Warning: Trouble Ahead

By Jeff Clark

Related Articles

It’s over. The bear-market rally of the past two months ended last week.

We knew it was going to happen. Heck, we had the canary in the coal mine, the volatility index, investor sentiment, and a host of other technical indicators all screaming it was time to get defensive. And the screams came just in time…

Last week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Nasdaq Composite Index, and the S&P 500 all lost about 3.5%. The semiconductor index was down about 5%. Retail and financial stocks fell more than 6%. Brokers lost 7%. And homebuilders gave up 10%.

The bad news, of course, is it’s going to get worse.

———- Advertisement ———-
Say these TWO Words to Your Broker

If you say 2 simple words to your broker, you could potentially make 3-times more money on every single trade.

Michael Marcus, one of the world’s most famous traders, used it to make an amazing 250,000% on his portfolio in just 10 years. That’s enough to turn a $10,000 stake into $25 million.

This is possibly the single most valuable secret of the investing world…

Click here to learn more.
———————————–

Here’s another look at the monthly chart of the S&P 500 plotted against its 20-month exponential moving average (EMA)…

If the S&P 500 is trading above the line, then stocks are in a bull market. If stocks are trading below the line, then the bear is in charge.

Stocks entered a bear market back in December. The S&P 500 declined for five straight months, and then put on a blistering two-month rally.

Today, the S&P is back up near the line. If history is any sort of a roadmap, then investors are in for a very long summer.

Take a look at what happened in the last bear market. Stocks broke down, rallied back up, and challenged the line… then cascaded lower again.

Get ready for the cascade.

Of course, stocks don’t go straight down. After such a nasty beating last week, stocks should enjoy a brief bounce higher early this week. In fact, the odds look pretty good that we may see the S&P rally back up and test the EMA at about 1,407.

At that point, though, traders ought to look at exiting long positions and adding on a few short sales.

Best regards and good trading,

Jeff Clark

Source: Warning: Trouble Ahead

Liked this article from Casey Research? You can receive the same great commentary and insights directly to your email box when you claim your free subscription to the Casey Research eletter service. Simply fill in your email address below and hit 'subscribe'.

Subscribe

NO-SPAM PLEDGE: We will NEVER rent, sell, or give away your e-mail address to anyone for any reason. You can unsubscribe from Casey Research with a few clicks.

Related Articles

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

About the Author

Jeff Clark is the editor of BIG GOLD, a Casey Research publication that pinpoints the safest ways to capitalize on the gold bull market.

See All Posts by This Author

Casey Research

The Daily Resource PLUS was designed from the start to be the world's most comprehensive yet quick-reading daily e-letter providing concise updates on precious metals, energy, resource stocks, currencies, unfolding economic trends and more... including private placement financings!

See All Posts from This Publication

Post a Response



Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Receive These Valuable Investing Strategy Resources to Your Inbox Courtesy of Contrarian Profits

    Subscribe
We respect your privacy.
Choose any of the FREE subscription services below that you'd like to receive, enter your email address, and click 'subscribe'.
Contrarian Profits

The Daily Reckoning



Select Edition:
Penny Sleuth

Money Morning

Investor's Daily Edge

Money Morning UK

Investment U

Whiskey and Gunpowder

Taipan Daily

Offshore A-Letter

Today's Financial News

The Smart Profits Report

Casey Research