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Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Technical warnings pile up on the Nasdaq



Key points:

  • The number of technical warning signs on the Nasdaq exchange continues to increase
  • On that exchange, there have been a large number of days with a split market over the past year
  • The only other times there have been this many protracted warning signs were ahead of peaks in 1990, 2000, and 2007

Warnings continue to pile up

On Tuesday, we saw how more and more stocks are diverging from the Nasdaq 100 index. These performance divergences aren't just isolated to the large stocks in the NDX; they are endemic to the broader Nasdaq exchange.

We looked at some of the warnings on the Nasdaq in April. The trend has continued into this month and, in some cases, has gotten worse. The number of technical warnings keeps rising.

Over the past 100 days, the number of Hindenburg Omens has spiked to the highest level in four years. It monitors conditions analysts have interpreted throughout history as signifying potential market weaknesses.

We use three criteria:

  1. The Nasdaq 100 is above its 50-day moving average
  2. Both new 52-week lows and 52-week highs on the Nasdaq are greater than 2.8% of all advancing and declining issues
  3. The Nasdaq McClellan Oscillator is negative.

When the signal triggers, it highlights a "split" market, which is unhealthy. Multiple signals in a cluster is a worrying sign.

What the research tells us...

Divergences are building across the market, but they're particularly egregious on the Nasdaq exchange and within some indexes like the Nasdaq 100. It is not pound-the-table obvious just yet, but one of the issues is that warnings have been piling up for months and months.

When these conditions have been this pervasive, there have been essentially no instances when the Nasdaq didn't escape a reckoning. It didn't necessarily happen immediately, and several times, the stocks were able to tack on substantial gains in the weeks (or even months) afterward. But it was rare to escape any damage whatsoever.

 

by SentimenTrader

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