After hitting fresh highs early last week, Asia’s equity rally lost steam, with both the Nikkei and KOSPI posting four consecutive sessions of declines.

Despite the pullback, the indices remain above their 1-day EMA-20 Bollinger Bands, suggesting that the short-term bullish structure is still intact.


Hindenburg Omen Signals Uneven Market Strength

A more cautionary signal has emerged: the Hindenburg Omen, now present on the S&P 500 (SPX), Nikkei, and KOSPI. This technical pattern signals market breadth stress, occurring when an index shows an unusual mix of new highs and new lows simultaneously, often preceding rotations, corrections, or volatility spikes.

In practical terms, it highlights that market strength is concentrated in fewer stocks, such as the SPX being propped up by AI and MAG7 names. While it is not a crash signal, it warns traders to monitor momentum closely and manage risk.


Volatility & Technical Indicators

  • Bollinger Band Width (BBW) for both Nikkei and KOSPI is near upper expansion levels, suggesting that volatility may have peaked and could begin to compress.
  • A compression phase often leads to sideways movement or short-term consolidation before the next market leg.

Market Outlook

Current signals point to a cooling phase rather than a collapse:

  • Market breadth is thinning, but support remains intact.
  • Volatility is likely to compress, setting the stage for a potential base formation.

If the Nikkei and KOSPI hold above their short-term trend bands, the pullback may simply be a pause before another upward leg. Traders are advised to treat this as consolidation within a broader bullish trend while watching for signs of renewed momentum in the coming weeks.

By Admin

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