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GLOBAL EQUITY MARKETS – April 28, 2018

REVIEW


Doji form when a security's open and close are virtually equal. The length of the upper and lower shadows can vary and the resulting candlestick looks like a cross, inverted cross or plus sign. Alone, doji are neutral patterns. Any bullish or bearish bias is based on preceding price action and future confirmation. Doji convey a sense of indecision or tug-of-war between buyers and sellers. Prices move above and below the opening level during the session, but close at or near the opening level. The result is a standoff. The relevance of a doji depends on the preceding trend or preceding candlesticks. After an advance, or long white candlestick, a doji signals that the buying pressure is starting to weaken. After a decline, or long black candlestick, a doji signals that selling pressure is starting to diminish. Doji indicate that the forces of supply and demand are becoming more evenly matched and a change in trend may be near. Doji alone are not enough to mark a reversal and further confirmation may be warranted.

The Hammer and Hanging Man look exactly alike, but have different implications based on the preceding price action. Both have small real bodies (black or white), long lower shadows and short or non-existent upper shadows. As with most single and double candlestick formations, the Hammer and Hanging Man require confirmation before action.

Hammer is a bullish reversal pattern that forms after a decline. In addition to a potential trend reversal, hammers can mark bottoms or support levels. After a decline, hammers signal a bullish revival. The low of the long lower shadow implies that sellers drove prices lower during the session. However, the strong finish indicates that buyers regained their footing to end the session on a strong note. While this may seem enough to act on, hammers require further bullish confirmation. Confirmation could come from a gap up or long white candlestick.

After the sharp sell-off in the beginning of 2018, Global equity markets started consolidating in a tight range. During the last quarter's consolidation, volatility dropped. Both the iShares MSCI All Country World Index ETF, a benchmark for Global Equity Markets performance and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index ETF, a benchmark for Emerging Markets performance, have settled above their long-term moving averages. Price action above the long-term moving average and in the up trend channel suggest that the multi-month long uptrends are still intact on both ETFs .

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GLOBAL EQUITY MARKETS – March 24, 2018

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Both the iShares MSCI All Country World Index ETF and iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index ETF are headed towards their February lows. Next few weeks will be important as these two Global equity benchmarks will tell us if the 2 year-long uptrend in equities is over or not. Breakdown below long-term averages will also violate the lower boundary of steady upward trend channels. While the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets index has margin towards the strong support area, the iShares MSCI All Country World Index closed the week at the support level. Unless we see a stability above 70 levels, the ETF can correct towards the next support at 63 levels.

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EUROSTOXX 600 & HEDJ EUROPE EQUITY ETF

Every week Tech Charts Global Equity Markets report features some of the well-defined, mature classical chart patterns under a lengthy watchlist and the chart pattern breakout signals that took place during that week. Global Equity Markets report covers single stocks from developed and emerging markets, ETF’s and global equity indices. The report starts with a review section that highlights the important chart developments on global equity benchmarks. This blog post features a review on European equity benchmark highlighted in the review section from the Global Equity Markets report. Also you will find a chart setup developing on HEDJ Europe Equity ETF.

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GLOBAL EQUITY MARKETS – March 17, 2018

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To summarize the current technical outlook in the Global Equity markets, I would say "range-bound". Global Equity benchmark charts below show the boundaries of the recent consolidations. After the sharp sell-off in the first half of February, global indices are returning back to low volatility conditions. Both the iShares MSCI All Country World Index ETF (ACWI.O) and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index ETF (EEM) are in a long-term uptrend. Both benchmarks are above their long-term averages. Latest consolidations are taking place above strong support areas.

  

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GLOBAL EQUITY MARKETS – February 10, 2018

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Global equity benchmarks deviated far from the averages that a 10% correction in 2 weeks is still considered a reversion to the mean. With this week's continued sell-off both benchmarks for Global equities, the iShares MSCI All Country World Index ETF and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index ETF reached their respective 200-day (40 week) moving averages. The 200-day moving average and the lower boundary of multi-month long upward trend channels are forming support around the same levels. Read More

GLOBAL EQUITY MARKETS – February 3, 2018

REVIEW


2018 started with strong weekly gains. The steady uptrend on the iShares MSCI All Country World Index ETF took a steep shape in January due to back to back long weekly candlesticks. This week's sharp reversal gave back last two week's gains. From a classical charting perspective we don't have enough evidence to call the latest reversal a "market top". Multi month-long uptrend is still intact. We are currently experiencing a reversion back to the averages or to the long-term trend line supports. Global equities can retrace further and major equity benchmarks can still remain in their long-term uptrends. We will need more evidence in the following weeks.

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