Huge XLF Volume Yesterday Signals Financial Sector Could Bottom
By Bill Luby on July 16, 2008 | More Posts By Bill Luby | Author's Website
If I could pick only one ticker to watch in order to gauge the market’s health in the current environment, it would probably be Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF), the most popular of the financial sector ETFs. You could make an argument for Regional Bank HOLDRs (RKH), the regional bank ETF, XBD, the broker dealer ETF, or any number of others, but XLF covers the entire financial sector, from Allstate (ALL) to Zions Bancorp (ZION).
With all the talk about the degree of a VIX spike needed to signal a bottom and other measures of capitulation, I am surprised I have not heard anyone else mention the volume in XLF yesterday.
As shown in the graphic below, XLF traded over 469 million shares yesterday, eclipsing the previous volume record (set just last Friday), by over 150 million shares. The 469 million share turnover also represents 3.3 standard deviations above the mean, which translates into an extremely unlikely event. [Note that in the chart below, the Bollinger band settings for volume are for 3 standard deviations instead of the default 2 setting]
This is capitulation-level volume in the sector that is most important to the stock market at the moment. If XLF can weather all the financial sector earnings due out tomorrow, I suspect that a bottom will be in for the financial sector.

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