Courtesy of John Nyaradi.
I predict an S&P 500 decline on Thursday because I am “selling the news”
I predict a decline for the S&P 500 (NYSEARCA:SPY) on Thursday, because I am “selling the news.” I have been wrong every day this week so far. Yesterday, the S&P 500 (NYSEARCA:SPY) went against me with a 1.38% gain on the hopes that Congress would come up with a deal, and thankfully they did. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (NYSEARCA:DIA) rose 1.36% and the NASDAQ 100 (NASDAQ:QQQ) rose 1.29%.
Hindsight is always correct, but part of me really felt the US could have defaulted last night (again, thankfully not). Stock markets did not feel that way however, as it is clear from yesterday’s gains that investors were driven by hope and absolute certainty that the US would not default. Now that a deal is made, the government is re-opening, and the bills will be paid, I predict the classic “sell the news” kind of day, because underneath all of this we are still looking at a fundamentally and technically weak market.
From a technical perspective, the only major S&P 500 (NYSEARCA:SPY) indicator that supports my forecast is the RSI, which is just ten points off from overbought levels (60.60). The S&P 500′s MACD is robustly situated at 2.43 and looks poised to keep going up. From a weekly perspective, however, we are in negative territory with the MACD and RSI, which is why I am in part selling the news for tomorrow:
chart courtesy of stockcharts.com
International markets are all in the green at the time of this writing. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised here because we skated through a potential world-wide soup kitchen.
US Futures Markets are trading in the red at the time of this writing, which does not really mean anything except for the fact that perhaps investors are feeling slightly jittery from the past days’ roller coaster ride.
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