Much of the time when the market has had bad days as of late people have pointed to troubles in Greece and Europe as the reason. I decided to isolate the US market a bit to see how much of the selling really could be attributed to Europe’s woes. The top pane of the chart shows closing half-hour readings for the SPY from the market top in the middle of January through Thursday’s close. The bottom pane shows an indicator that measures the movement of the US market from the time Europe is all closed at 11:30 EST until the NYSE closes at 4pm EST.
As you can see, while SPY is still down around 4% from its January highs, the 11:30 – 4:00 SPY broke out Thursday above the January highs.
I haven’t quantified what that may mean for the market moving forward but I’d love to hear others thoughts and interpretations...
3 comments:
Rob,
I think it was Zero Hedge who posted a similar graph showing how the thinly traded overnight markets basically accounted for the whole of the move up from the March 2008 bottom... Now it seems like we witness a reversal of this trend. Food for thoughts...
Sorry, memory played a trick with me, it was only the up leg from Sept 2009 onwards that could be accounted by the overnight trading. This is the post: http://www.zerohedge.com/article/three-month-flat-market-yesif-you-exclude-constant-after-hours-manipulation
I think it has something to do with the euro. The euro hasn't bottomed yet, while the SPX did. Basically the euro markets underperformed, as shown in your graph.
If the euro bottoms (even if temporary), I expect a continuation of the rally for the SPX.
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