Last week

The S&P 500 cash index ($SPX) closed at 2061.02 on Friday, down 47 points for a net weekly loss of 2.23%. That’s the loss from close to close, but the SPX also moved from a high at 2114 to a low at 2045, a decline of 69 points, before we saw a little bounce on Friday (Mar. 27).

In effect, the market gave back almost all the gain it made on the surge from the Fed’s dovish statements around the Open Market Committee report. The large-cap index is now up three points for the year to date. So far in 2015, we are barely marking time.

The broad market is still in an uptrend. The declines have not yet approached the long-term uptrend line; the SPX needs to drop more than 200 points to reach the 100-week moving average, for example. 

That’s fine for long-term investors, but the current short-term price behavior is a bit disturbing for traders. The weekly swings – 2% up and 2% down – are starting to be regarded by traders (and perhaps traded) as bear–market, price action, although we are still in a bull market. At some point, the short-term sentiment may start to take control.

According to Merrill Lynch, US stock funds have lost an estimated $44 billion in outflows since the start of 2015. Obviously not everyone is bullish, and this week “buy the dips” is not looking quite so solid as a trading strategy.

This Week

There will be a lot of conflicting currents at work in the market this week, and the result will likely be increased volatility.

This is a short week with the markets closed on Good Friday, and we also have the end-of-month and end-of-quarter on Tuesday. The usual window dressing may help hold the index up above last week’s low.

The monthly SPX options settle on Tuesday, and there is usually a struggle around the strike prices with the largest volume. And the market will treat the last two days as the start of the normally bullish trading in April – lots of back-and-forth.

The market is also entering the earnings manipulation season, when companies issue leaks and earnings estimates ahead of the actual Q1 earnings reports, which begin April 8. The earnings estimates are lowered as a way of managing expectations, so the actual reports will “beat the street,” as they have, in good times and bad, every year since 1998.

There are also a number of significant economic reports to be released this week, and there are 10 – count them, 10 – speeches scheduled for various Fed governors who have wildly divergent views on what the next step should be. It should be amusing.

Last week, the SPX had four consecutive down days and one small up day (Friday) on light volume – essentially an oversold bounce. The sentiment is negative, but this may change quickly if the money that came out of the market on the selling last week returns to the market immediately.

The first two days will be critical. The index will be determining if the next move will be up or down, and the decision will have an impact that may extend to the following days and weeks. 

The key zone for the SPX this week is 2075-80. A move above that level could push the index up to 2095-2100.

The major short-term support is at 2035. Failure to hold that support could trigger an intermediate-term correction.

Futures

Overnight Sunday (Mar. 29), the S&P500 mini-futures (ESM5) could retest Friday’s Globex low (2041), if overnight trading fails to break above 2056.50. However, 2041 could act as support, and the price could bounce from that level. The overnight action is likely to set the direction for the day sessions.

In the day session, we have economic reports being released at 8:30 am. The ES may gain upside momentum, if the price subsequently moves above 2058. Bad news could move the price down near the 2020-15 zone to shake out the weak hands. In either case, today’s volatility will increase.

SPX Weekly Chart, Mar. 27, 2015

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