Member Market Reports

Free CNBC Reports
Search


Advanced Search
Article Options
 »  Home  »  Free CNBC Reports 2006  »  August 2006  »  August 28 2006 CNBC Report


August 28 2006 CNBC Report
By Bill McLaren | Published  12/20/2004 | August 2006 | Unrated
August 28 2006 CNBC Report

CNBC EUROPE

˜

LET?S LOOK AT THE FTSE DAILY CHART

˜

˜

There are a few things that are notable about the daily chart.˜ The index is still being held back by the ?last low before the final high.?˜ There are now three thrusts up after the low.˜ The last thrust may not yet be complete.˜ But anytime an index shows three thrusts below a high it is at risk of reversing.˜ Unlike any of the previous rallies after a high was established at anytime in this bull campaign, the first correction had gone deeply into the rally as illustrated by the red arrows.˜ So because of those large retracements I consider this a weak trend.˜ If the index can show a low on top of the recent highs then it could be going into a vertical move up and my caution would be wrong. Also because each of the corrections down has been smaller it may have to exhaust the support with a spike up. But for now I believe the index is at risk of a run back to test the July low after this pattern is complete.˜ This last high was 90 days from low and is a cycle for strong resistance.˜ The more significant 90-day cycle is 11 September and could set up as an important high if it can either exhaust or move sideways into that date. So remember, even though it cannot ?get legs? you can also see the moves down have been less and less in points so the character of this trend since the June low could still show an exhaustion rally or spike up into the first week in September and then I?d be worried about a sharp rundown. For the stock indexes I believe this will be a year of consolidation and 2008 will be a big bull year.˜˜˜˜

˜

NOW LET?S LOOK AT THE S&P DAILY CHART

˜

˜

You can see there are also three thrusts upward below the high as in the FTSE only this is currently holding on top of the previous high.˜ Since we are looking for this to become a sideways pattern that means this rally can go to between ¢ of the range down, which it is now moving against, and up to a ª of extension of the last range up.˜ So now that the index is within that zone of price resistance we can look for a high. Unfortunately it is a large 53 point range and that is the best I can do for now.˜˜ But because the consensus became so bearish during June and July I believe their needs to see some further distribution before a correction. This current resistance is 90 calendar days from a low but the more meaningful 90-day cycle would be out to September 12th.˜ Notice how there was a wide range down on Wednesday and no follow through to the downside on Thursday and Friday showed a weak rally.˜ Breaking Thursday?s low after a weak rally of one to three days would be an indication of lower prices but not necessarily a run back to the July low yet, we still need more time to expire. It is also sitting in a strong position resting on top of the previous high so as with the FTSE a spike up is possible. Volume is drying up as it does this time every year. But even in view of that seasonality there is still vulnerability to a few wide range days down, I?ve learned not to make excuses for volume (it is what it is). So this week let the index show the direction-looks to me like up into September 12 but it needs to get by this light volume week.

˜

˜

CNBC ASIA

˜

LET?S LOOK AT THE TOPIX DAILY CHART

˜

˜

Most markets will run out a one, two and three year cycles numerous times throughout a decade.˜ This appears to be such an instance.˜ This chart is posted on my web site so you can study it further.˜ The one-year cycle breaks into 1/8th and 1/3rd in ?time? just as we do with the price of ranges.˜ This leaves September 3 to 6 and October 3 to 6 as important vibrations in time.

In order for this pattern of trend to turn into a distribution pattern and show a run down to test the June lows will take more much more time.˜ There are a few other points in time we?ll look at next week.

˜

NOW LETS LOOK AT THE DAILY CHART AND THE PATTERN OF TREND

˜

˜

This same analysis we?re now going to look at can be applied to many markets today from the metals to the other stock indexes.˜ IF this is a top forming or if there is going to be a pattern to confirm another run to the lows, the July high needs to be broken with this move down. I?ve drawn on the chart the minimum retracement necessary and the pattern to confirm a move down.˜˜ Normally, if this rally off the June low is going to fail, the rally will have three thrusts below the high and large retracements because the move up needs to be weak if it is a distribution pattern. So far there are two thrusts since the June low and one deep retracement.˜ There needs to be another fairly deep retracement. If this current move down can hold a small retracement and not move down below the July high, then there is something much stronger going on than I can see.˜ But once there is another large retracement and a new high above this level as I?ve drawn on the chart, then the index becomes vulnerable to a significant run down but only after that pattern of trend is complete and after the date of 12 September.˜

˜

LET?S TAKE A QUICK LOOK AT COPPER

˜

˜

As with most exhaustion moves this one ended with a 90 calendar day cycle low to high.˜ Now the question has been is the current trading a secondary or lower high to be followed by a fast run down to take back that last leg up.˜ I believe it is but following the huge blow off trend a good deal of distribution needs to take place before a trend reversal can occur.˜ Most distribution patterns don?t test lows as this has not been doing but hanging up above the low struggling each time it makes a move.˜ In the vernacular of my industry it cannot ?get legs?.˜ Sometime around September 12th that will change and any weakness after that date could bring in a breakdown through the June lows.˜˜˜

˜

˜

˜


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.

How would you rate the quality of this article?
1 2 3 4 5
Poor Excellent
Verification:
Enter the security code shown below:
img


Article Series
This article is part 17 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