With the election over, investors turned their worries towards the fiscal cliff, the ailing European economies, and turmoil in the Middle East, hence the slide in the stock market; but two stocks avoided the downtrend, says MoneyShow’s Tom Aspray.
Stocks continued to drift lower on Thursday adding to the losses since Election Day as the Spyder Trust (SPY) is down 5% in just seven trading days. Market internals are now starting to flash oversold readings as the McClellan oscillator is now at -279. During the correction in May the oscillator had a low of -335.
All the sectors have been hit hard also during the same period with many weaker than SPY. The Sector Select SPDR Financial (XLF) has lost 6%, the Sector Select SPDR Technology (XLK) has lost 5.5% while the Sector Select SPDR Energy (XLE) is down 5.3%.
Despite the steepness of the recent slide and the carnage in the tech sector the technical evidence does not indicate that the stocks have completed a major top. The ongoing debate over the fiscal cliff and the threat of increased conflict in the Gaza Strip are likely to add further pressure on stocks over the near term.
Once the market decline is over those sectors and stocks that have outperformed the S&P 500 or Spyder Trust (SPY) are likely to lead the next market rally. Just over a week ago, I focused on oil stocks and the energy sector.
The weaker performance of the Sector Select SPDR Energy (XLE) was due in part to its 35% stake in Exxon Mobil (XOM) and Chevron Corp (CVX), which are down 6.7% and 10.9% respectively this month. Two of the oil stocks I discussed have been bucking the market’s downward trend and if this continues they are likely to be two of the next market leaders.
Chart Analysis: The daily chart of the Sector Select SPDR Energy (XLE) has closed this week below the 50% Fibonacci support at $69.19, which turns the focus on the 61.8% support at $67.26.
Valero Energy Corp. (VLO) has been holding the 61.8% Fibonacci fan line during November and it closed strong Thursday. It is actually up slightly in November and yields 2.4%.
NEXT PAGE: Another Oil Stock Bucking the Trend
The Week Ahead: Will 2013 Be Another Double-Digit Year?