This Combination Makes Trading Next Week VERY Dicey

I think just about everyone is on "4600 watch" on the S&P 500 and I can't blame them.  It's a big level.  That was our high in July and now the subsequent recovery has returned the S&P 500 to the most critical price resistance of 2023:

At the time of this writing, the S&P 500 is a dozen points away from this key level, with an earlier high above 4600.  A false breakout on the close today, accompanied by that daily PPO rolling over isn't a great look and combination, knowing how important this breakout would.  But even a breakout doesn't exactly suggest it's an all-clear-ahead signal.  That PPO is suggesting momentum is seriously slowing right now.  If we do see a breakout, then be on the lookout for a reversing candle at some point next week.  That very well could precede a bout of selling, perhaps as much as 3-5%.

In addition to a few technical reasons to be cautious, next week isn't a great one for the S&P 500 historically either.  Should we struggle the next 1-2 weeks, there is a silver lining.  The December 22 through December 31 period is extremely bullish as you can see from the daily annualized returns on the S&P 500 (since 1950) below:

  • December 21:  +71.54%
  • December 22:  +31.82%
  • December 23:  +16.67%
  • December 24:  +27.39%
  • December 25:  Market Closed - Christmas holiday
  • December 26:  +126.94%
  • December 27:  +40.72%
  • December 28:  -10.07%
  • December 29:  +45.11%
  • December 30:  +29.78%
  • December 31:  +38.5%

For the entire Dec 21-31 period, the annualized return of +40.21% is more than 4x the average S&P 500 return of roughly 9% since 1950.  S&P 500 prices rarely see a cumulative loss during these final 11 days of the year.

I believe it's critical to fully understand the key historical trends on the S&P 500.  At EarningsBeats.com, we continue to offer a FREE 7-page PDF report on critical S&P 500 historical trends that every investor/trader should be aware of.  To download your FREE copy, CLICK HERE!

Happy trading!

Tom

 Previous Article Next Article