Nasdaq 100 - 2008 and Now
Nasdaq 100 - 2008 and Now

Good Morning:

  • The stock market keeps rising, seemingly in defiance of inflation, rising interest rates, inverted yield curves, the war in Ukraine, potential food shortages, and just about all calamities that should shake it to its knees.
  • And it is being led by the usual suspects, the FAANGMAN+T stocks in the NASDAQ 100.
  • So I thought comparing this same period in 2009 might be helpful to keep our feet on the ground.
  • As you will see from the side-by-side comparison above, the 2009 price chart is eerily similar to the current chart, literally down to the date.
  • But, as Paul Harvey used to say (that will date me), now for the rest of the story.
NASDAQ 100 - 2008-2009 Bear Market
NASDAQ 100 - 2008-2009 Bear Market
  • In 2009, the NASDAQ 100 and the rest of the stock market lost half of their value after the Spring 2009 rally.
  • The moral of the story is not to get too comfortable.
  • The Navigator Algorithm closed out its latest swing trading buy signal last week. But given the steep rally, we may see a second buy signal form. It hasn’t happened yet, but it is in the realm of possibilities.
  • In the meantime, the fundamental negatives keep piling on while the market sails on by.
  • I see muted volatility again today, with an open to close implied move of 0.65% or about 30 points from the open.
  • Resistance is at 4600, with support at 4550 and 4500.
  • Supportive interest finally filled the 4550 area yesterday and helped fill the void I mentioned.
  • Risk remains “on” based on moves in single stocks and volatility. Bulls retain the edge as long as the S&P remains above 4500.
  • The bullish tilt remains only as long as the market holds the 4500 Vol Trigger level. The 4600 Call Wall remains at the top of our range until/unless that strike rolls higher.
  • The “all-clear” or “risk-on” signal is coming more by attrition (expiration) than anything else. Neither put nor call demand is prevalent, and a lot of the speculation is in individual stock names.
  • Last Wednesday, the Fed reported an additional $45 billion added to the balance sheet, hardly a sign of Quantitative Tightening.
  • I can’t wait for the next report, but if you want to know why the market keeps going up, the explanation is that the Fed, despite its rhetoric, has done minimal tightening.
  • But the Fed governors are on the speaking circuit today, so watch out.
  • Also, we need to see the short-term trendline from 4/3 hold on the hourly charts for the bulls to remain in control. 4560 or so is the level that holds both the trendline and the 5-day EMA, also a key line on the chart.
  • Key A.M. Trade Levels and Charts are posted.

I keep threatening to take a few days off, and my birthday is Friday, so I plan to be out Thursday and Friday. So only key levels will be published on those days.

Have a great day ahead.

A.F. Thornton

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