Technically speaking, the U.S. benchmarks’ bigger-picture backdrop remains bullish, on balance, though the prevailing market technicals are not one-size-fits-all.

Amid the cross currents, the S&P 500 has sustained a bullish reversal from major support, rising to challenge record highs, and within striking distance of the marquee 4,000 mark.

Before detailing the U.S. markets’ wider view, the S&P 500’s
SPX,
-0.42%

 hourly chart highlights the past two weeks.

As illustrated, the S&P has rallied to the range top, rising to challenge record highs.

The prevailing upturn punctuates last week’s retest of the 50-day moving average.

More immediately, the Feb. peak (3,950) remains an inflection point, and is followed by the 3,915 support.

Similarly, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.34%

 has extended its rally attempt, rising to challenge record territory.

Here again, the prevailing upturn punctuates a bullish reversal from two-week lows.

Tactically, near-term inflection points in the 32,500 and 32,800 areas remain in play.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-0.30%

remains the weakest major benchmark.

As illustrated, the index is not challenging record highs.

Instead, the index is vying to simply maintain major support matching the 2020 peak (12,973), an area also illustrated below. A potentially consequential retest remains underway.

Widening the view to six months adds perspective.

On this wider view, the Nasdaq has registered an extended test of major support (12,973).

The specific area matches the 2020 peak (12,973) a level that also marked the early-March breakdown point. (Recall the initial violation of the 2020 peak punctuated a head-and-shoulders top, a bearish pattern that was subsequently neutralized by the swift reversal back to the range, fueled by two 7-to-1 up days.)

Tactically, a sustained violation of support would signal a bearish intermediate-term bias.

Delving deeper, significant support (12,607) closely matches the March closing low (12,609). (See for instance, the Jan. 11 review.)

Looking elsewhere, the Dow Jones Industrial Average remains the strongest major benchmark.

Recall that last week’s low (32,071) registered above the breakout point (32,009) to punctuate a successful retest.

The Dow has subsequently knifed from support, notching consecutive record closes.

More broadly, the index has registered directionally sharp March rallies, and a comparably flattish intervening pullback. Bullish momentum is intact.

Meanwhile, the S&P 500 has staged a bullish reversal from its 50-day moving average.

The prevailing upturn places the marquee 4,000 mark within striking distance.

The bigger picture

Broadly speaking, the prevailing backdrop is largely bullish, though it is not one-size-fits-all.

On a headline basis, the S&P 500 and Dow industrials continue to press record territory.

Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite remains far from record highs, as it vies to simply maintain major support (12,973). A potentially consequential retest of this area remains underway.

Moving to the small-caps, the iShares Russell 2000 ETF
IWM,
+1.27%

 has thus far weathered a respectable pullback from recent record highs.

Still, the small-cap benchmark has asserted a posture under its 50-day moving average (220.65) and the former range bottom (216.70).

Deeper inflection points match the March closing low (213.19) and absolute March low (207.21). An eventual violation would mark a “lower low” — and punctuate a modified double top — raising an intermediate-term caution flag.

Meanwhile, the SPDR S&P MidCap 400 ETF
MDY,
+0.73%

 remains incrementally stronger.

As illustrated, the MDY has maintained a posture comfortably atop its 50-day moving average, outpacing the small-caps.

Separately, the prevailing bullish reversal has been punctuated by a rally atop the former breakout point.

Looking elsewhere, the SPDR Trust S&P 500
SPY,
-0.44%

 has also reclaimed its breakdown point, an area matching the February peak.

The strong-volume bullish reversal punctuates a successful test of the 50-day moving average.

Placing a finer point on the S&P 500, the index has rallied toward its range top, rising to challenge record highs.

The prevailing upturn punctuates a jagged test of major support (3,870) and the 50-day moving average, currently 3,881.

Within the range, the Feb. peak (3,950) remains an inflection point.

More broadly, the prevailing bullish reversal places record highs under siege.

The S&P 500’s record close (3,974.54) and absolute record peak (3,983.87) rest just overhead, and are closely followed by the marquee 4,000 mark.

Also recall that near- to intermediate-term targets technically project to the 4,050 and 4,085 areas, detailed previously.

