Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Market summary for May 27th

Today started positive in all 3 Indexes, the Dow, the Nasdaq and the S&P 500, but they all ended down today, giving up much of yesterdays gains on about the same, to slightly higher volume. The volume is still low considering the 50 day Moving average Volume. The Nasdaq continues to flirt with trying to staying above the 200 day Moving average, as it has stayed above the 200 Day MA for 4 days in a month. For the past 2 days it has managed to stay above it, which currently crosses the axis at 1,700. Today's close was at 1,748. Tech's have led the Market up for the past 3 months, but seem to have staled out at the 200 day MA the past 2 weeks.

The Dow closed today at 8,300. The 200 day MA crosses the axis now at 8,900. While there still is room for the Dow to climb, it too has stalled the past 12 days in a tight range of between 8,200 and 8,600. The Dow's volume has been below the 50 day MA volume 19 out of the past 23 days. We need to have a breakout either above or below 8,200 and 8,600 to see where the next trend is going to take us. To me this and especially the 200 Day MA line are is going to limit the upside move.

The S&P 500 closed today at 893. The 200 day MA crosses the axis at 930. We reached a climax on this Index on May 8th when the Index closed at 930. Since then we have taken a step down. The range here is from 885 to 913. This 200 day MA is dropping at a rate of about 15 points a week. So if we stay exactly where we are now, the 200 day will be pressing on the Index to go lower in 2 weeks. That should take us past the Unemployment numbers for May as well as the GM bankruptcy to determine the impact on the market.

Treasuries rose sharply today as the curve between 2 year and 10 year was the steepest on record on concern surging sales of U.S. debt will overwhelm the Federal Reserve’s efforts to keep borrowing costs low. Ten-year notes have lost 10.3 percent this year, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes, while 30-year bonds have lost 27.5 percent. The unprecedented government borrowing has created concern about a rise in consumer prices. Policy makers have expanded the Fed’s balance sheet to $2.2 trillion while excess reserves at U.S. banks have increased to $896.3 billion.

The VIX closed up and closed at 32.36, while the Put to Call ratio closed at 0.86, up from yesterday's close of 0.72 for the day.

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