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Just on the heels of my praise for the internal strength of the market, the indicator I presented (the advance/decline line) exhibited a negative divergence last week. Even though the market averages were up strongly, there were more stocks declining than advancing for the week. So far, this is only a one-week phenomenon, but it certainly bears watching.Indicators Weaken
I still view the long-term market outlook as bullish, but there has been some further deterioration in the indicators that I use to forecast intermediate-term (two- to six-month) market moves. I've only got one bullish indicator left, and it has declined from very bullish territory. Let's look at it now. Below is a five-year chart of the S&P 500 (black) and a 10-week moving average of put volume divided by call volume (red). The green lines relate to the three-year average of this indicator and its standard deviations.| PUT/CALL RATIO VS. S&P 500 |
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| Click here for larger image. |
| Source: TheAstuteInvestor.com |





