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Dow Jones Industrial Average Falls to 17,300 Support

DailyFX.com -

Talking Points

-Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) fell towards a support zone near 17,300

-DJIA technical picture remains bullish for the time being

-Considering buying a dip above 16,500 in the void of program selling

In the wake of the Brexit vote calling for UK to leave the EU, global equities remain shaky as uncertainty pervades the market. While the European politicians sort through how to make the divorce happen, the market is left to ponder how messy it could be and what skeletons may be hiding in a closet. One such skeleton could be the fear of forced selling resulting from program investors adjusting to the increased volatility. Typically, as volatility increases, trade sizes decrease meaning algos might pare back their current positions. This forced selling continues the cycle of increased volatility. Though we don’t know if the volatility will continue, it is a risk to be mindful of.

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While navigating the volatile market, be mindful that leverage on trades exaggerates the markets movements. We urge low amounts of leverage or no leverage at all in these environments. (Read more about the effects of leverage in our Traits of Successful Traders research.)

Prior to the vote last week, we were considering a short position on ensuing rallies with an initial target towards 17,300. US30, a CFD which tracks the DJIA, is sitting in the zone of 17,300 with a current print of 17,250 as we write. So, what is next?

In times like these, it is important to take a step back and as best as possible, wipe the name off the chart and see what technical patterns may be evolving. As traders, we inherently bring a bias as to which direction we think US30 “ought” to go based on how we’ve processed the communication of what a Brexit means. Therefore, we need to neutralize as much of our bias as possible.

Dow Jones Industrial Average Falls to 17,300 Support
Dow Jones Industrial Average Falls to 17,300 Support

As we look at the technical picture for US30, one thing sticks out. We are only a few points off all-time highs. In fact, from the February 11, 2016 low to Friday’s close, US30 hasn’t retraced 38% of the previous uptrend which is quite shallow. I can appreciate how going into the vote, traders were expecting a “Bremain” and equities may have been bid up. However, the surprising Brexit result merely peeled away a couple of percentage points and the technical picture remains bullish for the time being.

Technical arguments for bulls:

-Price remains above the 200 Day Simple Moving Average

-Price has retraced less than 38% of the February 11 to April 20 up trend

-The move lower since April 20 appears to be a 3 wave correction (labeled a-b-c) suggesting the trend is still higher

In summary, these next couple of days will help set the mood. Technically, the picture is still bullish. Therefore, a void of program selling supports buying at cheaper levels. However, if program selling kicks in, that selling could spark another round volatility.

Holding above the February 11 low of 15,503 is critical to the bullish outlook. Below 16,070 will begin to show cracks in the bullish foundation. Below 16,070 could be an early warning signal of even deeper losses coming. Otherwise, consider buying dips above 16,500.

Suggested Reading:

Brexit Aftermath Analysis Directory

Previous Report on DJIA

---Written by Jeremy Wagner, Head Trading Instructor, DailyFX EDU

Follow me on Twitter at @JWagnerFXTrader .

See Jeremy’s recent articles at his Bio Page.

Check out the latest standings for the FXCM trading contest HERE.


original source

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