It was a busy week for the market as we saw questionable economic
data, an initial sell-off and recovery after the healthcare ruling
was announced on Thursday, and of course the big rally on Friday
after a deal was struck among European leaders to help struggling
eurozone banks.

Here are the TSP fund returns for the week of June 25 through June 29, plus the final monthly figures for June.

Although it is not a perfect example, the S&P 500 seems to be
taking the path of this typical outcome of an inverted head and
shoulders pattern.

The pullback was not to the neckline as we would normally see, but
instead it was the 200-day EMA (exponential moving average), which
was about 10 points below the neckline, that acted as support before
resuming the rally.

Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
We
should find out if it remains in a trading range between 1315 and 1360
pretty quickly as it it testing the high end of the range now. If it
can hold above the declining resistance line (top of the apex), we could
see a push back toward 1400 in July. The black apex / triangle
formation is a tricky one. Many times the initial breakout from an apex
is a false one, and the market reverses and actually breaks in the
opposite direction below the apex support. That is what I will be
watching.
The positive news out of Europe helped push the dollar down to its worst one day performance since last October.

Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
From
a technical analysis standpoint, the dollar fell right into support at
the 50-day EMA and the old descending resistance line. But according to
sentimenTrader.com,
after a one day sell-off this large in the dollar, after having been so
close to recent highs, the dollar tends to struggle for up to three
months.
Two months later, the dollar was positive only 25% of the time, with an
average return of -1.6%. If you have been watching the market over the
last few years you know that the correlation between the dollar and the
stock market has been negative, meaning if the dollar went up, stocks
went down - and if the dollar was down, stocks went up. That
correlation is not always true, but it has been pretty strong the last
few years.
So, if that correlation holds, and Friday's sell-off in the dollar is a
precursor to a weak dollar over the next few months, it could make for a
decent summer for stocks.
Good luck, and thanks for reading. We will be back here next week with another TSP Wrap Up.
Tom Crowley
www.tsptalk.com
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This information is for educational purposes only! This is not
advice or are commendation. We do not give investment advice. Do not
act on this data. Do not buy, sell or trade the funds mentioned
herein based on this information. We may trade these funds
differently than discussed above. We use additional methods and
strategies to determine fund positions.