The
Weekly Report For July 6th - July 10th, 2009
July
5, 2009- Market Summary
In this week's report we'll take a look at a common reversal
pattern, known as a head
and shoulders, which is starting to form on the charts of several
major indexes. For those who need a quick refresher, you'll find
that this pattern must go through four main steps to signal a reversal.
The first step is the formation of the left shoulder, which occurs
when the security reaches a new high and retraces to a new low.
The second step is the formation of the head, which occurs when
the security reaches a higher high, then retraces back near the
low formed in the left shoulder. The third step is the formation
of the right shoulder, which occurs with a high that is lower than
the high formed by the head, but is again followed by a retracement
to the low of the left shoulder. The pattern is complete once the
price falls below the neckline,
which is a support line formed at the level of the lows reached
at each of the three retracements.
As you can see
from the charts below, a head and shoulders pattern has formed on
the charts of the S&P
500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Luckily for the bulls,
the price has not broken below the support level yet, so the rally
is still deemed to be intact. It is interesting to note that this
pattern is forming near the resistance of the 200-day exponential
moving averages, which is also a level that is used by traders to
suggest that nearby resistance could become a going concern within
the next few weeks. It wouldn't be surprising to see additional
selling pressure enter the markets once the prices of these large
cap indexes close below their respective necklines. It will be interesting
to see if the smaller-cap indexes such as the Russell 2000 and the
Nasdaq, which have broken beyond their respective 200-day exponential
moving averages can continue to climb. Given the divergence
between the different indexes, the best bet may be way wait on the
sidelines to until we see which group will lead the general trend
of the markets.
(To learn more
about levels of resistance, be sure to check out the Support
And Resistance section of our Technical
Analysis Tutorial.)
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