The Standard and Poors 500 index (SPX) closed up 35 points today, closing at 6664. SPX opened the week at 6623, setting up a weekly gain of 0.6%. Trading volume ran along the 50 dma all week. SPX is trading within the channel from 6561 to 6705.
VIX, the volatility index for the S&P 500 options, opened the week at 19.5% and climbed as high as 28% this morning but closed today at 20.8%, down 18%. The market has calmed significantly.
I track the movement of the ETF containing the top 100 S&P 500 stocks ranked by beta, SPHB, to monitor the movement of high beta stocks. SPHB closed at 111.1 today, down less than one point or 0.1%. SPHB opened the week at 110 for a weekly gain of one percent. SPHB trading volume ran above average all week with the exception of Thursday.
The NASDAQ Composite index recovered much of last Friday’s collapse, closing at 22,680, up 117 points or 0.5%. NASDAQ opened the week at 22,579, gaining 0.4% for the week. Trading volume ran above the 50 dma most of the week but settled down to the 50 dma today.
Traders opened this week carefully after last Friday’s ugly decline of 2.7%.
The federal government remains closed, eliminating significant economic and unemployment data, leaving traders in the dark in terms of economic and unemployment data.
Last Friday, I suggested three possibilities for this week:
• Will calmer minds dominate trading on Monday morning?
• Will the lower prices be seen as buying opportunities?
• Could the market slide continue lower?
The S&P 500 stocks gave up 187 points last Friday, but they recovered 41% of that loss this week. I take that as a sign of bullish confidence. We aren’t going over the cliff. It just remains a very volatile market.
My advice for next week remains the same: Stay calm and look for opportunities, but don’t force the trade. It doesn’t hurt to take a pause.
