Last Friday I said we should be looking for a short-correction because
the CVI (Climactic Volume Oscillator) was very overbought, and prices
were approaching overhead resistance. There was a very small
correction, but prices kept moving higher, while the CVI zigzagged at
overbought levels. We also observed the STVO (Short-Term Volume
Oscillator) move down from overbought to neutral. This is the kind of
thing that happens in bull markets, and bear market rallys. There is no
guarantee that this bullish behavior will continue, but I suspect that
it will.
Now medium-term indicators are reaching overbought levels -- see the
VTO above and the intermediate-term breadth and volume indicators
below. Clearing this overbought condition will be more difficult than
the short-term clearing was.
Further complicating the issue is the overhead resistance. The market
has reached the resistance line at the same time that internals have
become overbought. A breakout at this time would be a very bullish
sign; however, a real pullback, allowing the buildup of some internal
compression would not necessarily be a bad thing.
Bottom Line: The market has been behaving in a positive manner ever
since it rallied off the March lows. Of course it is possible that the
bullish phase will suddenly fade, but for now I think we are
experiencing a bear market rally that could move the S&P 500 up to
the area of 1000.