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With many eyes focusing on the dual (and puzzling) rally in both the US Dollar Index and the S&P 500, I thought it would be good to go back starting with the March 2009 lows and see how many times this has happened recently - it turns out that there have been two times that the S&P 500 and US Dollar Index rallied simultaneously. Let’s see them.
Starting with the March 2009 lows (to keep the chart readable), we notice that the dollar rallied into a bear flag-style pattern which I discussed in prior posts:
April 24, 2009: Bear Flag Breakdown for the US Dollar Index
May 7, 2009: US Dollar Index Continues its Slide from Bear Flag
May 26, 2009: US Dollar Completes Bear Flag as Expected
As the Dollar Index formed a bear flag rally, the S&P 500 also rallied. Early April was really the only time that the US Dollar Index and the S&P 500 rose together for any meaningful period.
I’ve highlighted the three times that the Dollar Index formed any sort of upward counter-trend rally and compared it to what the S&P 500 was doing at the time - which was either pausing or declining slightly.
That brings us to the present, when the US Dollar Index (finally) is rallying off lengthy positive momentum divergences… but so is the S&P 500.
Not only is the S&P 500 not pausing or retracing downward, it is actually creeping its way higher along with new swing highs in the Dollar Index.
Market moves can be ‘fishy’ on the low volume and participation across the board that takes place in December, so it will take a few weeks into January to see how this ’strange bedfellows’ relationship will play out when volume/participation increase in early 2010.
For now, keep watching closely and be ready to shift if a sudden move begins in either of these markets.
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