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I Spy With My Little Eye...Fewer New
Highs November 12, 2009
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is an abbreviated sample of a comment posted for subscribers --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A popular topic today will no doubt be the plunge in stocks closing at new 52-week highs, which showed more shrinkage than a man's libido after an ice-cold bath. Despite the S&P closing higher than it did in mid-October, less than half the stocks trading on the NYSE went along for the ride than they did then.
This is a huge shift in sentiment. But does it matter?
Most will assume that it does, and that it's a very bearish sign for the market going forward. I don't like to assume (that whole ass-u-me thing), so let's try to quantify it and look at historical reactions.
Let's go back to 1965 (the furthest back that we have reliable new high / new low data for the NYSE) and check for the following conditions:
1. The number of new highs on the NYSE hits its highest level in at least 3 years
2. The S&P subsequently goes on to eventually make a new high sometime in the next 3 months
3. When the S&P makes that new high, the number of NYSE new highs shrinks by at least 50%
Not too many conditions there, and it helps approximate our current conditions. We got a big jump in the number of new highs in October, more than we'd seen in several years, the S&P corrected then pushed to a new high, and yet the number of NYSE new highs has been cut in half.
Here are the other times it has occurred:
Performance going forward wasn't great...but it wasn't terrible, either. In fact, other than the short-term of a week later, the S&P sported a higher average return, and more consistently so, than during any other random period, increasing the further out we look. Home | Commentary | Indicators | Models | Sectors | COT | Subscribe | About Us
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