Quick Look At Market Breadth

In the examples below, I am using S&P500 data as a proxy for the market.

First a short-term perspective: About 37 % of the SPX stocks are still trading above their 20-day moving averages. This doesn’t provide an edge for either bulls or bears. Extreme readings have led to mean-reversion in the indexes during the predominantly range-bound market environment of 2015. Oversold readings (reaching a value under 20%) hasn’t always led to an immediate bounce in the averages. For a more sustainable bounce, look for a divergence – bigger percentage of SPX stocks trading above their 20dma while the SPX keeps making new lows.

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Things are looking a lot different from a long-term perspective:

The % of SPX stocks trading above their 200dmas is almost back to its levels from October 2014, when  we had an almost 10% market pullback.

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The % of stocks, making new 52-week lows is at multi-year highs. The deterioration in any industry even remotely related to commodities has been breath-stopping.

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The number of stocks making new 52-week highs has been gradually declining in 2015 and it has now established in a low-value tight range. SPX has managed to keep near multi-year highs thanks to healthcare, financials, tech and consumer discretionary stocks.

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