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Does Yesterday’s 90-90 Lowry Up Day Change Anything?
Posted on February 27th, 2009 No commentsYesterday’s +3% snap-back rally was one of the famed Lowry 90%-90% days. For those unfamiliar with the term, these are climactic days coined by a research report by Paul Desmond written in 2002 (you can find the original report in the free trading resource section – in the Articles and Reports section).
90-90 days are defined by two conditions:
- Volume is extreme so that 90% or more is either devoted to downside volume or upside volume.
- Points are so extreme that they are 90% or more either gained or lost to the downside.
These days are significant because historically, every single major shift in the nature of the market has been presaged by the presence of one or several 90-90 down days (representing panic selling) followed by 90-90 up days (panic buying).
We’ve seen quite a few of both 90-90 up and down days during this vicious bear market. So much so that they have tended to be given less and less attention. Yesterday’s extreme up day was even more significant because it was on the heels of a 52 week low. We’ve seen these before too:
But before you get excited, consider that for all its glory, the rally was an inside day. That’s hard to believe since it was so powerful. But it still didn’t engulf the previous candlestick.
As well, the volume was nothing to write home about. It was higher than the previous session’s but compared to the November low, it came up short.
Most of the impetus for the rally came from a massive short covering rally in the financial sector. The Philadelphia Bank Index (BKX) was up almost 14%.
As well, Lowry Research continues to be unimpressed by the market’s behavior. In a recent reports, Paul Desmond says:
“A lot of investors were hoping the market would hold at the November 2008 low. As those hopes were broken, investors tend to panic. We’re really at a critical stage.”
Until the market eliminates those investors who bought high but are still reluctant to sell and take a loss, it will not achieve capitulation. A sign of approaching capitulation will be a slowdown in the rate of selling. That will set the stage for investors to begin looking at opportunities. We’re still into a healthy bear market.”
For all its significance and predictive qualities, the concept of 90-90 days is just one of the many tools that Lowry Research uses to analyse the market. Their most important indicators are proprietary and measure buying power & selling pressure. According to these indicators, Lowry Research is still advising clients to stay on the sidelines because investors aren’t done selling.
Check out my previous in depth report to find out more about Lowry Research and a sample of their analysis of the market (including charts of their proprietary Buying Power and Selling Pressure indicators).
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- Identifying a bear market bottom – Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters)
- CNBC Report by Bill McLaren – 22 May 09
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General Bank Index, Bear Market, Bkx, Candlestick, Critical Stage, Downside, Financial Sector, Impetus, Investors, Lowry, Lowry Research, Paul Desmond, Rally, Resource Section, Section 90, Volume PointsLeave a Reply





