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Via Trader's Narrative:
Since the start of the spring rally in March and into July, Lowry Research continued to recommend to its customers that the market would inevitably retest the lows and even see new ones. In June, Paul Desmond declared the impressive rally so far to be merely a bear market reaction and not a bull market. Then as early as mid-July Lowry was continuing to call for lower stock market prices (even lower than March 2009). Lowry arrived at this conclusion by looking at their proprietary demand and supply metrics: Buying Power and Selling Pressure Index. And not through the by now well known Lowry 90%/90% metric. If you’ve been keeping track of these 90/90 extreme breadth days, defined by Lowry as a trading day where 90% of the volume flows to the stocks trading up/down and 90% of the securities traded finish higher/lower, then you know that what was once a rarefied event has suddenly become commonplace. Whether the preponderance of extreme breadth days was because of the historic volatility we’ve seen recently or if perhaps it was due to the sudden spike in high frequency trading is of little importance. The only thing that matters is that as suddenly more and more people started learning about Paul Desmond’s research into the role of extreme breadth in creating the conditions for new bull markets, the game changed. And that is the inherent and tricky nature of the stock market of course. If you dare think you have it figured out, you are in for a big lesson. In any case, now, Lowry Research, the oldest and most respected technical analysis firm on Wall Street, is reversing its position and issuing an intermediate trend buy signal. To find out why they reversed and what the buy signal means, read on: The signal occurred as of last Tuesday August 4th’s close. To trigger the intermediate buy signal, on that day, the Selling Pressure Index fell by 32 points from its most recent peak (on July 8th 2009 at 889). In simple terms this means that selling has exhausted itself and therefore, we now have a safer environment for an uptrend to establish itself. Starting in late July, Lowry noted that volume started to expand to the upside, something that was not happening in the early stages of the spring rally. Sentiment Buy, Buy, Buy! errr… no Breadth Since late July, Lowry’s Buying Power and Selling Pressure indices are acting as they would typically in an intermediate uptrend. The volume is now more in line with what it should have been happening off the March low. Lowry believes that deleveraging resulted in diminished volume which in turn skewed their most trusted indicators. In economic news, things are getting less worse - and the market moves up on that kind of news. So that is a tell also. Sectors and Capitalization During the initial phase of the March rally, the small caps outperformed. Now the mid-caps (S&P 400) are outperforming the S&P 500 the large caps. Particularly the most recent rally off July’s low. As this move has matured, money has come out of smaller capitalization stocks and flowed into larger capitalization ones. Buying Power Index But while initially the Buying Power Index lifted off the March lows along with the market, it came back down again. This is probably why Lowry is still not ready to relinquish the bearish camp just yet. You see, since Lowry began collecting market data going back more than 75 years, no new bull market has ever given up all its initial gains in Buying Power as this recent rally has. To clarify, Lowry tracks the relative position of both demand and supply metrics and does not go by either one alone. But nevertheless, it is interesting to look at the BPI in a vacuum like this. The above covers everything and more but if you like, you can listen to the Bloomberg radio podcast below: <embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.google.com/reader/ui/3247397568-audio-player.swf?audioUrl=http://media.bloomberg.com/bb/avfile/Markets/Analyst_Calls/vNLbcn_Zq6kk.mp3" width="500" height="27" allowscriptaccess="never" quality="best" bgcolor="#ffffff" wmode="window" flashvars="playerMode=embedded"/> Press play, wait for it to fully buffer to the 32 minute mark. Then you can either listen to the whole thing or skip the US retail sales interview part by forwarding to the 16:30 minute mark to get to the interview featuring Tracy Knudson, senior market analyst at Lowry Research.
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