3% decline to test the 50-day moving average, a 5.4% decline to the 200-day moving average, and a 7.7% decline back to the March lows.

While such a correction certainly falls within the realm of "ordinary" within any given year and would provide a much better entry point for

This article was written by

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After having been in the investing world for more than 25 years from private banking and investment management to private and venture capital; I have pretty much "been there and done that" at one point or another. I am currently a partner at RIA Advisors in Houston, Texas.

The majority of my time is spent analyzing, researching and writing commentary about investing, investor psychology and macro-views of the markets and the economy. My thoughts are not generally mainstream and are often contrarian in nature but I try an use a common sense approach, clear explanations and my “real world” experience in the process.

I am a managing partner of RIA Pro, a weekly subscriber based-newsletter that is distributed to individual and professional investors nationwide. The newsletter covers economic, political and market topics as they relate to your money and life.

I also write a daily blog which is read by thousands nationwide from individuals to professionals at www.realinvestmentadvice.com.

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