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| The
McClellan Oscillator |
THE MCCLELLAN
OSCILLATOR HELPS CALL MARKET TURNS
In my Swing Trader newsletter I frequently reference the McClellan Oscillator as a
way of diagnosing whether the overall market is overbought or oversold.
When combined with the Arms Index, which I discussed in a separate
educational lesson, the two measures pack a powerful one-two punch at being able
to identify deeply overextended markets. When a market is overextended,
it is often like a spring that is held down with strong pressure. When
released, the spring snaps back with great force. An overextended market
can, at least in the short-term, rapidly reverse. The ability to
identify short-term reversals can help the swing trader enter the market
close to the beginning of a Minor trend to maximize profits.
The McClellan Oscillator was first designed by Sherman and Marian
McClellan in 1969. As a substitute for this indicator, traders can also
stochastics or RSI when applied to an index such as the S&P 500 or
New York Stock Exchange Index (NYSE), as these are both
overbought/oversold measures. The McClellan Oscillator, however, adds a
different perspective because it works with market breadth. Breadth is
defined as the balance between advancing issues (all stocks up at least
a penny on the day) and declining issues (all stocks down by at least a
penny). In a strong market, advancers will usually overwhelm decliners
by a significant margin. The opposite is true when a market turns weak.
The mathematics behind the McClellan Oscillator are complex.
Essentially, the oscillator takes two exponentially smoothed moving
averages (EMA) of advancers less decliners. The first is a 19-period
EMA, which is meant to represent the short- to intermediate-term period.
The second is a 39-period moving average, which describes a more
intermediate trend.
The formula for the McClellan Oscillator is:
(19-Day EMA of A-D) - (39-Day EMA of A-D)
This calculation results in a specific McClellan Oscillator number. On
Thursday, March 25th, for example, the McClellan Oscillator on the New
York Stock Exchange closed at –78, up from Wednesday's deeply oversold
reading of –168.
The traditional way to interpret the Oscillator number is as follows. A
reading of +100 on the Oscillator means the market has become
overbought. While a market can stay overbought for an extended period of
time, traders should be alert to any signals of selling pressure. When
the oscillator reaches –100 the opposite is true and traders should be
alert to a rally.
The middle point of the oscillator is the zero line. A cross of the zero
line after a reading of + or –100 provides confirmation that the
previous trend has reversed.
Typically, the McClellan Oscillator is juxtaposed against the New York
Stock Exchange Index (NYSE), as that is considered the broadest measure
of trading on that exchange. McClellan Oscillators can be calculated on
any exchange, and the Oscillator for the Nasdaq also is vital for
diagnosing when that exchange is at an extreme. The Nasdaq
overbought/oversold readings are +40 and –40.
On the NYSE, I pay careful attention to readings of + and – 100.
However, I give even more emphasis to the Oscillator's own recent
"signature" in determining "true" extremes. The
signature is a horizontal support or resistance area that aligns with
market turns.
Below you will find a chart of the McClellan Oscillator aligned with the
NYSE Composite Index. In the past two months, the McClellan Oscillator
has bottomed near –200 on four separate occasions. For me, that is the
"true" level to now be watching for important turns.
That extreme –200 reading is indicative
of the very heavy selling pressure we have witnessed throughout the past
two months. (This selling pressure has ravaged the McClellan Summation
Index, taking it from over 5500 to a current reading near 2000. I will
comment on the significance of that next week.)
From now on, when I cite a specific
McClellan Oscillator reading, you will ideally be able to put that
number into a meaningful context. I will be watching the Oscillator's
behavior keenly over the next few days. The question I have is whether
this rally will be strong enough to bring it back over the zero line.
Will the Oscillator merely approach zero, as it did on the previous
rally attempt, and then peter out? The answer to that question will be a
very important factor in determining whether the correct swing trading
strategy will be from the long or the short side. I'll be certain to
keep you posted.
Good trading!


Dr. Melvin Pasternak
Editor
The StreetAuthority
Swing Trader
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