"From a seasonality perspective, there is hope for the bulls, with New Year's week having a historically bullish seasonality... [but] with [the Santa Claus rally] yet to arrive, the Fed might be labeled as the Grinch that is stealing Santa's thunder...
"[T]he levels that are a round 20% above the SPX and SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY - 266.86) 2016 closes -- 2,686.60 and $268.23 - have been areas of resistance during the sideways action that has mostly defined the second half of December... the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (IXIC - 6,903.39) has toyed with the round 7,000 level since the Dec. 18 rally, but still has yet to close above this round millennium mark... in addition to the longer-term trend, the risk to the bears is the possibility of a short-covering rally."
-- Monday Morning Outlook, January 2, 2018
$SPY $268.40 is 4x's the '09 low and site of December's high on 12/18... Attempting first weekly close above this level.$SPX
- Todd Salamone (@toddsalamone) January 5, 2018
As it turns out, Santa arrived after all -- albeit late and bearing fewer gifts than usual, as the time period encompassing the last five days of 2017 and first two trading days of 2018 saw the S&P 500 Index (SPX - 2,743.15) gain 1%, below its 1.7% average gain since 1928.
The action last week followed lackluster price action in the second half of December, which proved to be nothing more than a short-term consolidation. Round numbers on key equity benchmarks, such as Dow Jones Industrial Average 25,000 (DJI - 25,295.87), Nasdaq Composite 7,000 (IXIC - 7,136.56), and SPX 2,700 were taken out as the bulls celebrated the start of a new year. Sell-side analysts returned from an apparent December vacation to issue a slew of upgrades relative to downgrades.
Less obvious resistance levels were also taken out, such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY - 273.42) mid-December high just above $268, which corresponded not only to last year's round 20% gain, but also four times its 2009 low. And as it turns out, unlike the pattern I have discussed multiple times in this space about Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting day closing levels acting as resistance in the immediate days after a rate hike, it appears the Dec. 13 FOMC day close at SPY $266.75acted as support during the pullbacks on the last trading day of 2017.
In fact, per the chart below, the SPY has only experienced one daily close below its 20-day moving average since Aug. 30. The current site of this trendline is at $267.59, which is between the mid-December FOMC day closing level ($266.75) and $268.40, or four times its March 2009 low close. This area would be a first line of defense if there is a pullback from its current overbought condition. The 2017 close of $266.86 is also in this vicinity.
I mentioned the SPY's overbought condition, but note that since early October, according to the 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI), the SPY has been in an "overbought" condition multiple times with little to no pullbacks occurring.
88 stocks above $7 with at least 1 million volume per day came into '18 down 10% or worse in '17 & short/float of 10%+.On avg, they are beating '18 SPX return of 2.6% pic.twitter.com/OGFkmquW9b
- Todd Salamone (@toddsalamone) January 5, 2018
Continue reading:
Indicator of the Week: Stock Buyers May Need To Be Patient in 2018The Week Ahead: Fed, Inflation Data Headline First Full Trading Week of 2018