- The
S&P 500 is still likely to retest its January low despite the ongoing relief rally, according to Fairlead Strategies' Katie Stockton. - The technical research firm highlighted 4500 and 4600 as key resistance hurdles for the S&P 500.
- In previous market declines, "it took another 1-2 months for the correction to fully mature," Stockton said.
A retest of the January lows for the S&P 500 remains likely despite the ongoing relief rally in stocks, according to a Tuesday note from Katie Stockton of Fairlead Strategies.
Stockton sees a test of strong resistance being imminent for the S&P 500 that could ultimately lead to a rejection and further weakness ahead, according to the note. A decline back to the January low around 4200 represents potential downside of 6% from current levels.
"The S&P 500 faces intraday resistance near 4500 as a hurdle to its down-trending 50-day moving average near 4600. Initial support near 4200 looks in store for an eventual retest on weak intermediate-term momentum," Stockton said.
Longer-term, Stockton noted that the S&P 500 is poised to flash a downturn in monthly stochastics to below 80%, which is often associated with major corrective phases in the
"In each of those instances, it took another 1-2 months for the correction to fully mature," Stockton said.
That kind of decline would come amid a period of rising geopolitical tensions between Russia and Ukraine, as well as a hawkish Fed that is poised to begin raising interest rates to get a better handle on taming rising inflation.
But one sector that has been benefiting from the recent volatility, energy, could be poised for a "sell the news" event, Stockton said, noting that counter-trend "sell" signals per the DeMARK Indicators flashed for the first time since November 9.
"The timing of these signals suggests a sell-the-news event may be at hand as it pertains to the Russia-Ukraine conflict," Stockton said. Support for oil prices is around $81 per barrel, Stockton said, which would represent a potential decline of 13% from current levels.