Stocks’ short-term rally came to an end this week and the S&P 500 index entered a consolidation along the 4,700 level. Is this a topping pattern?
The S&P 500 index lost 0.35% yesterday, as it fell below the 4,700 price mark following a two-day-long consolidation along Friday’s record high of 4,718.50. The recent rally was not broad-based and it was driven by a handful of tech stocks like Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). The market seems overbought in the short-term and most likely it’s trading within a topping pattern. Today we may see another consolidation or a profit-taking action following worse-than-expected inflation data release (the CPI monthly number came at +0.9% vs. the expected +0.6%).
The nearest important support level is at 4,650-4,675 and the next support level is at 4,600. On the other hand, the resistance level is at 4,700-4,720. The S&P 500 broke below its steep short-term upward trendline, as we can see on the daily chart (chart by courtesy of http://stockcharts.com):
Nasdaq Lost 0.7% on Tuesday
Let’s take a look at the Nasdaq 100 chart. The technology index broke above the 16,000 level recently and it was trading at the new record high. The market accelerated parabolically above its short-term upward trendline. But yesterday it lost 0.7% and closed below that trendline. The resistance level remains at 16,400, and the short-term support level is at 16,000, among others, as we can see on the daily chart:
Apple’s Further Consolidation And Microsoft’s Potential Topping Pattern
Let’s take a look at the two biggest stocks in the S&P 500 index, AAPL and MSFT. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) continues to trade within a consolidation along the $150 level and it is still well below the record highs, and the Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) is close to breaking below its over month-long upward trend line. So the tech “mega-caps” may be turning lower, as we can see on their daily charts:
Conclusion
The broad stock market went slightly lower on Tuesday and we may see a downward continuation this morning. The main indices are expected to open 0.2-0.5% lower following worse (higher) than expected consumer inflation number release.
It looks like a topping pattern and we may see a downward correction at some point. There may be a profit-taking action following quarterly earnings releases.
Here’s the breakdown:
- The S&P 500 extended its uptrend last week, but since Friday it is trading within a short-term downtrend.
- But still no positions are justified from the risk/reward point of view.