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James Ross, the University Architect at UNC Wilmington and an astute observer of the economy, called my attention to an amusing Business Insider piece published yesterday: The S&P Is On The Verge Of The Ultimate Death Cross. The piece mentions a note published Monday by Societe Generale analyst Albert Edwards, who points out that the S&P is on the verge of an "ultimate" death cross. And what, pray tell, is that? A 50-200 moving average crossover, based on months, not days (or even weeks). 

So let's check this out. The S&P 500 only dates back to March 1957. Since that time the 50-month MA has never crossed below the 200 month MA. The closest it came was the June 1978 monthly close, which gave us a 2.09 point spread between the 50-month (92.09) and the 200-month (90.00). During the 55-plus years that the S&P 500 has existed, there has never been an "Ultimate" Death Cross. 

At the end of last month, the spread was a little over 11 points.

Comments

Booboo, Degrowth Defined →Booboo, Degrowth Defined →
Looked at it on my charts, I see it, but should I believe it ? 7/18/12
Tim KnightTim Knight
I dunno; looking at the chart, the handful of times they DID get a crossover, the "move" was already long over. Indeed, the biggest plunges seem preceded by the largest spreads between the averages. 7/18/12
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