S&P 500 Falling Below 600?
By Tomi Kilgore
United-ICAP senior technical analyst Walter Zimmerman says the S&P 500
could rally a little further into January before beginning a “traumatic
decline” for the rest of 2012, dragged down by weakness in Europe.
How traumatic? You might want to sit down for this one.
He thinks the index will reach its 2012 peak in the 1293-1311 zone, then
start a “sharp and sustained drop” until December. His downside target is
around 579.57.
579.57! The index would have to wipe out the March 2009 lows and fall by
more than 50% current levels to reach that target. And the last time the
S&P 500 traded below 600 was in the mid 1990s, when the Backstreet Boys
burst on the scene and bell-bottom jeans were making a comeback.
Zimmerman’s reasoning is Europe is in an even worse shape now than it was
at the beginning of the year.
“If the history of debt tells us anything it is that one cannot solve a
debt crisis by lending more money to the bankrupt and the insolvent,” Zimmerman
says.
He expects 2012′s price action will mirror what the S&P 500 did from
its Oct 2007 peak until it bottomed in March 2009.
“The technical patterns suggest that 2012 will be a terrible year for
holding stocks. Even if by some miracle the euro zone hangs together, it
is already falling into a deep and enduring recession,” says Zimmerman. “We
expect this recession will drag down both the USA and China.”
The S&P 500 was recently up 0.2% at 1268.
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