Sunday, January 1, 2017

Year-, Quarter-, Month- and Week-end Reviews

[Corrected]

We are now (Jan. 1) at the end of the week, the month, the quarter and the year.  It's time to review what the market, as exemplified by SPY, is doing on all four of these timeframes:

•  Very Long Term - Quarterly bars chart
•  Long Term - Monthly bars chart
•  Intermediate Term - Weekly bars chart
•  Short Term - Daily bars chart.

I'll do this in four blog posts here, starting with this one, Very Long Term.

But first, let me reiterate my general understanding:  One cannot predict the market.  Technical analysis, including my Midas methodologies, does not and cannot predict what prices will do in the future.  Rather, it shows what the market is doing in the present, and it is exquisitely good at detecting and signaling when the market's behavior has changed so that you may keep your trading in line with the market.  And that's how to make money in the market, not by following a prediction, but rather by carefully staying in sync with the market.  So, nowhere in my posts here am I making any prediction of the future movement of the market.



The Very Long Term, the quarterly bars chart

Here is the quarterly bars chart of SPY from its 1993 inception, plotted in candle volume display...





The market has been in an uptrend since that historic bottom in early 2009.  There was a modest pullback in 2011, but from there it launched into an accelerated uptrend.  The definition of accelerated is that the first pullback (here in 2015) occurs far above the Midas support curve launched from the beginning of the accelerated trend - the middle green curve here.  When this happens, we may fit a TopFinder curve (TF) to the trend, the purple curve here.  The value of the free variable, the fitting parameter D, needed to fit the curve to the pullback is the projected total cumulative volume that the trend will have consumed when it ends.  Here, D is 350 billion shares.  Right now, the accelerated trend's cumulative volume is 47.5% of D, so at present we are a little less than half way through the duration of this accelerated trend as measured by cumulative volume.  Since the chart's horizontal axis is linear in cumulative volume, not time, I can and have placed that dashed purple vertical line at the horizontal location corresponding to 350 billion shares of cum vol, which is the projected horizontal location of the end of this trend. 

Notice that this is not a prediction of when and at what price the trend will end; we don't know when and at what price, but we will know when we get there because D will have been fully consumed.  The date we get there depends entirely on what the trading volume per quarter will be going forward, which we don't know.  This chart is produced by MetaStock, and that program makes some very dubious assumptions about what the future trading volume per quarter will be and places dates in the future accordingly.  Those date should be completely ignored.

Conclusion:  On this timeframe the market is nearly half way in cum vol through an accelerated uptrend that began in mid 2011. 

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