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Here is one of those sporadic posts, I'm going back to my first post on this thread because I think it's important. I've just copied this from the website link in my first post;
NYSE BULLISH PERCENT
Welcome to the New York Stock Exchange Bullish Percent Index (BPI) page -- a free investing resource from True Market Insiders.
The NYSE BPI chart, above, updates daily. We update the commentary whenever the NYSE BPI signals an important change in the stock market.
September 2, 2021 ~ Chris Rowe
This Recent Change Is: A reversal from an O-column to an X-column. This means the direction of the indicator is UP. It means the most recent trend is bullish, with demand in control of the market. More and more stocks moving to buy signals (breaking above resistance levels).
Date of Change: September 2, 2021.
Number of Days Since Previous Change: 49 days
*******
This is going to be a confusing one, for some people.
VERY LONG-TERM: The underpinnings of the very long-term global financial market position -- the VERY BIG picture -- are very bullish. Of course we can have swings up and down in the next smaller picture which is the...
LONG-TERM: You can see, in the NYSE BPI, the "sell signal" which is lower lows than the most recent O-column made.
INTERMEDIATE-TERM: We have reversed up where demand is in control. We will see if the intermediate-term bullish trend can continue up and then create a confirmation of a bullish long-term trend but that still has yet to happen. Therefore, even though we are seeing intermediate-term bullishness and can run some bullish plays here, we must be aware that the long-term trend hasn't yet repaired.
That means, we aren't super convinced there will be bullish followthrough without a big sell-off to "wash out" the scared money, which would be a painful but healthy thing for the bulls in the long-term.
WHAT'S THE SIGNAL?
What we are seeing is an intermediate-term move higher, which tells us demand has taken control of the stock market -- for now. The column change to X's means the intermediate-term (weeks to months) breadth has gotten significantly stronger and we'll look for followthrough into the larger, long-term, trend.
Until then, the longer-term signal (months to years) remains in question. It's critically important that investors understand this. And know this isn't some tea-leave reading that tells us what may happen int he future. It's exactly what is currently happening right now.
The longer-term signal is actually bearish, where more and more stocks have been participating in the downside moves of the stock market while fewer and fewer stocks are participating in the upward moves in the stock market.
With that being said, the majority of stocks are in fact bullish. If this seems confusing, reread what I wrote and understand the difference between the fact that most stocks look bullish while the recent trend is a weakening one.
I circled another time when the NYSE BPI looked similar to today's pattern, which was back in the summer of 2018.
That was followed by a huge market decline, circled in blue.
It was devastating for short-term investors and tough for long-term investors to endure. We aren't saying history will repeat because we don't predict/forecast and it might not repeat itself but when we consider the probabilities... consider this a tornado watch on an otherwise beautiful day.
You can create a Bullish Percent Index for any group of stocks, like the 500 stocks in the S&P 500, the 2,800 New York Stock Exchange stocks, or the stocks that comprise sectors of the stock market like the Semiconductors sector or the Textile & Apparel sector.
What's important, now that we've covered the general market risk and condition by viewing the NYSE BPI, is to have a strong focus on the sub-sectors of the stock market. We analyze the 41 sub-sectors and decide which ones should be bought by looking at the BPIs for each sector, and the Relative Strength of each sector. This is done using the Sector Prophets Pro platform.
We love this "granddaddy of all technical indicators" (the BPI) because it's basically where we got the name of our firm: "True Market Insiders". It shows us the TRUE MARKET, while popular moving averages like the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ, NYSE Composite, etc. can be very deceiving. For example, popular market averages has been breaking new highs all year even though stocks have actually been very weak.
The deception we've seen in 2021 is the biggest deception I've ever seen in an up market (it's very common at market lows). To describe this deception in my classes, I typically reference the deception in the second half of 1998, when the major averages continued to break highs, while most stocks were actually trading lower. I'll have to start referencing 1998 and 2021, going forward.
We are disciplined technical analysts and so we don't predict or forecast. But I will point out that, although the current intermediate-term market condition is bullish (net of more and more stocks breaking highs) the long-term picture is bearish until we see more bullish confirmation.
But the biggest longest-term trend, which can be seen in the global financial markets (including U.S. stocks, International stocks, Commodities, Fixed Income, Currencies and Cash), paints a very bullish picture. It's just that the next smaller trends might include several months of decline before reversing back up and continuing the biggest trend higher.
A BIT ABOUT THIS INDICATOR
The New York Stock Exchange BPI is, as I mentioned, the granddaddy of all technical indicators. It can tell us a lot about the stock market from the current risk to current direction of strength (whether the demand side or the supply side is getting stronger). The indicator as a whole gives us longer-term guidance. But there's a longer-term picture and an intermediate-term picture.
I'll sum that up very quickly and clearly for you, and in today's context.
THE POINT AND FIGURE CHART STYLE WE VIEW IT ON: The bottom shows the years (visible: 2014 - 2021). The numbers within the chart (within the X's and O's) represent what month it was when that box was filled.
When it's going up in a meaningful way (current settings are 2% box size), X's are drawn on the grid, creating an "up-column" of X's. When it reverses back down (in this case, by more than 6%), we move to the next column over to the right and start drawing O's, one below the next, creating a down-column. It's that simple.
We only plot the chart when there's significant up or down movement so it actually stays the same more often than it changes. Some years are more active than others, which is why you see some years have a few column changes and others have many.
