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STOCK
MARKET, NATURAL RESOURCE RECOVERY CONTINUES
by Clif Droke
March 22, 2007
The market
indicated its super-oversold condition to us soon after the Feb. 27
sell-off based on volume and put/call ratio indications. The
bottom has since been confirmed and Wednesday witnessed the big rally
day everyone has been waiting for. The market rewarded our
patience on Wednesday by rallying 24 points, or 1.71%, as measured by
the S&P 500 index (SPX).
As
of Wednesday the number of stocks making new 52-week highs on the NYSE
was 239 versus only 19 new lows. The number of new lows over the
past week has held consistently below 40, a sign that internal selling
pressure is almost non-existent. That’s a big positive from a
technical standpoint and it proves that the recent damage done by the
Feb. 27 panic selling was over-done and bound to be recovered. As
of Wednesday we’ve recovered most of those losses as measured by the
SPX.
Market
breadth has also looked good ever since that volume reversal day last
Tuesday and today (Mar. 21) the advancing issues on the NYSE were
outpacing the decliners by a margin of almost 60% in late afternoon
trading. Upside-to-downside volume was in favor of upside volume
by 89%.
An
interesting thing could be noticed in the charts of the NASDAQ 100 index
(NDX) and the QQQQ. Both closed above their 15-day moving averages
on Monday to confirm the short-term bottom we’ve been discussing.
NDX and QQQQ are also among the only major indices/ETFs in which
Monday’s closing price was above the closing price of March 12.
Thus, we had a leading indication of more technical improvement in the
market with the promise of further improvement to follow. This has
certainly proven to be the case as the major indices rallied strongly on
Wednesday. The S&P 500 index has recaptured most of its losses
since the panic selling of Feb. 27.
Factor
in all those positive volume divergences across the board that we’ve
been talking about lately and quite a number of bullish (short-term)
chart patterns among the Dow 30 component stocks (especially AT&T)
and we have the makings of a turnaround. To refresh your memory,
take a look at that positive divergence in the NASDAQ Volume indicator
chart shown below.

Another
indication that the global market scare will be short-lived is the
recent action of the Shanghai Composite Index (SSE). The SSE is
the index that basically got the ball rolling on the global correction
the markets have been through in late February through mid-March.
As of Tuesday, Mar. 20, the SSE had completely retraced all of its
losses and made a full recovery on an intraday basis, closing at its
all-time high on Tuesday. Thus the first major event-driven panic
has recovered nearly all its losses just as expected based on history.
This proves what I’ve been saying since the panic began that losses
following an even-driven panic are usually recovered within a short
time.
The
stock market is temporarily “overbought” based on the oscillators so
a temporary pullback or correction wouldn’t be out of place here.
But the main trends remain up going forward.
The
gold/silver, oil and natural gas stock recovery we’ve talked about in
the past couple of weeks is materializing as expected so far. Oil
and natural gas stocks did especially well on Wednesday, with the Amex
Oil Index (XOI) closing up 1.44% at just below its February high of
1,183. The Amex Natural Gas Index (XNG) was meanwhile 1.46% higher
at 467.36. XNG succeeded in making a new high for the year on
Wednesday. This was brought to you courtesy of the rising 120-day
internal momentum indicator for resource stocks that we mentioned
earlier this month.

For
a picture of how I envision the gold stocks may recover in the next few
weeks before the next peak is in, take a look at the daily chart of
mining stock Anglo American (AAL:UK) as shown above. Note the
sharp downside move to test the recent floor at around the 2,300 level
following the late-February sell-off. Then a recovery followed
that has so far taken AAL back up to its previous highs, or nearly so.
Might we not see a similar episode take place in HUI in the coming
weeks?
Clif
Droke is editor of the 3-times weekly Momentum Strategies Report which
covers U.S. equities and forecasts individual stocks, short- and
intermediate-term, using unique proprietary analytical methods and
moving average analysis. He is also the author of numerous books,
including "Stock Trading with Moving Averages." For more
information visit www.clifdroke.com

© 2007 Clif Droke
Editorial Archive
Clif
Droke
P.O. Box 3401
Topsail Beach, N.C. 28445-9831 USA
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