The S&P 500 is a prominent American stock market index that tracks the performance of 500 of the largest companies listed on exchanges in the United States. It serves as a primary benchmark for the overall health of the American economy and the broader equity market. The index also encompasses various subindices that allow for more granular analysis of market segments.

“as of right now, the S&P 500 requires a stock to have been trading on a public exchange for 12 months before inclusion.”

“We're broken under the 200 day moving average.”

“And the S&P 500 slid into the red in the final few seconds avoiding a record closing high.”

“which is something when you compare it to 1.3% of the sap 500”

“my default's always the S&P, even though my personal benchmark is more tied to the NASDAQ.”

“I found for relative strength work, it's like the S&P is still the big daddy. Like that's what people typically benchmark themselves to.”

“went down 2.29% S&P 1.6 Dow 1.65 65. So”

“Now you get this war and what happens with the war whether we win or lose or whatever ends up happening is it adds a level of uncertainty and that level of uncertainty is quite high. So you have to revalue the S&P at a lower price earnings ratio because we don't know how this will come out.”

“What if you just eliminate one of those years? Yeah. So, basically, if you took the S&P 500 and you just eliminated the 2008 crash, which we eliminated, you would have doubled your money at retirement.”

“So, basically, if you took the S&P 500 and you just eliminated the 2008 crash, which we eliminated, you would have doubled your money at retirement.”

“Run for the exits. The S&P 500 is down 2.1% from its all-time high. Full-blown quad 4 is like the one we called in 2022, the most recent one. The S&P was down over 20%.”

“If the S&P 500 breaks 6801 yesterday... That's a lower high. There are three things that create a topping process.”

“What you need to do is sell it at the top end of the range. It's also immediate term trade bearish and if it breaks 67.99, it will finally break trend.”

“And our subscribers do too because like 86 or 88% of the time SPY closes within my wrist range. That's pretty good going back a long time.”

“If you go back to 2008, the energy sector was about 16% of the S&P 500. It's now down to something like three. It's a big shift. So, if you have oil prices go up, the energy sector does well, the wealth effect that feeds through into US households that own the S&P 500 and neutral funds used to be measurable, quite palpable, but now it's gone from 16% to 3% of the S&P.”

“But since the war in Iran started, a subindex of the S&P 500, America's share index, a subindex of that with the highest quality firms in it, has actually done worse than the main index.”