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The Wagner Daily ETF Report For July 12
By Deron Wagner | Published  07/12/2010 | Stocks | Unrated
The Wagner Daily ETF Report For July 12

Stocks wrapped up the holiday-shortened week with a fourth straight day of gains, but now must contend with an abundance of overhead supply and resistance levels in the coming days. Last Friday, the broad market spent most of the session drifting in a sideways range, then edged higher in the final hour of trading. The Nasdaq Composite gained 1.0%, the S&P 500 0.7%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average 0.6%. Small and mid-caps showed relative strength, as they often do during recoveries off the lows. The Russell 2000 and S&P Midcap 400 indices advanced 1.5% and 1.0% respectively. All the main stock market indexes closed at their best levels of the day and week.

As was the case with all four days of last week's gains, turnover was lighter in both exchanges. Total volume in the NYSE eased 25%, while volume in the Nasdaq limped in 23% lighter than the previous day's level. In both exchanges, volume was well below 50-day average levels. When downtrending markets are bouncing off their lows, one of the most important elements to determining the longevity of a recovery is the volume that accompanies the rallies. Unfortunately for the bulls, declining volume in every one of last week's "up" days tells us mutual funds, hedge funds, and other market-moving institutions remain on the sidelines, and apparently are not yet convinced. Until that changes, we remain quite suspicious of the viability of a substantial market bottom presently being formed.

While the daily chart interval is typically the main timeframe used in our daily technical analysis, the longer-term weekly charts have the benefit of removing the noise, and enabling one to more clearly see the "big picture" of the dominant trend. Case in point is the current pattern of U.S. Dollar Bull Index (UUP). On the daily chart, it's easily apparent that UUP has been in pullback mode for the past month, and has fallen below support of its 50-day moving average. However, a quick glance at the weekly chart shows that UUP has retraced perfectly to support of its primary uptrend line, which has been in place all year. Take a look:



One elementary tenet of technical analysis is traders should always assume a firmly established trend will remain intact, until the price action proves otherwise. Furthermore, the longer a trend has been intact, the more likely the prevailing trend will continue. In the case of UUP, the uptrend on the weekly chart has been in place for approximately seven months. Conversely, the downtrend on the daily chart has only been in effect for just over a month. As such, there are greater odds of UUP bouncing off support of its weekly uptrend line and resuming its dominant uptrend than it continuing lower from here. Nevertheless, our protective stop is in place at the right level, below last week's low, just in case a major change of sentiment sets in.

Last Friday, Market Vectors Gold Miners (GDX) perfectly triggered our initial short entry point, as it bounced to probe above resistance of its 50-day moving average on an intraday basis, then closed below it. The "overcut" above the obvious level of resistance triggered buy stop orders for the bulls, and provided a positive reward-risk ratio for traders to initiate new short positions as well. Below is the daily chart of GDX:



The double top from last month's failed breakout (marked by the dashed horizontal line) has created a substantial amount of overhead supply. This should make it difficult for GDX to recover back above its 50-day moving average, which has now converged with resistance of its 20-day exponential moving average as well. If GDX breaks below last week's "swing low" support level, it will coincide with a break of the weekly uptrend line as well. If that occurs, an intermediate-term downtrend in GDX will likely develop, thereby benefiting our new short position in GDX. Helping to confirm the sudden reversal of sentiment is the pattern of SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), which failed several attempts to break out in June, then broke down on July 1.

Quarterly corporate earnings season officially kicks off today, with the release of the latest numbers from Alcoa (AA) after the close. Along with a plethora of other companies, Intel (INTC) reports tomorrow, JP Morgan Chase (JPM) and Google (GOOG) on Thursday, and Bank of America (BAC) on Friday. Be prepared for higher than usual volatility, as the market reacts to and digests the initial batch of key numbers. If anything is to improve market sentiment enough to enable last week's rally to develop into more than just a bounce, a slew of better-than-expected earnings reports could do it. Nevertheless, most professional traders will be taking a "wait and see" approach before placing any big bets.

Deron Wagner is the Founder and Head Trader of both Morpheus Capital LP, a U.S. hedge fund, and MorpheusTrading.com, a trader education firm.