The Standard and Poors 500 index (SPX) closed today at 5,347, down 100 points or -1.8%. SPX opened the week at 5477, setting up a weekly loss of 2.4%. Trading volume ran above the 50-day moving average (dma) for the last four days of this week. SPX set its recent high at 5670 on 7/16 and today’s close results in a pullback of 5.7%.
VIX, the volatility index for the S&P 500 options, closed today at 23.4% with an intraday high of 29.7%. VIX opened the week at 16.6% and rose as high as 18.5% during the week but spiked up significantly today.
I track the Russell 2000 index with the IWM ETF, which closed today at 209, down 8 points or -3.5%. IWM set its most recent high at 225 on 7/16, leading to a pullback of 7.1% to date.
The NASDAQ Composite index closed today at 16,776, down 418 points or
-2.4%. NASDAQ opened the week at 17,332, setting up a weekly loss of 3.2%. From NASDAQ’s opening high on 7/11, this index has now corrected by 10%. NASDAQ’s trading volume rose above the 50 dma for the last three days of this week.
Traders were hoping for a reduction of the federal discount rate at the FOMC meeting on July 30-31. Markets traded higher after the FOMC announcement on 1/31, but the mood changed after further reflection and the markets traded off significantly over the past two days. The S&P 500 stocks, the NASDAQ Composite stocks and the Russell 2000 small caps all gapped open lower today for large losses.
Trading analysts have traditionally referred to market declines as pullbacks until they reach ten percent, where the term, correction, is employed.
The S&P 500 index broke down through its 50 dma today; the NASDAQ Composite broke through its 50 dma on Wednesday of last week, and the Russell 2000 index found support at its 50 dma today.
Corrections come in different sizes. The correction of February of 2018 was 12%; December 2018 was 20% and the correction in March 2020 was 35% (all measured with the S&P 500 index). It is impossible to predict the severity of this pullback.
The only trades that remain open in my accounts are in the Conservative Income service and my long-term portfolio. Outside of those accounts, it is interesting that my only gains this week were for three earnings announcement trades in the trading group and two trades in the Zero DTE trading service. The irony is that those trades represent the riskier trades of my repertoire. What they have in common is a very short duration.
I think this is a good time to be largely in cash.