SPX opened and traded lower this morning, recovered most of that by noon, and then revisited the lows by late afternoon. But the bulls took control and recovered much of the losses before the close. SPX closed down $17 at $1272 and RUT lost $3 to close at $1159. I find it interesting that RUT led SPX into the market crash, trading much weaker than SPX for several weeks. But now it appears to be leading the market out of the hole. Trading volume continues to decline with 2.4 billion shares of the S&P 500 stocks trading today. Trading volume declined 0.3% on the NYSE and declined 1% on NASDAQ. Volatility, as measured by the VIX (based on SPX) rose over two points today to 28.4%. RVX, based on RUT, closed at 27.7% today, up about one point. Normally RVX runs higher than VIX since it is based on small caps that tend to be more volatile. It is unusual to see VIX and RVX this close to each other.
The Chicago PMI reported 54.4 for August, essentially flat with July at 54.7.
Markets tend to test levels of support a couple of times before rebounding. Of course, the now famous "V-bottoms" of the past couple of years haven't behaved that way. Go back and take a look at the chart around October 15th last year. The rebound out of the low of the correction was steeper than the drop into the hole. So, we have to ask ourselves some questions:
Is this just another V-bottom?
Will we see the markets pull back and test those lows made last week before heading higher?
Or will the market turn over and begin the bearish reversal lower?
I am inclined toward the V-bottom viewpoint. I think the China slowing scare has been over-done. And, of course, all of the hand wringing about the Fed and interest rates adds to the uncertainty, but I don't see their raising rates a quarter point or not raising rates having much of a meaningful effect on the markets.
But the rebound won't be confirmed until SPX can break above $2040. Then we can relax a bit.Until then, remain vigilant.
