RightNow Technologies, a scrappy CRM company that is starting to become a more serious competitor with CRM giants such as SAP, Oracle's Siebel, and Salesforce, just announced a solid quarter in which they continue to make customer and revenue gains.

The company reported GAAP earnings of $1.4 million, or 4 cents per share, for the quarter. The non-GAAP earnings, which analysts use in their estimates, were 9 cents per share, matching the street view. Revenue grew 20 percent from the year-ago period to $43.5 million. But company executives were careful to stress on the call that recurring revenue stream is growing at a 27% clip.

I don't want things to fall apart in the stock market. No really, I don't. But the unusual level of "CNBC Optimism" combined with a bad chart, and terrible reactions to so-called "good news" today are all leading indicators, to me, that all is not well in market land. Let's take a look at these items one-by-one: 1) A $6B deal between SAP and Sybase is announced. It can't help the market though. As I like to say, it's not the news but the reaction to the news that matters. The market's reaction was muted, at best. Tech stocks have been selling off all day. 2) Even John Chambers can't save the market. When America's most polished optimist, John Chambers, announces a "great quarter" and comes on CNBC, but the market sells off, that's a bad sign. Cisco reported its "strongest quarter ever," but the stock has sold off nearly 5% so far today. Hmmm. 3) The S&P chart, which I commented on here, is looking more and more awful. Following the trillion-dollar Euro bounce, further gains have been muted, and we are getting yet another rounded top in the context of a scary looking waterfall like pattern. You think all those High Frequency Trader (HFT) programs are done with their mini-panics? I don't. On the chart below, I have shown the downward angle of the top we've formed in the last few weeks, as well as circle the area where that interesting "panic gap," was created after the Euro bailout was announced. Notice that the "Euro Bailout Rally" is now just a blip in the overall chart. For whatever reasons, markets like to gravitate back to areas of huge turbulence -- especially when there was a large gap. This is what I expect to happen to this market. That area will be tested again and either fail or succeed. Disclosure: Short S&P (stop at 1175), long S&P puts.