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Feb 13 2006 CNBC Report
By Bill McLaren | Published  12/20/2004 | February 2006 | Unrated
Feb 13 2006 CNBC Report

mclarenreport.com.au

CNBC EUROPE

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LETS LOOK AT MY FORECAST FOR THE S&P 500

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Every year I publish a forecast for the coming year.˜ This year called for a high on the 11th of January and a low on the 10th of February.˜ This is not a pretty picture for the low to resume the trend and most world stock indexes are struggling to go up.˜ The current market is very close to the picture I drew when I made up the forecast the first week in January.˜ This forecast was based upon long term cycles so lets see if there are any buyers out there.˜ The past 5 years I have not had to redo a forecast but as I stated when I published this chart, the critical part of the model is now.

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LETS LOOK AT THE S&P DAILY CHART

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You can see the index has been going sideways since the end of November.˜ You can also see the move down since the January 11th high has not been a strong trend and in fact has been a weak move down for 30 days.˜ So the forecast can still materialize, but I need a bit more evidence before concluding this to be fact. It needs to show some volume on the up days this week. I am troubled by the world stock indexes as much as the sloppiness of this index compared to the Mid-cap and Russell. A couple up days with strong volume and the forecast will be OK.˜˜

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NOW LETS LOOK AT THE FTSE 100 WEEKLY CHART

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You can see how the index appears to be running within a defined channel.˜ Technically this offers some probabilities.˜ Most of the time when markets present this picture an important high doesn?t come against the overhead trendline.˜ The market will move to the right of the trendline and show a new high that fails to reach that trendline and that high presents the risk of a trend reversal.˜ I am looking for the US market to explode upward yet most stock markets appear to be struggling against some formidable resistance.˜ My forecast regarding this index is for one smaller drive up to complete this trend and this weekly chart indicates this is possible. Last week we looked at how there have been two complete wave structures since the October low and a third is still possible and if it occurs can complete this entire bull campaign.˜

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CNBC ASIA

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LET?S LOOK AT THE NIKKEI DAILY CHART

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I indicated when the index went to a new high a few weeks back that the index would need to struggle and correct for the next few weeks until it could come back towards the hypothetical trend line I drew on the chart. It needed to allow some ?time? to expire. The previous move up was unsustainable and would need to be consolidated over the next few weeks and that has now occurred.˜ My analysis indicated there were two probabilities from this pattern of trend.˜ Either a large distribution pattern starting now with one or two marginal new high left and rolling into a bear campaign starting in April or the index puts on one more exhaustion leg up that would go to a minimum of 1785 and do it in 90 calendar days from the last low.˜ If the index moves down past the 4th day down, which was this past Friday, it will be a sign of weakness as 4 trading days is the time period for a normal counter trend while in a fast trend. IF that occurs it would bring up the question is this move down a counter trend down or is it a trend down? I can?t answer that question until next week.˜

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LETS LOOK AT THE NIKKEI WEEKLY CHART

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The vertical lines on this chart are 6-month intervals in ?time.?˜ You can see every significant movement either ended or started with this 6-months/one year vibration in time.˜ The next increment is April and also times out with possible short-term cycles for a top.˜ As we?ve discussed prior the 1680 price level is a 100% extension of the 2003/2004 one year leg up. This relationship is very strong resistance but when a market is traveling at this high level of momentum or speed, resistance levels can easily be temporary.˜˜˜

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GOLD

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During the January 23rd report I indicated Gold would be at a risk of a correction starting the 2nd through the 8th of February.˜ Last week I said the correction was starting and would be four days and correct to ª of the range up.˜ The high was on the 2nd of February and the low came on the 4th day down as forecast. But the low price was 3/8th of the range up and very close to the ?obvious? support of the previous high.˜ Each a normal place to find support in these circumstances.˜ The price of 542 (JUNE contract) is still probable even though the low has been on the 4th day down as previously forecast. So I?m still looking for 542 or ª of the exhaustion trend up.˜ If the index exceeds 542 then there is a probability of having completed the bull campaign. Yes I know it is difficult to believe this trend will ever end the way it has been accelerating.˜ This week will be very significant for this market.˜ Next week I may have another forecast.

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Disclaimer: All the reports and content in the entire McLaren Report web site (including this report) are for educational purposes only and do not constitute trading advice nor an invitation to buy or sell securities. The views are the personal views of the author. Before acting on any of the ideas expressed, the reader should seek professional advice to determine the suitability in view of his or her personal circumstances.

