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Is the worst over for the stock market? Are shares now safe?

The answer to our question is…Perhaps, but the stock market is not out of the woods yet.

Over the last few weeks the risks have been much increased so we ceased to call new trade alerts just before the FTSE began to tumble. That does not mean that we are brilliant or clairvoyant but it does mean that our daily analysis of the market trends is accurate and effective.

The current state of play is that the FTSE is still below potential resistance (at the 5400 level) in spite of the big rise earlier this week. This resistance could send the index sharply back down again; otherwise, if 5400 is overcome then share prices should move strongly ahead again and back up to test the 5770 level resistance. All this can be seen from the chart –

Interestingly, and perhaps indicating that there is an underlying and growing strength in the market as a whole, the FTSE 250 index is far more positive than its big sister (the FTSE 100). The FTSE 250 has found and bounced up from support at the 9610 level and is racing back up to test the 10500 level again. This is shown on the chart below –

So, nothing is for definite just yet. Risk remains above the norm although not nearly so high as it has been recently. The answer has to be to invest cautiously (as you know we started again, gently, this morning) and to keep a very close eye on the likely future direction of all share prices.

THE FALLING FTSE

We should not have doubted quite as much as we did, the FTSE’s potential to show the lead to the world’s major stock indices. In our Stock Markets review last weekend we were too dismissive of the idea of the FTSE indicating that the way was going to be down. All of the other indices were moving up so we surmised that it was just the FTSE that was out of step.

It wasn’t and we were wrong. Yesterday all the markets moved downwards with the FTSE again leading the way. And there is likely to be more downside to come. At the moment the FTSE has the potential to fall to the 5400 area.

A Review of the FTSE – as at 18 April

On Friday morning 16th April we were anticipating a comment along the lines of ‘the 5770 level resistance has been broken and all that is now needed is another week of the same or higher prices to confirm the breakout’!

Then, on Friday afternoon, the US SEC dropped its ‘fraud’ bombshell on Goldman Sachs; Wall Street fell off and, of course, the FTSE had to follow.

So we are back to noting that the 5770 on the FTSE 100 is still playing its resistance role. Friday’s sell off looks to have been something of a knee jerk reaction and was not of major proportion. The dominant trend is still the Uptrend so there is every chance that the markets will resume their slow upward course during the coming week or the next and this should take the FTSE on up towards a test of the 6160 level area.

The alternative scenario is that last week could form the top of the recovery rally and could be the start of a longish retracement in share prices but there is really no solid evidence that this might be the case and so, on current evidence, we expect no more than a shallow correction at worst.

The FTSE 100 –

Individual market commentary and illustrative charts are available at http://www.sharehunter.com/news/market-review/

The FTSE Analysis

For the 3rd week running the FTSE has been hiiting its head against the 5770 level as it attempts to break above its resistance. It is indiocative of the underlying strength of the index that it has not fallen back in any of the three weeks; each time it has closed the week in positive territory.

The liklihood is, therefore, that the FTSE is going to succeed in breaking out above 5770 and then to rise by another 300 to 400 points (about + 7%) up towards a test of the resistance at the 6160 level.And this looks likely to start next week.

However, and it is an important ‘however’, should the FTSE not manage to close clearly above 5770 next week (say at 5820 at least) then the risk of a retracement becomes much greater and the liklihood will be for a fast fall back to the 5400 level area. Even that, of itself, would not effect a change of the dominant trend of the market which is, and would be, still in Uptrend with the promise of higher values.

The FTSE is being supported by the strength showing on Wall Street where the S&P 500 index has now left behind the resistances of the 1122 and 1167 levels and looks set for a continuing rise up to an eventual test of the resistance at the 1290 level – a further 8% – which would reflect well for a similar rise in the FTSE where a 7% rise is possible.

The other positive news for the market’s continued Uptrend is that our Momnetum Indicator is recovering its upward trend (in support of the rising indices) although its rise is still not emphatic enough for us to be able to feel entirely confident of the indices and to feel that a sharp retracement is still a possibility.

So the summation is – yes, be ‘in there’ but be careful, watchful and do not commit 100% to this market.

Individual market commentary and illustrative charts are available at http://www.sharehunter.com/news/market-review/

Which Way the FTSE This Week?

In summary;

Not much to be said this week. Although we worry that we are tempting fate…it can be said that the main market indices present a reasonably benign picture at present (that could be the cue for a major market upset!!).

The FTSE looks to be en route to a test of resistance at the 5770 level and the FTSE 250 has, at last, started to show some gains and could be on for an attempt at the 10500 level.

It will really depend on Wall Street; the Dow is still not showing much enthusiasm for higher prices although the S&P 500 has now broken out above the very important 1122 level and could, if its support continues, head on up for a test of the 1290 level. But that is quite a way ahead yet. The important thing (for the FTSE) is that the US markets do not weaken.

