The recent rally out of the August 5th low is definitely stronger than I had anticipated. I was watching the resistance zone between 5350 and 5400, but that area was passed as if there was no supply whatsoever, at least at the index level.
Looking at the sector rotation coming with this move, we see the RRG as plotted above. Technology and, to a lesser degree, Consumer Discretionary are picking up some speed and driving the market higher. And this happens at the cost of relative strength for all other sectors. The split between relative uptrends, sectors on the right-hand side of the RRG, and relative downtrends, sectors on the left-hand side of the RRG, is also very clearly visible.
Looking at the performance over the last five trading days, it is clear that the base for this rally is, once again, very narrow. Technology and discretionary are the only two sectors that beat the S&P 500.
Bringing up the weekly RRG shows a different picture, which is more the opposite of the daily. Technology is the only sector still on a negative RRG-Heading. All others are on a positive RRG-Heading, or at least picking up relative momentum.
The big difference is that on this weekly RRG, Technology (and Utes) is the only sector on the right-hand, positive side of the RRG, while all others are on the left-hand, negative side of the chart.
Regarding performance, discretionary and technology are the only sectors underperforming in the S&P 500. All other sectors have beaten the market over the last five weeks. Combining the info from these two RRGs leads to the belief/conclusion that the Large-Cap-Growth rotation is back, at least temporarily.
This observation also appears when we examine the weekly and daily RRGs, which show the various market segments broken down into Growth-Value and their respective size segments. Here also, the weekly RRG shows the rotation OUT of Large-Cap Growth and INTO anything else, at least on a relative basis. The Daily RRG shows the opposite: rotation INTO Large-Cap Growth and OUT of anything else.
All in all, we're now back to a situation in which market strength is supported only by a very narrow foundation. That, therefore, brings back a particular concern: is this enough to keep this rally going?
The series of higher highs and higher lows (uptrend) is uninterrupted on the weekly price chart.
However, the series of lower highs and lower lows (downtrend) is uninterrupted on the daily chart. It looks like this week continues to be critical for the further development in the S&P 500.
Until either of these situations resolves in the other's favor, I expect market behavior to remain very tricky.#StayAlert --Julius