Yes….the big short is still on hold

YM emini, NQ emini and VIX daily charts
YM emini, NQ emini and VIX daily charts

US equities closed last week’s trading session in bullish mood once again, with all three of the primary indices exhibiting almost identical price and volume profiles, with the VIX also confirming the current sentiment.

The move high on Friday, was once again a repeat of the price action on Thursday, which saw an initial fall at the open of the physical market promptly reverse during the remainder of the session, with Thursday’s candles for both the NQ and the YM closing with deep wicks to the lower body, and sending a clear signal of bullish intent, which was duly delivered in Friday’s price action. Once again, the open was marked with volatile price action driven by insider stop hunting, before the market was taken higher once again. For the YM emini it was the deep resistance area at 17,860 which was key, and having been breached on Thursday, this then held firm on Friday and provided the requisite platform of support for the move higher.

Longer term, all the major US indices remain rangebound with the NQ Emini moving between the solid platform at 4260 and the less well developed resistance in the 4460 region. For the YM, the well developed platforms of support in the 17,500 and 17,850 are now firmly established, with resistance in the 18,100 now increasingly well defined. A potentially worrying sign on both charts is the price and volume, with both indices rising on falling volume as we move back to test the highs of February and March once again, and suggesting a possible repeat of the last few weeks. Therefore, any breakout into new high ground will need to be accompanied with rising volumes for such a move to be authentic and sustainable.

Finally, moving to the chart of the VIX (on the right), last week was significant with the index moving through the solid platform of support in the 14.00 to close the week at 12.58. Ahead lies the next potential level of support in the 12.00 region, as shown in blue by the accumulation and distribution indicator, and should this be breached, then 11.50 becomes the next logical target which will no doubt reflect US indices testing their own areas of resistance prior to any breakout and continuation of the bullish trend.

By Anna Coulling

Charts are from NinjaTrader and the trading indicators from Quantum Trading.

About Anna 2009 Articles
Hi – my name is Anna Coulling and I am a full time currency, commodities and equities trader. I have been involved in both trading and investing for over fifteen years and have traded many different financial instruments, from options and futures to stocks and commodities. I write and publish articles ( mostly for free ) for UK and international publications on a wide variety of financial issues, and in particular I enjoy helping others learn how to invest and trade.

1 Comment on Yes….the big short is still on hold

  1. Hi Anna.
    I have a question about anomalies and gaps. Often I encounter an anomaly on the weekly chart – a big spread on average volume – then on the daily chart I see there was a big gap (up or down) in one of the sessions during that week and, gap aside, there is no anomaly there. Question is can I really put the gap aside. I mean of course gaps do carry importance in the analysis, but in respect to anomalies, when comparing a gap candle to a non-gap candle is it an apples-to-apples comparison? Or should I expect a gap candle to have a slightly different price-volume relationship, in which case if it looks similar to the non-gap candles then is it in fact an anomaly?
    I hope you can shed light on this.
    Thanks!
    Gil

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