The Uptrends remain in place on all of the major indices and their moving averages continue sloping upwards so any correction is likely to be short lived and relatively minor (there we go tempting fate again).

Individual market commentary and illustrative charts are available at http://www.sharehunter.com/news/market-review/

Is RBS About to Rocket?

This is a headline that we have just seen. Our answer is “No it isn’t – not yet anyway”.

For anyone who buys RBS shares now, in the hope that they are about to rocket upwards, would be a high risk venture suitable only to those who welcome the adrenalin rush of trading ‘penny’ stocks.

RBS shares are, however, showing movement within a ‘Basing’ trend ( which started from the Jan’09 end of the steep Downtrend). The next stage, after the Basing stage, for this share should indeed be an Uptrend but this will not occur until the price has succeeded in rising above the resistance that will be presented at the 58p level. Only then should it be considered as a ‘buy’ for medium to long term investors.

RBS  -  wkly2(Click on the chart to enlarge).

For (shorter term) trdaers however there will be a ‘buy’ opportunity presented when the price rises above the resistance presented at the 43p level (this being the 50% retracement of the Aug-Dec’09 bear run (see the daily price chart below). Today the price is breaking above the 38p resistance and this could be the start of a short run up to the 43p level and, if the price should manage to get above 43p then there is a very good chance that it could move quickly up to the 58p level. So there could be a short term possible gain of some 10% if the price continues up to 43p (where it is likely to turn over again. But this hardly represents a “rocket increase” as some suggest!

RBS - dly2

For the moment, we would suggest that only those with deep pockets and not given to anxiety attacks should consider buying RBS shares.

RELY ON THE RELIABLE  -  TECHNICAL RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS FROM SHAREHUNTER.COM

Stock Market Armaggedon Deferred Not Cancelled

It is satisfying that our analysis was correct in that the 30wk Moving Average of each of the main indices performed as we said it should and had the effect of changing the direction of the index. Each index fell and then reversed back up the scale from the meeting point with its MA and created new trend lows in so doing (but, significantly, not higher lows).

We would tempting fate to say that worst of the danger (of a collapse of share prices) has now passed; at best all we can say now is that it has been deferred! The markets are not out of the woods yet; there are still too many potentially negative signals for us to be able to feel confident that another test of the moving averages support levels will not be made soon.

For the FTSE 100 the situation is that it must climb to and break above the January high at 5600 before a climb to test 5770 becomes a real prospect. Whilst the FTSE remains below 5600 there remains the probability of a fall back to the 5100 area.

So, as the Uptrends are still in place – although weaker than in the July/December ’09 period – we are back to eschewing all but the very occasional ( and only very obvious) ‘short’ trade alert and will stay with identifying the ‘long’ side of potential trades.

Individual market commentary and illustrative charts are available at http://www.sharehunter.com/news/market-review/

Which Way is the Market Heading?

The FTSE 350 stocks are a real mixed pot.

Some are in short term downtrends – but not definitive enough to trade short just yet.

Others are retracing back to the level of their 30wk MA where they should make a turn back upwards – but are not yet showing enough signs of strength for us to be able to put them forward as a buy.

Yet others, the majority, are just trading sideways; drifting with no definitive trend neither up nor down – so a trade here would be more ‘in hope’ than anything else and that certainly is no proper basis for a trade.

As an example of the influence of the market’s current volatility we had identified one ‘short’ trade this morning in the form of Dana Petroleum (dnx). It is in both short term and long term downtrend. It closed yesterday at 1008p but there it is this morning up by 3% at 1030p. That’s strength not weakness. This will probably only be short lived but this sort of volatility is not only a nuisance but also it will cause whipsawing losses if we succumb to the temptation of making the trade before we are really certain of it. We will be watching Dana.

What is both a source of confidence in the market and yet, at the same time, a source of worry that a collapse may be just around the corner, is how the indices are staying as high as they are with so much worry and concern abounding throughout the financial world. If it is not the sub-prime, it is the jobless figures; if it is not the size of UK’s sovereign debt it is a double dip recession or a downgraded credit rating; if it is not Greece it is the Euro, or Spain….and yet the FTSE index hangs in up there!!

Our FTSE Sector analysis confirms and illustrates the current underlying strength of the market. Of 35 sectors our long-term (weekly prices) trend analysis shows –

9 sectors in Stage 1 trends (Basing/accumulation trend)

22 sectors in Stage 2 trends (Uptrend)

4 sectors in Stage 3 trends (Topping trend)

And, significantly, No sector is in a Stage 4 (Downtrend).

Our major concern right now is that that “current underlying strength” may be masking an inherent and serious weakness. It is an aspect which we all need to be mindful of.