The McMillan Options Strategist Weekly |
By Lawrence G. McMillan |
Published
01/15/2016
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Options
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Unrated
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The McMillan Options Strategist Weekly
The fall in the price of $SPX has continued, adding to the worst start of any year -- ever. As a result, there are severe oversold conditions, and buy signals are pending on many fronts. But few buy signals have been confirmed, and markets can continue to decline precipitously while they are oversold.
$SPX declined to the August-September 2015 lows, and that should represent support. If that level gives way, it could unleash another round of heavy selling. The next support level would be at 1820, which is the October 2014 and April 2014 low.
Equity-only put-call ratios continue to rise, and thus they remain on sell signals. There will not be a buy signal until they peak and roll over.
Market breadth has been terrible, and it continues to be a big problem for this market. Both breadth oscillators remain on sell signals, and they remain in deeply oversold territory.
That brings us to volatility, which has not been nearly as bearish as one might expect. With the market suffering such a large loss since the beginning of the year, I would have thought that $VIX would be much higher. It seems to me that the lackadaisical performance by $VIX is more symptomatic of a lack of fear, and that's certainly not bullish for the market. $VIX is now in an uptrend, which is bearish for stocks as well.
In summary, the oversold conditions continue to build, and they will inevitably lead to buy signals. But oversold rallies are sharp and short-lived. The intermediate-term outlook remains bearish.
Lawrence G. McMillan is the author of two best selling books on options, including Options as a Strategic Investment, and also publishes several option trading newsletters.
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