drill4oil78 said:
Farmer @ Johnsongrass, TX said:
S&P 500 didn't give the Market a Closing Low below 2,344.6. The Bull continues to run.
As for the NAS, it was way over bought for a long time and maybe now it can stay contained within itself moving forward.
This is not over ... We will test the 2300 area again before this is over. Hopefully it holds and I think it will and the long term bull stays intact. It will take many months to repair the damage in this market. Every bear market has tremendous rallies in short periods of time and just as fast declines off those rallies.
From a technical standpoint the 2,300 area may be revisited; however, that's a short term play and my positions are more longer term entrenched to avoid in & out gyrations.
As a general rule, Bear Market declines in excess of 20% begin in advance of the development of recessionary conditions. Recessions are accompanied by rising unemployment, which creates stress on the ability of consumers to generate the income necessary to support discretionary spending. Corporate earning power recedes along with cash dividends as the economy contracts. Investors respond by selling stocks, and in a severe recession declines can far exceed the 20% Bear threshold. The size of the decline is usually correlated to the severity of the recession.
Today, all economic indicators used by the FED continue to reflect a strong economy. Jerome Powell pointed out in his press conference the FED may not reach its goal of 2% inflation this year. Powell should stop using the Dot Plot as it means nothing in an environment where an interest rate is greater than zero. There is no recession visible yet. Pre-recession indicators of accelerating inflation, payroll growth, rising unemployment claims, inverted yield curve and leading economic indicators suggest that risk of recession remains low over the next several months. (Trade wars do need to be watched) All measurable data points are solid and strong, housing, labor, manufacturing and the Bull continues to be intact.