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Bullish Signal Has Only Happened 10 Times in the Last 94 Years.

In today’s article by Chris Ciovacco of Ciovacco Capital Management Chris looks at a Bullish Signal that has only happened 10 times in the last 94 Years. Plus 8 charts that show a bullish break upward through resistance. In the first chart, we see 3 points where T-Bonds turn down vs. the S&P 500 (where the blue vertical lines cross) and following each of them, good things happened for the stock market. The most recent one was at the end of 2018.  ~Tim McMahon, editor

Intermediate and Long-Term Looks

Treasury bonds turned down relative to the S&P 500 at important turning points for stocks in 2012, 2016, and 2018; the S&P 500 is shown at the bottom of the chart below as a “risk-on” reference point. The current look of the chart says good things could still happen for stocks relative to bonds.

T-Bonds vs S&P 500

The same concepts apply from a much longer-term perspective when viewing the stock/bond ratio below. The ratio is trying to make a stand near an area that could act as major support and as a potential launching point for stocks relative to bonds. [This chart is inverted compared to the one above.~editor]

Stocks vs Bonds 2005-2019

Rare Long-Term Bullish Signals Around the Globe

Do longer-term setups tell us there is a realistic possibility of stocks continuing to march higher over the next one to five years? You can decide after reviewing the facts in this week’s video.

Baby Steps Away from Fear

Despite very little hard evidence a recession was imminent, market participants have been highly risk-averse in recent months. While many of the charts below still have hurdles to clear, some incremental steps were recently taken away from the Armageddon narrative. Banks are trying to break out from a range that has been in place since February. KBE printed a new multi-month high Monday.

Banks Chart

The Dow Jones Transportation Average still has some work to do, but it has taken some incremental steps and recently printed a multi-month high. Transports Chart

Tech stocks relative to consumer staples cleared a trendline that acted as resistance in April, July, and October.Tech vs Defensive

Financial stocks also made some “risk-on” progress relative to more defensive-oriented bonds.

Financial vs Treasuries

A similar “maybe the world is going to stay on its axis” look can be found on the chart showing the performance of the S&P 500 relative to bonds.

S&P 500 vs Treasuries

The trade war contributed to increasing conviction to own lower-volatility sectors. With trade rhetoric having moved into the “toned down” camp in recent weeks, the broader market has made some relative progress.

S&P 500 vs Low Volatility Stocks

 

Monday’s session also featured the S&P 500/corporate bond ratio clearing a trendline that had rejected risk seekers in May, July, and October.

S&P 500 vs Corporate Bonds

 

The Market Has Been Providing Factual Clues Since Mid-January

The “be open to bullish outcomes” message is not particularly new. In fact, the blurb below comes from a Short Takes posted dated January 21, 2019:

In last week’s CCM stock market video, we noted the slope of the S&P 500’s 200-day moving average told us to keep an open mind about better than expected outcomes in the days, weeks, and months ahead. A recent development on the breadth front also falls into that bullish-open-mind category.

While it is never easy navigating near a major low (December 2018), the market has provided numerous “this does not look like a bear market” and “this does not look like a recession is underway” clues since the rare breadth thrust that was covered on January 21:

This Never Happened In The 1974, 2001, And 2008 Bear Markets

Rare Bullish Shift In P&F Buy Signals

Learning From The 1998, 2002, 2009, 2011, And 2016 Stock Market Lows

An Extremely Rare Move In Bonds, How Have Stocks And Bonds Performed In The Past?

What Typically Happens When These Charts Flip?

Are Institutions Selling Into This Rally?

Monthly Breadth:  Dark Clouds Or A Ray Of Hope?

History Says Stocks Could Rocket Higher Over The Next Two Years

2019 Market Action Points To Positive Long-Term Outcomes

Are National Financial Conditions Saying The Stock Market Is In Big Trouble?

Bulls Trying To Make A Stand

History Says Stocks Can Perform Very Well After Big Oil Shocks

Bulls Have Setups In Place For Monster Breakout

The Road Ahead May Be Brighter Than Expectations

Similar Drops In ISM Manufacturing Data

The Six Most Powerful Charts On Wall Street

Demographic Sweet Spot Says Bull Market Could Last Until 2035

Bulls Still Have Support For Upside Breakout

History Says Stocks Could Still Soar To Unimaginable Heights

Volatility is a Normal Part of All Trends

As outlined in the posts above dated between January 21 and November 4, the market and economy have provided numerous reasons to keep an open mind about better than expected outcomes. Now that stocks are near an all-time high, it can be easy to forget all the volatility that took place between those two dates. The moral of the story is even IF really good things happen in the weeks, months, and years ahead, we can expect a ton of volatility and scary headlines along the way. We will continue to take it day by day with an open mind about all outcomes, from wildly bullish to wildly bearish.

You might also like these articles from Chris Ciovacco:

 

About Chris Ciovacco

Chris Ciovacco has been serving investors for over 17 years. He is a regular contributor to Financial Sense, Seeking Alpha, and Safehaven. Mr. Ciovacco has been quoted in several media outlets, including the Dow Jones Wire Service, MarketWatch, Fox Business News, the Atlanta-Journal Consitution, and Nasdaq.com. Chris Ciovacco began his investment career with Morgan Stanley in Atlanta in 1994. With a focus on global macro investing, Chris uses both fundamental and technical analysis to assist in managing risk while looking for growth opportunities around the globe in all asset classes.

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