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Market Trends: How Does This Momentum Divergence Compare?

By Clare White, CMT, Optionetics.com | Tue October 16, 2012 1:06PM PT

 

The current divergence in the weekly Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM (INDU) chart with its ROC is 31 months and counting. While lengthy, such a divergence is not uncommon. Since 1930, there have been eleven ROC divergences lasting more than a year. Figure 1 displays a very compressed weekly chart with all divergences and also includes.

 

Specs for Weekly Line Chart of INDU:

Price & Volume are on a log scale

Volume with 20-week SMA

34-week ROC with 21-week SMA

ROC divergence > 12 months

Extreme ROC levels noted at 1.25 (bullish) and 0.85 (bearish)

 

fig 1 weekly dow

Figure 1: Weekly Line Chart of INDU with 34-Week ROC & Volume

 

Since details are difficult to discern, here are a couple of observations for the ten previous divergences:

  1. All but the last divergence (2003-2007) occurred during various stages of secular bull markets*
  2. Mid-1967 through mid-1985 experienced no such divergences

 

With only ten data points, note the data that follows is not statistically significant:

 Divergence Period

  • The ten divergences had averaged 25.5 months with a median of 23.5 months
  • The shortest divergence was 13 months and the longest 48 months
  • The average gain during the divergence period was 31.5% with a median of 33.1%
  • The smallest gain during the divergence period was 6.5% and the largest 46.6%

  

Post Divergence

  • The post-divergence period averaged 9.3 months with a median of 7.5 months
  • The shortest divergence was 1.6 months and the longest 20.8 months
  • The average decline post-divergence was -26.0% with a median of -23.8%
  • The smallest loss post-divergence was -7.5% and the largest -53.0%

 

It was noted most divergences that formed from bullish extremes for ROC (+1.25) were resolved by moves to bearish extremes in the indicator (+0.85). On Thursday a more detailed view of the current divergence and past divergences from extremes will discussed.

 

* See the 1/21/10 Market Trends article for secular bear periods from 1900-1999

 

Clare White, CMT
Contributing Writer and Options Strategist
Optionetics.com ~ Your Options Education Site

Questions for Clare? Please visit the discussion board on the homepage of Optionetics.com.

 


Recent articles by Clare White, CMT, Optionetics.com


May 22, 2013  -  GLD Short-Term Volatility Rising Again
May 14, 2013  -  GLD Bearish Pattern: Short-Term Reversal Lacks Conviction
May 07, 2013  -  Changing Up the View: Broad Markets & Oil, Part 4
May 04, 2013  -  GLD Pattern Update, Move Back to Pattern Underway
April 29, 2013  -  Bullish Breakouts for the FTSE 100 & Hang Seng


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