So it's "that time" again, when the bears start getting loud -- how the market environment can change in a week! The bottom line, though, is that nothing's cut-and-dried yet from an intermediate perspective.
The market hasn't done anything to prove itself one way or the other here, and the long-term counts are simply going to require a bit more clarification from the market. While many Elliotticians are viewing S&P 500 (SPX) 1426 as the "end-all" to ruin all future bull prospects, 1426 is simply the first warning level, and trade beneath that level would not guarantee a bearish long-term outcome. The chart below shows why.
Something that remains bothersome to the immediate bear prospects is the fact that RSI and MACD both confirmed the 1474 high, and it's rare for the market to form a long-term peak without some type of divergence forming first -- not impossible of course, but unusual.
While we're at it, let's look at the count which has the bears claiming victory. The pattern below is called an ending diagonal, and to my knowledge, I was the first to propose it, many months ago. This pattern can't be confirmed yet, though the whipsaw of the upper trendline is a good start. In any case, I'm continuing to track it, and am watching the market's behavior before putting all my eggs in one basket.
Over the short-term, the prospects for both counts remain viable. The market has simply not declared its long-term intentions yet, and the first step for bears would be to complete a five-wave impulsive move to the downside. In order for this to happen, it would take a low toward the (3)/c level, followed by a reasonable bounce and then another new low to begin to consider the decline impulsive, which would suggest a major trend change.
Some key short-term levels with larger-degree implications are noted on the chart below.