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Article Series
This article is part 44 of a 107 part series. Other articles in this series are shown below:
  1. December 18 2006 CNBC Report
  2. December 11 2006 CNBC Report
  3. December 04 2006 CNBC Report
  4. November 27 2006 CNBC Report
  5. November 20 2006 CNBC Report
  6. November 13 2006 CNBC Report
  7. November 06 2006 CNBC Report
  8. October 30 2006 CNBC Report
  9. October 23 2006 CNBC Report
  10. October 16 2006 CNBC Report
  11. October 09 2006 CNBC REPORT
  12. October 02 2006 CNBC REPORT
  13. September 25 2006 CNBC Report
  14. September 18 2006 CNBC Report
  15. September 11 2006 CNBC Report
  16. September 04 2006 CNBC Report
  17. August 28 2006 CNBC Report
  18. August 14 2006 CNBC Report
  19. August 07 2006 CNBC Report
  20. July 31 2006 CNBC Report
  21. July 24 CNBC Report
  22. July 17 2006 CNBC Report
  23. July 10 2006 CNBC Report
  24. June 26 2006 CNBC Report
  25. June 19 2006 CNBC Report
  26. June 12 2006 CNBC Report
  27. June 05 2006 CNBC Report
  28. May 29 2006 CNBC REPORT
  29. May 22 2006 CNBC Report
  30. May 15 2006 CNBC Report
  31. May 08 2006 CNBC Report
  32. May 02 2006 CNBC Report
  33. April 24 2006 CNBC Report
  34. April 18 2006 CNBC Report Europe
  35. April 17 2006 CNBC Report Asia
  36. April 10 2006 CNBC Report
  37. April 03 2006 CNBC Report
  38. March 27 2006 CNBC Report
  39. March 20 2006 CNBC Report
  40. March 13 2006 CNBC Report
  41. March 06 2006 CNBC Report
  42. Feb 27 2006 CNBC Report
  43. Feb 20 2006 CNBC Report
  44. Feb 13 2006 CNBC Report
  45. Feb 06 2006 CNBC Report
  46. Feb 01 2006 CNBC ASIA
  47. Jan 30 2006 CNBC Report
  48. Jan 23 2006 CNBC Report
  49. Jan 16 2006 CNBC REPORT
  50. Jan 09 2006 CNBC Report
  51. Jan 02 2006 CNBC REPORT
  52. Dec 12 2005 CNBC REPORT
  53. Dec 05 2005 CNBC Report
  54. Nov 28 2005 CNBC Report
  55. Nov 21 2005 CNBC Report
  56. Nov 14 2005 CNBC Report
  57. Nov 07 2005 CNBC Report
  58. Oct 31 2005 CNBC REPORT
  59. Oct 24 2005 CNBC REPORT
  60. Oct 17 2005 CNBC Report
  61. Oct 10 2005 CNBC Report
  62. Oct 03 2005 CNBC Report
  63. Sept 26 2005 CNBC REPORT
  64. Sept 19 2005 CNBC Report
  65. Sept 12 2005 CNBC Report
  66. Sept 05 2005 CNBC Report
  67. August 29 2005 CNBC Report
  68. August 22 2005 CNBC Report
  69. August 15 2005 CNBC Report
  70. August 08 2005 CNBC Report
  71. 08-01-2005 CNBC REPORT
  72. July 25 2005 CNBC REPORT
  73. July 18 2005 CNBC REPORT
  74. July 11 2005 CNBC Report
  75. July 04 2005 CNBC Report
  76. June 27 2005 CNBC Report
  77. June 20 2005 CNBC Report
  78. June 13 2005 CNBC Report
  79. June 06 2005 CNBC Report
  80. May 30 2005 CNBC Report
  81. May 23 2005 CNBC Reports
  82. May 16 2005 CNBC Reports
  83. May 09 2005 CNBC REPORT
  84. May 02 2005 CNBC Report
  85. April 25 2005 CNBC Report
  86. April 18 2005 CNBC Report
  87. April 11 2005 CNBC Report
  88. April 04 2004 CNBC Report
  89. March 29 2005 CNBC Report
  90. March 28 2005 CNBC Report
  91. March 21 2005 CNBC Report
  92. March 14 2005 CNBC REPORT
  93. March 07 2005 CNBC Report
  94. February 21 2005 CNBC Report
  95. February 14 2005 CNBC Report
  96. February 07 2005 CNBC Report
  97. January 31 2005 CNBC REPORT
  98. January 17 2005 CNBC REPORT
  99. January 10 2005 CNBC Report
  100. January 03 2005 CNBC REPORT
  101. DEC 20 2004 CNBC REPORT
  102. Dec 13 2004 CNBC Report
  103. Dec 06 2004 CNBC Reports
  104. Nov 29 2004 CNBC Report
  105. Nov 22 2004 CNBC Report
  106. Nov 15 2004 CNBC Report
  107. Nov 1 2004 CNBC Report