More broadly, the S&P 500’s successful retest of the 50-day moving average — combined with the prevailing series of “higher highs” and “higher lows” — signal a firmly-intact intermediate-term uptrend. The S&P 500’s path of least resistance continues to point higher.

Also see: Bull trend intact: S&P 500 retests the breakdown point.

Tuesday’s Watch List

The charts below detail names that are technically well positioned. These are radar screen names — sectors or stocks poised to move in the near term. For the original comments on the stocks below, see The Technical Indicator Library.

Drilling down further, the Materials Select Sector SPDR
XLB,
-0.44%

 is acting well technically. (Yield = 1.7%.)

As illustrated, the group has tagged a nominal record high. The prevailing upturn punctuates a tight mid-March range, as well as an extended February test of the 50-day moving average.

Tactically, the 50-day moving average, currently 75.35, is rising toward the range bottom (75.80). The prevailing rally attempt is firmly-intact barring a violation.

Initially profiled March 2, Dow 30 component Boeing Co.
BA,
+0.49%

 has returned 11.6% and remains well positioned.

Earlier this month, the shares knifed to 52-week highs, clearing resistance matching the December peak. The subsequent pullback has been fueled by decreased volume, placing the shares 11.2% under the March peak.

Tactically, the breakout point, circa 240, is followed by the post-breakout low (231.70). A sustained posture higher signals a firmly-bullish bias.

Target Corp.
TGT,
+0.55%

 is a large-cap retailer coming to life. (Yield = 1.4%.)

Technically, the shares have knifed atop trendline resistance, rising to challenge record territory.

The prevailing upturn has been fueled by tandem volume spikes — and subsequent sideways price action — laying the groundwork for a potential breakout.

Slightly more broadly, the shares are rising from a year-to-date range hinged to the steep early-January rally. An intermediate-term target projects to the 222 area on follow-through.

F5 Networks, Inc.
FFIV,
-0.74%

 is a well positioned large-cap networking name.

As illustrated, the shares are challenging a three-month range top matching record highs. The prevailing range is underpinned by gap support. (See the early-January gap and subsequent retest.)

Tactically, near-term support (204.60) is followed by the 50-day moving average, a recent bull-bear inflection point. A breakout attempt is in play barring a violation.

More broadly, the shares are well positioned on the three-year chart, rising from a continuation pattern hinged to the steep late-2020 rally.

Finally, Ternium S.A.
TX,
+2.73%

 is a well positioned large-cap Luxembourg-based steel producer. (Yield = 5.5%.)

The shares started March with a strong-volume breakout, reaching 34-month highs. The subsequent orderly range is a bullish continuation pattern.

More immediately, the prevailing upturn has been fueled by increased volume, improving the chances of more decisive follow-through. Tactically, a near-term floor matches the former range top (34.50). A breakout attempt is in play barring a violation.

Still well positioned

The table below includes names recently profiled in The Technical Indicator that remain well positioned. For the original comments, see The Technical Indicator Library.

