Trump Makes His Choice for White House Press Secretary
The Ratings Continue to Fall Down an Elevator Shaft as the Networks Continue...
NSSF Makes the Right Request on Office of Gun Violence Prevention
Staying on Top May Be Harder Than Getting There in the First Place
Third-Party-Payers Might Be the Real Financial Catastrophe
Will President-elect Trump Deliver on His 11-Point Education Plan?
A Whistleblower's Warning: RFK Jr. Must Address the Missing Migrant Children Crisis at...
Democrats Defend Soviet-Era ‘Myth of Infallibility’
Remembering Corrie ten Boom and the Jews
Trump's Iran Strategy Could End Middle East Wars
Human Smugglers Told to Rush to the Border Before Trump Takes Office
John Brennan’s Criticism of Tulsi Gabbard Contradicts His Own Past
Ridiculous Democrat Calls for 'Shadow Government' to Undermine Trump's Agenda
No, a Bakery Did Not Refuse to Make a Cake for Whoopi Goldberg
Doug Burgum Will Hold Dual Roles in the Trump Administration, and That's Bad...
OPINION

Congress Stimulus Fight Has Market In Suspense

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

After all those earnings reports, the circus in D.C. with Congress ripping into mega-cap growth companies, and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) gathering, Friday’s session came down to progress on the next round of fiscal stimulus. When it looked as if Congress would leave town without any deal, early gains in the market rolled over and began to gather speed to the downside.

Advertisement

Before reaching terminal velocity, word came out that those elected officials would hang around town over the weekend to try to hammer out a package. 

The market reversed, as investors were able to focus on things such as earnings and guidance. 

Follow the bouncing S&P:

  • Opens at 3270 +24 points
  • Slumps to 3220 -49 from the high
  • Rallies to 3741 +51 points from the session low and high of the day

S&P 500


Always Follow Volume

The rebound in the S&P 500 was impressive on Friday, but volume was the tell-tale sign. A ton of buying happened in the last thirty minutes of trading. This was a Friday session with a lot of unknowns going into the weekend, but fence-sitters panicked. Many had no choice as the tenure of the rally began to change. It’s easy to look at this market from the March lows, and think the rally is overdone.

However, looking at major indices’ year-to-date and event, the NASDAQ rally could claim more to the upside, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) was still in the negative.

I was extremely impressed with Friday’s volume, which was the highest of any session of the month.  The session was the perfect proxy for the rally. On the way down, stocks drifted on exceptionally light volume. When the needle turned up, buyers emerged.

To see the chart, click here.

Key Technical Hurdles

There was some resistance around 3,276 for the S&P. The big test comes with a retest of the new high at 3,386.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is just a basket case with too many oil stocks, the wrong tech stocks, and no Amazon (AMZN), Facebook (FB), or Alphabet (GOOGL). Nuts! 

Advertisement
  • The index sees its big upside test at 27,572
  • There is no resistance for the NASDAQ Composite

Fund Flows

Funds continue to migrate to bond funds at the expense of equities, although the rate of rotation is slowing. If this ever reverses, the stock market would go parabolic.

To see the chart, click here.

Portfolio Approach

We are going long a Consumer Discretionary stock this morning and lowering Cash to 1 in our Hotline Model Portfolio. If you are not currently a subscriber to our Hotline service, contact your account representative or email Info@wstreet.com to get started today.


Today’s Session

Eli Lilly (LLY) announced a late stage Phase III trial of its Covid-19 vaccine in conjunction with nursing homes.  This is a huge step and the first that has focused on the most vulnerable part of the population.

Winners are Winning Big

Back on June 5th, there were 189 winners in the S&P 500 with an average gain of less than 13%. Coming into the week, there are 189 winners in the S&P 500 with an average gain of 20%.

Winners keep running.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos