Upside Volume Hits Extreme Oversold Levels
Tuesday, February 2, 2010 at 09:34AM Following the declines of the last two weeks, many of the indicators we track have hit extreme oversold levels. One specific indicator is the 10-day average of volume in NYSE listed stocks trading higher as a percentage of total volume. As of Friday, this indicator was more oversold (35%) than at any other point since last November. Compared to the average reading of this indicator since 2002, the current level is two standard deviations below normal. In the charts below, we show the S&P 500 and the 10-day average upside volume on the NYSE. On the chart of the S&P 500, we have also included red dots to show each time upside volume was at least two standard deviations below average. As shown, most (although not all) of these readings have occurred near short-term lows. In fact, in the week following these instances, the S&P 500 has averaged a gain of 0.89%. Over the next month, the S&P 500 has averaged an even greater gain of 4.3%.
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Reader Comments (1)
With all due respect, I have to say that this is the least valuable indicator and the most obtuse chart you've put out in a long time. It's unusable since you didn't say for how long the market can be in one of these over-sold conditions: a day, a week, a month? And you didn't compare it against the mirror image of over-bought conditions. Sorry, not for me.