Member Market Reports

Free CNBC Reports
Search


Advanced Search
Article Options
 »  Home  »  Free CNBC Reports 2006  »  October 2006  »  October 16 2006 CNBC Report


October 16 2006 CNBC Report
By Bill McLaren | Published  12/20/2004 | October 2006 | Unrated
October 16 2006 CNBC Report

mclarenreport.com.au

CNBC EUROPE

˜

LET?S LOOK AT THE FTSE 100 DAILY CHART

˜

˜

Two weeks ago the index was up to the ?obvious? resistance of the previous high.˜ I indicated whenever a market moves against the ?obvious? it creates an opportunity.˜ If the index is going to hold the fast trend the move down from the ?obvious? will only be one to three days and there will likely be a fast move up since this would indicate the previous weak trend up was accumulation.

You can see two weeks ago the index corrected only two days.˜ The index is again up to an ?obvious? resistance.˜ So we are looking at the same circumstance-the index is now up to the ?obvious? resistance and if it is going to trend above this level there should only be a counter trend move of one to four days.˜˜˜˜˜

˜

LET?S LOOK AT THE S&P DAILY CHART

˜

˜

This chart is a beautiful example of a blowoff trend and is currently in the exhaustion phase of this trend.˜ Last week we looked at how each correction or counter trend move down was less in price and time than the previous.˜ You can also see the lows are not reaching the previously established trend lines.˜ When you can see three ascending trendlines it almost always indicates the final thrust up.˜ If you would look at the NASDAQ 100 or Comp the three ascending trendlines is very clear.˜ Since this is an exhaustion phase of this trend any indication of weakness will start a consolidation or sideways pattern.˜ The first indication this is occurring will be when the index breaks the previous swing high in this instance at 1354 in the S&P 500 Index.˜ Again I don?t anticipate a severe correction and could only correct 31 to 36 points but should take 30 or 45 days on the side before the next trend immerges.˜ Right now it looks like there will be one more leg up after this consolidation occurs and that leg will complete the bull campaign.

˜

LET?S TAKE A QUICK LOOK AT GOLD

˜

˜

Last week I thought Gold looked vulnerable to a spike down.˜ Friday the market gapped up.˜ If that gap up is not followed by a gap down or strong move down now, then the market is not vulnerable to a fast move down and my analysis was wrong.˜ If it does leave that gap up on Friday as an ?island reversal? by gapping down, it would indicate the gap up was an exhaustion of the bulls. But that is the only bearish resolution to this pattern I can see and that needs a large gap down to confirm a probability of moving down.˜˜˜˜

˜

CNBC ASIA

˜

LET?S LOOK AT THE HANG SENG DAILY CHART

˜

˜

We were looking for this index to accelerate up out of this pattern.˜ In order for that to occur the price needed to stay on top of the previous swing high of September 25th.˜ Unfortunately there was the North Korean news that brought in a temporary reaction down through that price level that needed to show support.˜ The move down was destined to be temporary, as it had nothing to do with economic activity.˜ Then two days later the index did successfully test that level but I don?t know if we should ignore the reaction to news that broke that important level. Without that one day break of support this would be an extremely bullish pattern.˜ There was also a large gap up on Friday that reversed back into the previous days range indicating possibly some kind of exhaustion. If it is going to trend up from this sideways consolidation it needs to do it now, today and eliminate the possibility of Friday being an important exhaustion.˜˜˜˜˜˜

˜

LET?S LOOK AT TWO U.S. STOCK INDEXES

˜

˜

The S&P 500 is currently in an exhaustion phase of this trend.˜ This is obvious because each correction is smaller than the previous correction and you can see three ascending trendlines, which is also a signature of an exhaustion move up or down.˜ When this index breaks the price of a previous swing high at 1354, it will be giving evidence the trend is changing. That break should be followed by either a lower high or a marginal new high that fails to follow through. This evidence is critical to determining the validity of my forecast.˜ In this instance that change in trend will be from a fast trend into a sideways pattern for about 30 or 45 days and the correction will be small at 31 to 36 points.˜ At that juncture the trend will either resume for another 60 or 90 days and complete the bull campaign or there will be a quick failed rally and reversal.˜

˜

The next chart is the NASDAQ and the three ascending trendlines are much more obvious.˜ The point being this is not the start of a strong drive up but the start of the completion of a strong drive up and an exhaustion of the trend.˜ I would expect the same resolution to this style of trend as I expect for the S&P 500 index.˜

˜

˜

Last week I thought gold may be vulnerable.˜ If the index cannot gap down today and leave Friday?s rally as an exhaustion, then the index will no longer be vulnerable to a fast decline. Now there is a false break low followed by a higher low and a gap up out of the higher low.˜ Unless Friday can be proven to be an exhaustion move up the likelihood of a decline is small.˜˜˜˜˜˜ ˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜ ˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜˜

˜


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 10 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