I believe we haven't got out of the last bear market , and put it forward that we have just been through an extended bounce , matched by attempts to expand the cycle . This means I believe the last run that surpassed 6500 was a bull trap and had called for friends to sell into the market .
Interested to see who thinks we are in the beginning of a bear market.
Myself I think we are, although it may not last that long, time will tell I guess.
Just looking at the XJO price chart:
Daily chart: just under the 61.8% fib. retracements level
Weekly chart: Sitting on the uptrend trendline
Next week ?
There are many takes on "When".
Here are a few.
One thing is for sure that its currently (XJO) in a corrective phase.Return of the bear in my own view will see these recent highs remain unchallenged for some time.
Hi Tech, I'm more of a fundamental trader, but do pick up useful snippets from chartists such as yourself. I was wondering whether your stock selection, as well as entry and exit point decisions are different in a bear market. Alternatively do you you apply the same principles in the same way as in a bull market?
I posted this chart on another thread. I won't call it yet, but there are many signs to suggest all is not that rosy! Start with this S&P 500 chart. Can't find anything bullish about that....
US recession 'could hurt Aust resources sector'
Posted 3 hours 50 minutes ago
A leading economic analyst says Australia's strong resources sector could suffer if the United States economy slides into recession.
Economists say data to be released this week including US retail sales, housing starts and business inventories, may see the Dow Jones Index dragged even lower.
Craig James from Commonwealth Securities says the slowdown in the United States will have a follow-on effect for Australian shares, particularly the resources sector.
"If the US economy slows and there's less spending by consumers and businesses, that means there's less demand for say Chinese manufactured goods," he said.
"If the Chinese economy sees less demand that means less resource demand from China for Australia."
The New York Stock Exchange plummeted almost 2 per cent on Friday.
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