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With the
8-year cycle behind us and September seasonal weakness almost over we
are within reaching distance of the next meaningful bull market in
equities. The stock market will soon once again be the "only game
in town" compared to other financial investment areas and the
lethargy of the past year will gradually be replaced by excitement as
the next bull market commences in the fourth quarter and continues into
what should be an exceedingly bullish 2007.
It has
been two full weeks since the latest major trading cycle has bottomed.
Since that time the major indices and financially sensitive stock market
sectors have gradually firmed up and are actually showing signs of
wanting to move higher into the fourth quarter. The internal indicators
(price oscillators) are still mostly in an "overbought"
status, which makes a move higher from here without a corrective
pullback or pause a low probability. But beyond a short-term
"hiccup" we should continue to see improvement in the stock
market in the upcoming weeks.
The most
important "heads-up" signal for the market’s next move seems
to be coming from the overall NYSE hi-lo momentum indicator. This
particular indicator is a simple rate of momentum measure of the net
number of 52-week highs on the NYSE from a 30-day, 60-day and 90-day
rate of change basis. For the past few weeks the 30-day and 60-day hi-lo
indicators have been moving higher almost every day and both are in
positive territory. Only the 90-day hi-lo indicator has lagged behind
and is still in negative territory. This has been the missing ingredient
to the stock market really taking off on the upside up until now, for
the 90-day rate of change indicator in *any* internal momentum measure
is the dominant bias indicator (just as the 90-day moving average of
price in a stock market index, such as the Dow, is considered the
dominant interim bias indicator). By the time October rolls around,
however, the 90-day NYSE hi-lo indicator will have turned around and
accelerating its advance as it enters positive territory in a few weeks.
This will
present a favorable backdrop to the equities market and allow for the
best positioned stocks (namely those showing relative strength and
strong earnings momentum) making higher highs in the upcoming months. It
should also continue to present quite a few turnaround opportunities for
us as the stocks that have been hardest hit since April/May (mainly
among the NASDAQ stocks) should be able to participate in this rally.
Speaking
of the tech stocks, once the market becomes more settled (presumably
sometime in October) and the bullish seasonal bias kicks in I expect the
NASDAQ to lead the way higher with many major tech industries soaring to
higher levels. Along these lines there is an interesting chart showing
the trend of DRAM prices, which in turn tend to lead the overall NASDAQ
sectors at major tops and bottoms. (DRAM stands for Dynamic Random
Access Memory and the index of DRAM tracks price trends of this
important memory component used in computer manufacture and can be used
as a leading indicator for the tech-related industries). After a nasty
decline in 2004 and 2005, DRAM prices have bottomed out and since April
of this year have turned up, including the 50-day and 200-day moving
averages of the DRAM Index. Here you can see this rather stunning chart,
reprinted with Don Hays’ permission. It bodes extremely well for the
intermediate-term outlook for the tech stock sector.

Another
clue that the market’s next broad move beginning sometime in the
fourth quarter will be to the upside is provided courtesy of trading
volume patterns on the NYSE. One July 19 the upside-to-downside ratio of
trading volume on the NYSE was 10:1 in favor of upside volume. This same
10:1 ratio was also seen earlier this summer. Marty Zweig used to call a
relatively rare 10:1 positive volume day a "volume blast-off"
signal. By this he meant that a 10:1 volume ratio underscored the fact
that the insiders were so heavily loading up on stocks that a major
upside move was a virtual guarantee, and usually one lasting several
months. With two volume blast-off days in the market’s quiver this
summer, it’s only a matter of time before the next sustained bull
market gets underway.
Market
psychology is an important backdrop to any bull market, and you’ve all
heard the adage that bull markets climb a proverbial "wall of
worry." That much-need background of fear and worry (from a
contrarian standpoint) is still very much present in this current market
environment. In fact, the fear in some quarters is so thick you could
cut it with a knife. The cumulative bull/bear statistics adequately show
this bearish sentiment and have done so for weeks on end.
To take
one example, the flow of funds into the Rydex series of mutual funds has
been decisively downward since January of this year even as the S&P
500 has risen in recent months. This positive divergence of
price-to-bearish bets on the stock market harbingers higher prices ahead
for the broad market, including the Dow 30 and S&P 500 indices. Note
the chart below showing the comparison of the S&P to the Rydex Ratio
from Carl Swenlin’s Deciosionpoint web site.

The
International Securities Exchange (ISEE) Sentiment Index, which measures
calls/puts, is also sending a very bullish intermediate-term signal for
the market. The 15-day moving average of this ratio is currently at its
lowest level in over two years, which shows that the public has been
very heavily bearish on the market’s prospects. Once again, from a
contrarian standpoint this is bullish.
The
S&P 500 index (SPX) closed at its highest level of the past four
months Friday at just under the 1320 level. What’s next for SPX in the
next few days is anyone’s guess but odds favor a corrective dip or
"pause that refreshes." The downside potential on the
market’s next correction will likely be limited by the bearish
investor sentiment backdrop and once this correction ends, as previously
mentioned, we’ll likely see the SPX breaking out above its May high
and on to higher levels.
After
breaking out above its 10-week consolidation pattern, the Broker/Dealer
Index (XBD) has finally signaled that the bull market we’re talking
about should shortly begin. I’m hopeful that before long the Bank
Index (BKX) will join the broker/dealers on the upside. The bullish
signal generated in XBD will be difficult to ignore as many professional
traders and institutions follow this extremely important leading index.
When XBD breakout out on the topside and makes a new 10-week high the
broad market indices nearly always follow suit.

So with
the dust settling from the 8-year cycle, the pieces are being put in
place for the next bull market in stocks that will take the Dow to its
highest level in a while and finally lift the NASDAQ out the funk it has
been in for a long time (as exemplified until recently by the NASDAQ
advance-decline line). The tech stocks will finally resume its role as a
leader as the baton is passed from the oil stocks to the techs and the
Dow, which has been held back now from breaking out for over a year,
will finally take off and running as we head into what should be a
bullish 2007.

© 2006 Clif Droke
Editorial Archive
Clif
Droke
P.O. Box 3401
Topsail Beach, N.C. 28445-9831 USA
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