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Go to: Top | Short-term Outlook | Int-term Outlook | Equity Updates | Indicator Summary | Commodity Updates
Short-term
Outlook (1-5 Days):
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Intermediate-term Outlook (1-3 Months):
Today's Update: We will remain Neutral.
Why: During the market's breakdown in early
July, we saw a number of examples of excessive pessimism,
such as deeply
oversold conditions, and give-up among
Rydex traders and
individual investors. After sentiment recovered
from that during a 10% rally, we saw some encouraging signs,
such as the advance/decline line
making a
new all-time high. But indexes like the S&P 500
remained mired in a pattern of lower highs and lower lows,
so price action was dubious. Since then, we saw some
worrisome signs, some of which the media has grabbed onto,
like
the Hindenburg Omen. Now stocks are
threatening to break down under support. There is
anecdotal evidence of too much pessimism once again
(mainstream press about mutual fund flows into bonds instead
of stocks, firms rolling out "fat tail" funds, and
celebrities warning about pending market crashes and
advising the masses to stay away from stocks). Lately,
some of our indicators have started to reflect that,
including a dearth of money in
leveraged long funds at Rydex and investors clamoring
for
"fear trade" currencies. According to our
indicators, though, we're not yet at a pessimistic extreme,
and given the poor price action we're not eager to add
exposure.
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Sentiment (
Trend (
Support/Resistance (
Other (
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Equity Indicators - Updates and Extremes Another day,
another crazy breadth reading. Once again, the
all-or-nothing market shone through, this time to the upside. More
than 96% of all volume on the NYSE flowed into issues that were up on
the day, one of the largest ratios we've seen in months. The number of
issues themselves that were up on the day wasn't quite as impressive,
which skewed the Arms Index (also known as the TRIN). Since the
Arms Index is the ratio of Up Issues to Up Volume, when Up Volume is the
greater of the two, it pushes the TRIN lower. In this case, much
lower.
The table below shows how the S&P 500 fared going forward when the TRIN
was 0.25 or below when the S&P had been within 1% of a one-month low
before the buying spurt.
Date 1
Day Later 1
Week Later 2
Weeks Later 1
Month Later 3
Months Later
This is relatively expected - we normally see some short-term
back-and-forth after such a skewed day, and for the most part it tends
to be more bullish the longer-out we look.
There were only two times when we saw a TRIN at 0.25 or below within a
few days of it being 3.0 or above, like it was on Monday. Those
were 10/28/97 and 1/2/03. The former was a signal that we were in
the midst of a major bottoming process; the latter not so much as the
S&P slid for two months before bottoming.
I would normally be more interested in exploring some of the
implications of buying pressure like we saw yesterday in terms of market
breadth, but as we've discussed many times over the past year, we seem
to be in a different world now than we were prior to 2007 or so.
Whether its the proliferation of ETFs or High-Frequency Trading, or
whatever, breadth extremes just aren't as reliable when they become so
common, and so often switch from one extreme to another within days.
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Equity Market Indicators
Notes: In late June, we got a spike in bullish (for the market) indicators above the 30% level, similar to what we saw in late May. It wasn't quite a spike in extremes like we've seen at other major lows, but it was apparently enough for the buyers to step in, at least temporarily. While the percentage of our indicators at a bullish extreme have drifted lower since then, so has the number of bearish ones. For the past few weeks, we have seen few true extremes, and many that conflict with one another.
More history:
* New extreme
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Bonds, Commodities and Currencies - Updates and Extremes
Nothing notable for today.
Jason Goepfert Founder, Sundial Capital Research, Inc.
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