By Kristoff De Turck - reviewed by Aldwin Keppens
Last update: Jun 6, 2025
(All data & visualisations by ChartMill.com)
SPY, QQQ both showing a distribution day after yesterday's session (down on above-average volume near the high).
For the SPY, IT is the third distribution day within the current price range since May 12, 2025.
For the QQQ, it is the second distribution day in the same time frame of about 3 weeks.
The Russell 2000 index etf IWM also shows two previous distribution days.
This does not mean that we will automatically go lower but caution is certainly advised.
The all-time highs for SPY and QQQ are not far away and the scenario so far is still that they will be reached in the coming days/weeks.
After a promising breadth signal earlier this week, the latest data from June 5 paints a more cautious picture.
Thursday's session showed weakening internals, with breadth indicators turning negative again across several key metrics.
Let’s break down what happened and how it compares to the prior sessions.
On June 5, only 39.9% of stocks advanced while 56.8% declined, a reversal from the solid breadth seen just two days earlier on June 3, when advancing stocks peaked at 69%. The drop-off signals a fading momentum and a growing defensive stance among investors.
This is a clear shift from our June 4 analysis, where we noted that although market breadth had narrowed from June 3, more than half of the stocks were still gaining (53.2%). The continuation of the downtrend suggests the bullish sentiment was short-lived.
Despite Thursday's weakness, the percentage of stocks above their:
20-day SMA stands at 60.2%
50-day SMA remains strong at 71.5%
100-day SMA is hovering at 50.5%
200-day SMA, however, lags at just 39.5%
This tells us that while short- to medium-term trends remain broadly intact, long-term trend participation has not meaningfully improved.
For context, these metrics are only marginally lower than on June 4 and June 3, suggesting recent price weakness hasn't yet broken the broader uptrend, but it's close to doing so.
Looking at the 3-month horizon:
Advancing Stocks (3-Month) dipped slightly to 48.1%, now below the 50% mark.
Declining Stocks (3-Month) climbed to 51.1%, showing a slow but steady shift in favor of bears.
Even more telling is that this is the third straight session where declining stocks outpaced advancing ones on a 3-month basis. It reflects a gradual deterioration in underlying strength, even though broader indexes may not yet reflect that weakness outright.
Our visual (above) highlights the tug-of-war between advancing and declining stocks over the past two weeks. The June 3 spike in advancing stocks appears to be a short-term anomaly, followed immediately by lower participation on June 4 and now clear negative breadth on June 5.
This repeated failure to hold gains suggests poor follow-through, a hallmark of indecisive or weakening markets. Unless the advance/decline ratio improves significantly in the coming days, this could signal the start of a broader pullback.
Market breadth has weakened noticeably following a strong performance earlier in the week. While medium-term trend indicators remain healthy, long-term support is still lacking, and the recent deterioration in participation, especially on a 3-month basis, is worth monitoring closely.
As we await Friday's job report, this faltering breadth may reflect growing market anxiety. If the data disappoints, we may see further deterioration. For now, caution is warranted..
Next to read: ChartMill Market Monitor News, June 06
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