NYSE BULLISH PERCENT
Welcome to the New York Stock Exchange Bullish Percent Index (BPI) page -- a free investing resource from True Market Insiders.
The NYSE BPI chart, above, updates daily. We update the commentary whenever the NYSE BPI signals an important change in the stock market.
September 2, 2021 ~ Chris Rowe
This Recent Change Is: A reversal from an O-column to an X-column. This means the direction of the indicator is UP. It means the most recent trend is bullish, with demand in control of the market. More and more stocks moving to buy signals (breaking above resistance levels).
Date of Change: September 2, 2021.
Number of Days Since Previous Change: 49 days
*******
This is going to be a confusing one, for some people.
VERY LONG-TERM: The underpinnings of the very long-term global financial market position -- the VERY BIG picture -- are very bullish. Of course we can have swings up and down in the next smaller picture which is the...
LONG-TERM: You can see, in the NYSE BPI, the "sell signal" which is lower lows than the most recent O-column made.
INTERMEDIATE-TERM: We have reversed up where demand is in control. We will see if the intermediate-term bullish trend can continue up and then create a confirmation of a bullish long-term trend but that still has yet to happen. Therefore, even though we are seeing intermediate-term bullishness and can run some bullish plays here, we must be aware that the long-term trend hasn't yet repaired.
That means, we aren't super convinced there will be bullish followthrough without a big sell-off to "wash out" the scared money, which would be a painful but healthy thing for the bulls in the long-term.
WHAT'S THE SIGNAL?
What we are seeing is an intermediate-term move higher, which tells us demand has taken control of the stock market -- for now. The column change to X's means the intermediate-term (weeks to months) breadth has gotten significantly stronger and we'll look for followthrough into the larger, long-term, trend.
Until then, the longer-term signal (months to years) remains in question. It's critically important that investors understand this. And know this isn't some tea-leave reading that tells us what may happen int he future. It's exactly what is currently happening right now.
The longer-term signal is actually bearish, where more and more stocks have been participating in the downside moves of the stock market while fewer and fewer stocks are participating in the upward moves in the stock market.
With that being said, the majority of stocks are in fact bullish. If this seems confusing, reread what I wrote and understand the difference between the fact that most stocks look bullish while the recent trend is a weakening one.
I circled another time when the NYSE BPI looked similar to today's pattern, which was back in the summer of 2018.
That was followed by a huge market decline, circled in blue.
It was devastating for short-term investors and tough for long-term investors to endure. We aren't saying history will repeat because we don't predict/forecast and it might not repeat itself but when we consider the probabilities... consider this a tornado watch on an otherwise beautiful day.
You can create a Bullish Percent Index for any group of stocks, like the 500 stocks in the S&P 500, the 2,800 New York Stock Exchange stocks, or the stocks that comprise sectors of the stock market like the Semiconductors sector or the Textile & Apparel sector.
What's important, now that we've covered the general market risk and condition by viewing the NYSE BPI, is to have a strong focus on the sub-sectors of the stock market. We analyze the 41 sub-sectors and decide which ones should be bought by looking at the BPIs for each sector, and the Relative Strength of each sector. This is done using the Sector Prophets Pro platform.
We love this "granddaddy of all technical indicators" (the BPI) because it's basically where we got the name of our firm: "True Market Insiders". It shows us the TRUE MARKET, while popular moving averages like the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ, NYSE Composite, etc. can be very deceiving. For example, popular market averages has been breaking new highs all year even though stocks have actually been very weak.
The deception we've seen in 2021 is the biggest deception I've ever seen in an up market (it's very common at market lows). To describe this deception in my classes, I typically reference the deception in the second half of 1998, when the major averages continued to break highs, while most stocks were actually trading lower. I'll have to start referencing 1998 and 2021, going forward.
We are disciplined technical analysts and so we don't predict or forecast. But I will point out that, although the current intermediate-term market condition is bullish (net of more and more stocks breaking highs) the long-term picture is bearish until we see more bullish confirmation.
But the biggest longest-term trend, which can be seen in the global financial markets (including U.S. stocks, International stocks, Commodities, Fixed Income, Currencies and Cash), paints a very bullish picture. It's just that the next smaller trends might include several months of decline before reversing back up and continuing the biggest trend higher.
A BIT ABOUT THIS INDICATOR
The New York Stock Exchange BPI is, as I mentioned, the granddaddy of all technical indicators. It can tell us a lot about the stock market from the current risk to current direction of strength (whether the demand side or the supply side is getting stronger). The indicator as a whole gives us longer-term guidance. But there's a longer-term picture and an intermediate-term picture.
I'll sum that up very quickly and clearly for you, and in today's context.
THE POINT AND FIGURE CHART STYLE WE VIEW IT ON: The bottom shows the years (visible: 2014 - 2021). The numbers within the chart (within the X's and O's) represent what month it was when that box was filled.
When it's going up in a meaningful way (current settings are 2% box size), X's are drawn on the grid, creating an "up-column" of X's. When it reverses back down (in this case, by more than 6%), we move to the next column over to the right and start drawing O's, one below the next, creating a down-column. It's that simple.
We only plot the chart when there's significant up or down movement so it actually stays the same more often than it changes. Some years are more active than others, which is why you see some years have a few column changes and others have many.