Sunday, March 7, 2010

Trading After The Jobs Report


One year ago today, March 6th, 2009, if you were in the market or just a casual observer you would have been convinced the end of Western civilization(?) was at hand. The stock market had been in an aggressive accelerating downward spiral and by March 6th value in the S&P500 had been cut by ~57%. And it did it in frightening high record setting single day drops as the credit markets froze up.

Buying into those drops on the way to Mar. 6, 2009, specifically during the period between Sep 29 and Mar 6, was as deadly as shorting into the rallies since. The relentless rally started on March 6th and has rallied ~67% with only one ~8% correction.

I mentioned at the beginning of last week that I sensed a paradigm shift in sentiment mainly due to ever improving price action and improving, but spotty, economic reports. These favorable reports were topped off by Friday’s jobs report and rally.

All of a sudden, as shown by the drop in the VIX in recent weeks, the bullish reading in the $TRIN, the bulls have made their move. Things are so bullish… that they’re now bearish technically speaking. We’ll have to wait and see if the fundamentals really have improved and only time will tell us that story.

The market always overreacts up or down, always overplays its hand, and always reverses when least expected. The bullish readings are so high that the trade has to be a short play but (there’s always an infuriating ’but’) we can squeeze higher still… 1150 SPX looks like a target but it’s too obvious.

My best bearish scenario would be a small push higher on Monday that fades quickly and, more importantly, a pullback across all sectors with a sharp pullback. Developments in Europe and Asia over the weekend will influence Monday’s trade as usual. If the market really wants to show bullishness it will have to correct (headline unknown at this point) and bounce back sharply. Any correction in this environment will be short lived and that’s okay with me as long as it’s sharp… say down to SPX 1109 which would make price sit right on the Feb low uptrend line. Probably more realistically for any pullback next week would be to target closing the gaps down to 1116… roughly a ~2% pullback and certainly not a correction.

A correction is meant to shakeout the excess usually by violating a trend line… a pullback still maintains it’s uptrend. My last comment of the day on Friday in Trader 2010 on Finviz was, “Lack of volume throughout the last 5 days will take it’s toll on today’s rally.”