Company Symbol* (Click symbol for chart.) Date Profiled
Texas Instruments, Inc. TXN Mar. 29
NXP Semiconductors N.V. NXPI Mar. 29
iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF IYR Mar. 29
Coca-Cola Co. KO Mar. 29
Home Depot, Inc. HD Mar. 26
Ferrari N.V. RACE Mar. 26
Funko Inc FNKO Mar. 26
Cisco Systems, Inc. CSCO Mar. 25
Steel Dynamics, Inc. STLD Mar. 25
Procter & Gamble Co. PG Mar. 25
Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR XLP Mar. 25
iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF ITB Mar. 23
Lennar Corp. LEN Mar. 23
Jabil Circuit, Inc. JBL Mar. 23
Dish Network Corp. DISH Mar. 23
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. UNH Mar. 22
Shift4 Payments, Inc. FOUR Mar. 19
Whirlpool Corp. WHR Mar. 19
U.S. Bancorp USB Mar. 19
Nasdaq, Inc. NDAQ Mar. 18
D.R. Horton, Inc. DHI Mar. 18
Facebook, Inc. FB Mar. 17
AutoNation, Inc. AN Mar. 17
McDonald’s Corp. MCD Mar. 16
Virtu Financial, Inc. VIRT Mar. 16
Spirit Airlines, Inc. SAVE Mar. 16
LKQ Corp. LKQ Mar. 15
Anthem, Inc. ANTM Mar. 15
Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc. WBA Mar. 12
International Paper Co. IP Mar. 12
iShares Europe ETF IEV Mar. 11
CME Group, Inc. CME Mar. 11
3M Co. MMM Mar. 11
Southwest Airlines Co. LUV Mar. 10
Big Lots, Inc. BIG Mar. 9
Alaska Air Group, Inc. ALK Mar. 9
State Street Corp. STT Mar. 8
American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. AEO Mar. 8
Hess Corp. HES Mar. 3
Beazer Homes USA, Inc. BZH Mar. 3
Mastercard, Inc. MA Mar. 2
Boeing Co. BA Mar. 2
Starbucks Corp. SBUX Mar. 1
Eaton Corp. ETN Feb. 25
Oracle Corp. ORCL Feb. 24
United Airlines Holdings, Inc. UAL Feb. 24
Nucor Corp. NUE Feb. 23
Signet Jewelers Limited SIG Feb. 23
Old Dominion Freight Line ODFL Feb. 22
Seagate Technology STX Feb. 19
Chevron Corp. CVX Feb. 18
Lyft, Inc. LYFT Feb. 16
Intel Corp. INTC Feb. 12
U.S. Global Jets ETF JETS Feb. 9
Motorola Solutions, Inc. MSI Feb. 9
KeyCorp KEY Feb. 5
Diamondback Energy, Inc. FANG Feb. 4
CarMax, Inc. KMX Feb. 3
Toll Brothers, Inc. TOL Feb. 2
Avis Budget Group, Inc. CAR Feb. 1
Capital One Financial Corp. COF Jan. 29
Cummins, Inc. CMI Jan. 25
Magna International, Inc. MGA Jan. 22
M.D.C. Holdings, Inc. MDC Jan. 22
Zebra Technologies Corp. ZBRA Jan. 14
Nexstar Media Group, Inc. NXST Jan. 11
iShares Transportation Average ETF IYT Jan. 11
Energy Select Sector SPDR XLE Jan. 8
Skyworks Solutions, Inc. SWKS Jan. 7
Financial Select Sector SPDR XLF Jan. 7
Synaptics, Inc. SYNA Jan. 4
JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM Dec. 22
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. WSM Dec. 15
SDPR S&P Regional Banking ETF KRE Dec. 14
Emerson Electric Co. EMR Dec. 8
Fortinet, Inc. FTNT Dec. 7
Kulicke and Soffa Industries, Inc. KLIC Dec. 7
Dillard’s, Inc. DDS Dec. 4
Sonos, Inc. SONO Dec. 1
American Airlines Group, Inc. AAL Nov. 30
Bank of America Corp. BAC Nov. 20
SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration and Production ETF XOP Nov. 20
MetLife, Inc. MET Nov. 19
Kohl’s Corp. KSS Nov. 18
Applied Materials, Inc. AMAT Nov. 17
Regions Financial Corp. RF Nov. 13
Norfolk Southern Corp. NSC Nov. 9
Communications Services Select Sector SPDR XLC Nov. 5
Alphabet, Inc. GOOGL Nov. 5
Micron Technology, Inc. MU Oct. 20
ON Semiconductor Corp. ON Oct. 16
Ford Motor Co. F Oct. 15
SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF XHB Oct. 9
Shake Shack, Inc. SHAK Oct. 9
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. MLM Sept. 30
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. ANF Sept. 29
Crocs, Inc. CROX Sept. 14
Five Below, Inc. FIVE Sept. 10
Deere & Co. DE Aug. 24
Johnson Controls International JCI Aug. 21
General Motors Co. GM Aug. 20
Builders FirstSource, Inc. BLDR Aug. 18
Industrial Select Sector SPDR XLI Aug. 6
SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF XME July 28
Materials Select Sector SPDR XLB July 20
Caterpillar, Inc. CAT July 20
SPDR S&P Retail ETF XRT June 3
iShares MSCI Japan ETF EWJ May 29
Tesla, Inc. TSLA Apr. 23
Apple, Inc. AAPL Mar. 27, 2020
Microsoft Corp. MSFT Feb. 22, 2019
* Click each symbol for current chart.

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