AT40 = 65.7% of stocks are trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs)
AT200 = 63.2% of stocks are trading above their respective 200DMAs
VIX = 9.2 (was as low as 8.9)
Short-term Trading Call: cautiously bullish

Commentary
The S&P 500 (SPY) burst higher yet again and spent most of the day at or above its upper-Bollinger Band (BB). Technically, the index is getting stretched. Combine that move with a volatility index, the VIX, which barely closed above its all-time low for the second day in a row, and conditions are ripe for a pause and a pullback for the stock market.

A shot straight up so far in 2018 for the S&P 500 (SPY).

 

The volatility index, the VIX, is once again scraping at all-time lows. Note how little time the index typically spends at these low levels.

Given the short amount of time the VIX typically spends at these low levels, I promptly bought a fresh tranche of call options on ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures (UVXY). Per the trading strategy, I plan to sell these calls at the first large spike in volatility. The volatility faders still dominate trading and have been quite effective at grinding volatility back into extremely low levels.

AT40 (T2108), the percentage of stocks trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs), is still struggling to gain momentum and challenge the overbought threshold at 70%. Thus, the S&P 500 is once again outstretching the field. The inability of buyers to expand breadth on the stock market’s latest march higher is a classic AT40 sign of buyer exhaustion for the general stock market. The longer AT40 spends churning below 70%, the less likely it will break into overbought territory before it pulls back. Of course, recall that AT40 can decline for quite some time before the major indices (aka the biggest stocks) decide to follow suit.

The raging bull market has turned the anticipation of pullbacks into a quaint exercise in nostalgia. I am not even changing the short-term trading call and expect the next dip to be quite buyable even if all that awaits around the corner is a pause and another shallow pullback. The coming earnings season is the most likely catalyst for the next pause/pullback.

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