U.S. Trade: The major U.S. indexes traded barely above
the break-even line, aided by gains seen in the commodity markets and
by the mergers and acquisitions announcements on Tuesday.
The
global equity market saw negative momentum during the overnight
session, especially around the European open, when the entire market
was falling at a strong pace. However, S&P futures managed to
bottom in the 1025.00 area, the same place where the market made an
intra-day swing point low in Monday trade. To some extent, this shows
that the 1025.00 level was protected by several large orders.
The
market traded in a very chaotic fashion around the opening bell, with
the S&P 500, Dow Jones and the NASDAQ indexes swinging between the
break-even level and the -0.5% moves. Eventually, the three indexes
managed to turn into the green following the news that Berkshire will
buy the railroad company Burlington Northern Santa Fe, a transaction
that would cost up to $26 billion. The last time that Warren Buffett,
the man behind Berkshire Hathaway, bought a company, it happened at the
peak of the credit crisis, when it acquired a $5 billion stake in
Goldman Sachs.

S&P Technical View:
Daily chart trend: Long. Main price points: 1080-1100. Looking for: Wave 5 or C top
The
price structure on the daily chart is showing two valid scenarios. On
the left side of the chart below, it shows an impulse structure with
five waves up from the 665 lows to the current highs. If this is the
case, the wave 4 discussed on the weekly chart, below, will be
rejected, since the fourth wave is a corrective wave, which means it
cannot be sub-divided by a five wave move. However, in this scenario, a
three wave push lower into a corrective blue wave 2, with a targets
somewhere around 950 area is expected.
On the right side of the
chart, we have a different picture, with a wave count that with a
zig-zag correction, which is valid for a wave 4 scenario. In this case
lower blue wave 5 will follow.
Overall, the current price
structure signals for a coming turning point with at least three wave
push lower over the coming weeks, since the market is trading around
the top of wave 5 or wave C leg.
Sector Moves:
Basic materials and industrial goods had the biggest upward
contribution to the equity market. Basic materials surged as gold
reached a new all time high in Tuesday trade, while crude oil
approached the $80.00 area. The industrial goods sector surged on the
performance of Black & Decker, which is currently trading up by 25%
after Stanley Works announced that it would buy the company. Right now,
Stanley Works is up 6%.
Negative momentum came from the
technology sector in Tuesday trade, after Morgan Stanley down-gradeds.
The semiconductor sector was the second worst industry in the S&P
500, falling 2.5%.
In the S&P 500, the biggest gains came
from the Black & Decker and Buffett's latest acquisition,
Burlington Northern Santa Fe, which advanced 28%. The railroads index
jumped 10% on Tuesday.
Economic Moves: The U.S.
calendar was clear of any red-flag reports, but still a news release
showed that U.S. factory orders increased for the fifth consecutive
month in September.
Crude oil was recently trading at $79.30 per barrel, higher by $1.10.

Crude oil Technical View:
Daily chart trend: Long. Main price points: 68.00, and 82. Looking for: Wave V top
Oil
has made the latest top around the 82.00 zone, very close to the
Fibonacci resistance levels shown between 83 and 84. Volume has not
been strong over the last ten days, and the MACD is showing bearish
divergence. All these reads are characteristics of a wave V move, which
is the final sub-wave of a black wave 1), and is indicative of a
reversal set-up, in this case, short.
Gold was recently trading higher by $31.10 to $1085.10.