Wednesday’s gap created a significant reversal, stalling the mini-rallies kicked off in April. Thursday and Friday generated some come back against last week’s loss, bringing many of the markets back to the highs of the gap down.
The S&P is in a position where shorts may look to attack the gap. Friday’s spike high put itself inside the gap, recovering the 50-day MA in the process. This gain was supported by a ‘buy’ trigger in On-Balance-Volume. While shorts might have the better risk:reward option, a move above 2,389 opens up for a retest of 2,405.
The one index which struggled with the recovery rally was the Russell 2000. The break from the ‘bear flag’ has struggled to make it back to the top of Wednesday’s high, or even the 50-day MA. Technicals are weak and the relative performance of Small Caps against Tech indices has accelerated lower. The 6-month picture is range bound which keeps the broader outlook as neutral, but this will change if 1,345 is breached to the downside.
The Nasdaq was able to make back more of Wednesday’s lost ground, but left itself stalled at its 50-day MA. Volume was lighter than the S&P which suggests buying strength is weakening. The index is offering itself as another aggressive shorting opportunity with a stop above 6,107. Technicals haven’t changed with the MACD trigger ‘sell’ still in play.
The Semiconductor Index was another recovery which looks to have run its course by Friday’s close. However, it doesn’t have a weak technical picture and a breakout in relative performance against the Nasdaq 100 is only a short hop away.
As for longer time intervals the relationship between Consumer Staples and Discretionaries still has room for upside before the ratio reaches resistance and/or technicals become overbought. Those on a buy-and-hold strategy have not got a clear ‘sell’ signal yet.