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The Dow, Record moves, and what it means Print E-mail
Written by Jim Patterson   
Wednesday, 02 May 2007

Records are made to be broken 

A long, long time ago, someone witnessed something that had never happened before. Human kind was astounded by the event and it was decided that a record of the event would be made. A stone tablet was selected and a stone carver set to work with hammer and chisel. After great effort a record of the event was sculpted from stone for all to see.

Then something even better happened. It was decreed that the stone tablet record was to be amended to reflect the new event. A new record was fashioned and then someone asked what shall be done with the old record. A query was sent to the great leader and a discussion ensued. It was then decreed that out dated records of events shall be destroyed. And with that the stone carver broke the record and said allowed, ‘records are meant to be broken.’

The longer records are kept the more difficult it becomes to break them. But records are made to be broken and with time, most records tend to fall. The Dow is currently on a record run having advanced a record 19 of 21 trading days. I am guessing, I bet if you search historical markets going back far enough, such an event has happened before, but not with the Dow.

With the first day of May being up the Dow has advanced 20 of 23 trading days, which has happened twice before, in July 1955 and October 1968.

I went a step further and found that during move higher that ended July 6, 1955, the Dow advanced 21 of 24 trading days, which is the only record of such an event. Three are no records of the Dow advancing 22 of 25 trading days. After the final advance in the series, which was also the largest, the Dow saw one large down day, which started a two week consolidation.

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In October 1968 the Dow capped off an equally impressive string advancing 20 of 23 trading days. The Dow closed down three days in succession after the last advancing day then ground higher. Essentially the Dow traded sideways for several weeks before the advance continued.

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Before getting to the current chart, there are several similarities with these historical runs. Towards the end both saw some short-term upside acceleration. In 1955 it was a bit more obvious than in 1968. In both 1955 and 1968 there was a mild consolidation that lasted several weeks, and then prices moved to new highs. In 1955 it was an intermediate-term high and in 1968 the higher high turned out to be a significant high as the Dow stalled just below 1,000.

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The current move higher is equally remarkable. If the Dow closes higher on May 2 it will mark an impressive 21 up days out of 24 for only the second time on record. Closing higher on May 2 and May 3 will be something that has never been seen before. In light of the healthy start to trading on Wednesday May 2, it looks like the stone carver needs to dust off his hammer and chisel again.

Looking forward past the next few days, we know the current run will run its course and a consolidation will ensue. Whether the consolidation starts today or a week from today is of little concern for those with a longer time horizon. Historically May is the third most difficult month for the market so it makes sense for a consolidation to develop during May. Fortunately, the historical precedents tell an important story. Powerful moves of this nature are rarely seen at important high. While a consolidation will eventually take place, there is no need to panic as history suggests once a consolidation lasting a couple of weeks or so, baring an unforeseen catastrophe, the indices should move to higher levels. Considering the state of the calendar and historical precedents, by the end of May we should be hearing talk of an expected summer rally.

For the PRS Trading system, it means we should see stocks move higher.  

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 02 May 2007 )
 
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It should not be assumed that recommendations made will be profitable or will equal the past performance of securities discussed herein. The information herein is collected from various sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed in any way. Patterson Capital, Inc., Patterson Relative Strength Report, nor their employees or directors shall be liable in any manner for losses of any kind. The firm, its affiliates and their respective offices, directors, employees and clients may or may not have a position long or short in stocks mentioned in this publication and may from time to time increase or decrease their positions. All performance numbers presented are hypothetical and do not represent actual trading.
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