In the early day of the Market Profile, Pete Steidlmayer taught that ‘long-term’ perspective was governed by three types of fundamentals:
The current views on the world stock markets can be divided into two main camps:
I believe both are wrong: I believe we will repeat the 1966 to 1982 path with perhaps a lot more pain. The reasons for this are partially fundamental and partially technical. Fundamentally I view this context through the eyes of Austrian economics coupled with the ideas Lord Rees-Mogg and James Davidson (Blood in the Streets [1]). Technically there is insufficient evidence to believe in either a bull or bear market.
The current price action is in-line with my expectations: the volume continues to deteriorate as we head up into the upper boundary of the Value Area, 1290. Once we accept above 1290, we can expect to see a sharp move to the Primary Sell Zone. From there I’d expect to see a return to the Primary Buy Zone of 1576 and 666.
What would change my mind:
If I have to lean to onside or another, I’d lean to the bearish side. It seems to me that traders are failing to appreciate the reality of a weaker US economy and a more serious inflation problem than is being acknowledged. The numbers that are coming out are starting to show that inflation is on the rise. I’ll be watching the CPI on Wednesday to see if we have evidence that will discount or confirm my inflation scenario.
I attach a 12-m swing chart of the cash S&P showing:
Links:
[1] http://www.amazon.com/Blood-Streets-James-Dale-Davidson/dp/0283998091/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1258418248&sr=8-2
[2] http://www.amazon.com/Nature-Trends-Strategies-Successful-Investing/dp/047082235X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1258418844&sr=8-1
[3] http://tradingsuccess.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/2009-11-17-12m-sp.jpg