Japanese Nikkei Turns Weakness Into Strength
A long-time line of resistance has turned to solid support for Japanese stocks.
One of the objectives of Sun Tzu’s Art of War philosophies is to transform one’s enemy’s strength into weakness -- and, thus, transform one’s own weakness into a strength. One might argue that the technical analysis version of this philosophy is “resistance, once broken, becomes support”. If we can make that reach, then the Japanese Nikkei 225 is executing the Art of War with military precision.
The recent generation in financial markets has seen 2 dominant trendlines. The first is the Down trendline stemming back to the early 1980′s in long-term U.S. Treasury Yields, which remains intact. The other was the Down trendline in the Japanese Nikkei 225 stock index, which contained the secular bear market since its blowoff top in 1990. We tracked the Nikkei trendline for decades as it served as impenetrable resistance at multiple major tops over that time.
3 years ago, the Nikkei was at long last able to break above the multi-decade resistance, as we noted at the time (Stick A Fork In The Nikkei’s 20-Year Downtrend). This was a monumental event for a number of reasons. First, it marked the end of an epic piece of charting analysis which served technicians well for decades. Secondly, it removed the obvious and formidible resistance that had held the index in check during that time, finally opening the door for substantial upside. Indeed, the Nikkei would follow through to the upside after the breakout, to the tune of about 30% over the next 7 months.
Lastly, the broken trendline also potentially transformed what was epic resistance into staunch support, i.e., a weakness into a strength. The first test of this “support theory” would come in February 2016 as the Nikkei, caught in the global equity selloff, lost all of its post-breakout gains and found itself testing the top of the broken trendline. As we posted at the time, the theory passed the test as the Nikkei bounced immediately up off of the trendline (Nikkei Passes 1st Test Of Broken Epic Trendline).
After a few months of a bounce, however, the Nikkei found itself headed south again. And by June, the index was again testing the top of the broken long-term trendline. In what appeared to be a key market juncture for Japanese equities, the question again, as we posted, was Will Epic Line Of Resistance Turn Support For Japanese Stocks?
While is was discouraging to see the trendline tested again so soon, we reminded readers that “the trendline was the dominant force upon Japanese equities for over 2 decades, so its potential role in supporting the index now should not dismissed.” Should, we continued, “the Nikkei hold the top of the broken trendline, it could well serve as a springboard to a substantial rally.”
Fast forward about 15 months and we see that the former Nikkei weakness did prove once again to be a newfound strength. The index ended up bouncing immediately off the broken trendline once again. And, as today’s Chart Of The Day shows, just closed at a 20-year high, breaking above its 2015 high.
So with the resistance-turned-support/weakness-turned-strength issue settled, the question now is -- is this move in Japanese equities for real?...like, for the long haul? Certainly this recent development is a big technical win for Japan. However, economically, fiscally and demographically, the nation definitely has its challenges. Where do we come down? In a premium post at The Lyons Share, we clearly choose a side -- and lay out the important support and resistance levels to watch.
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Disclaimer: JLFMI’s actual investment decisions are based on our proprietary models. The conclusions based on the study in this letter may or may not be consistent with JLFMI’s actual investment posture at any given time. Additionally, the commentary provided here is for informational purposes only and should not be taken as a recommendation to invest in any specific securities or according to any specific methodologies. Proper due diligence should be performed before investing in any investment vehicle. There is a risk of loss involved in all investments.











