Quote from michaelscott:
Now that it is after market hours, I can tell you a few more details about the above charts and the signifigance.
I can tell that stocktrader and makloda probably only have a few years experience in the market at best and so Id like to educate.
The cautionary period for the SPX is the height of the (cup+right peak)X1.03.
So the projected advance is:
1438-1368= 70
1438+70= 1508 (target price)
1508X1.03= 1553
So between 1508 and 1553 we have a period of caution. To be safe, we want to round the numbers down and up to create a risk range. So between 1500-1560 we should take caution with the market.
If the SPX were to pullback from here then the most likely result would be a 50% retracement which is classic textbook TA.
A 50% retracement would be to about 1450 and a 33% retracement would be to 1483.
If we look at the classic indicators, RSI=SPX overbought; MACD=crossing now, Chaikan Money Flow=divergence with price, TNX= rising and breaking out, OIL=going up, margin=30%+ rise from last year. None of these classic indicators are bullish for the SPX.
So we must be suspect of the SPX until it closes above 1560-1600 range. Corrections can happen suddenly or in a grinding slow manner. You want to be safe and have cash if this happens. This means taking a little bit off the table or going short on obvious picks.
I made some cash today on Force Protection and Trina Solar. I usually do not hold my shorts for long. I mercilessly cover them the second I believe they will not go my way.
Those who got caught by Tech Bubble 2000 were not looking at the big picture. The crash of 1987 formed macro trend lines that still shapes our market today. On a chart, there are 100s or 1000s of different trend lines. Each time the price hits a peak or a bottom, its bouncing on something. Some of my charts contain over a hundred trend lines so I can see the big picture.
The big picture for Tech Bubble 2000 was that there was a large trend line created by the peak of 1987 going parallel to the bottom and then there was a diagonal created by the price going up. When those two intersected, then it formed a triangle and the price in those types of triangles usually never survives.
I see guys like StockTrader who bought some shares of Mastercard last year and rode it up as lucky idiots. They dont know exactly why it went up or when to cash out. This is the same guy who bought JDSU in 1997 rode it up, thought they were the best traders in the world and then watched it go down.
2000 taught me to always look at the larger picture and that includes trend lines, mathamatical formulas and classic analysis. The lucky are only lucky until they are not...this was proven by so many stories from people such as "I was up 500k and then went down to 50k in 3 months".
There is a method behind my so-called madness...