a) Complete this capitulation and reverse upwards very hard, or
b) Drop to zero and close its doors for good.
At this point I wouldn’t rule out either one. If you’re of the belief that it is more likely to reverse hard than go to zero then you’re probably in the minority. You may also find the following charts interesting. They’re 5-minute charts of the legendary reversal bottoms. Whether you’re long, short, or sidelined you may want to study them for a few minutes – in case it doesn’t drop to 0.
September 1, 1998
July 24, 2002
October 10, 2002
They didn't all happen in 1 day. Here's 3/12 and 3/13/2003.
One common theme I see is that once the bottom was established the uptrend stayed in tact. October 10th 2002 saw a brief and relatively minor break of price support just before noon. Other than that all the rallies held their ground throughout the day. In other words, if you're trading intraday, a loose trailing stop may not be a bad idea. A sharp break of support seems unlikely if the market is going to put in it's next legendary reversal.
Love me some CBI = 31!
ReplyDeleteIs the CBI a new record? If so, by how much?
ReplyDeleteMarc
There was no broad based rally, so I have to say today's action was just a stay at motel for the weekend on the way towards around 750(S&P).
ReplyDeleteCapital preservation is the key.
http://tinyurl.com/5y4ku9
ReplyDeleteCBI was 52 in July 2002 !!
Another common theme from your charts is that the TICK lower channel is trending upwards in all charts.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing!