The Standard and Poors 500 index (SPX) closed today at 5303, up six points or +0.1%. SPX opened the week at 5233, gaining 1.3% for the week. SPX set a new all-time high on Wednesday, but trading volume has remained below the
50 day moving average (dma) for the past two weeks.
VIX, the volatility index for the S&P 500 options, opened the week at 13.3% but declined all week, closing today at 12%. Normally a declining VIX would accompany a bullish move higher, but below average trading volume doesn’t fit that scenario.
I track the Russell 2000 index with the IWM ETF, which closed today at 208, nearly flat on the day, up 0.07%. IWM opened the week at 206 for a weekly gain of one percent. Normally, the Russell 2000 leads bull markets. Russell is off its high as the S&P 500 hits an all-time high?
The NASDAQ Composite index closed today at 16,686, up 12 points or +0.07%. NASDAQ opened the week at 16,400 for a weekly gain of 1.7 percent. Trading volume spiked well above the 50 dma on Tuesday and stayed high all week.
The old adage, “sell in May and go away” doesn’t seem to fit this year. The S&P 500 stocks are up 5.4% in May. But traders remain skittish, spiking up or down on the latest comments from Powell or one of the other members of the FOMC. Many of the comments appear to be pushing interest rate cuts later in the year, a far cry from three cuts in 2024 that was once the prediction, or the dream, of many on Wall Street.
May has been a great month for the bulls so far, but I have trouble believing the economy is on a solid foundation. I have always attempted to rationally analyze the market, which I suppose reflects my training in the sciences. But I often find myself trading what the market gives me, not what I think the market should be doing. Whether I think our economy is great right now doesn’t really matter. The bulls are running. I am on the train.
The Bulls Are Running
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