Birchtree
TSP Talk Royalty
- Reaction score
- 143
Re: Birchtree's account talk
"We are currently very close to eclipsing the peak in long-term bearish sentiment during the 2000-2003 market meltdown, which I find astonishing given that the S&P 500 is 115% higher from October 2002 bear market lows and is making new record highs daily. While bullishness has rebounded recently, I would have to see a string of readings in the high 50s - low 60s before becoming concerned. We are just now getting back to more normal bull market levels in most gauges of investor sentiment.
I still see no signs of excessive optimism in our markets, outside of the Chinese ADRs. Moreover, U.S. stock mutual funds have seen outflows for modt of the past five years; domestic ETFs have recently seen improved inflows, and there has been an explosion in low correlation/negative correlation U.S. stock strategies; the quantity of research that caters to these funds has soared; permabears pundits are more popular than ever, there have been huge spikes in gauges of investor anxiety over the last couple of years on relatively mild market pullbacks; a fairly large chunk of the general public generally hates U.S. stocks and says it won't ever invest in them again; public short selling is more popular than ever, short interest on the major exchanges has exploded higher this year; S&P futures traders remain positioned near historically short levels; the mainstream press obsesses with what is wrong and what could go wrong; investors seem to always price in the worst case scenario immediately rather than the most likely scenario; and long-term investors are denigrated (I like that), while day-trading is championed as a crash is always seen as just around the corner.
I continue to believe that overall investors sentiment regarding U.S. stocks has never been worse in history with the market at records, which bodes very well for further outsized gains." From Gary at Between the Hedges
"We are currently very close to eclipsing the peak in long-term bearish sentiment during the 2000-2003 market meltdown, which I find astonishing given that the S&P 500 is 115% higher from October 2002 bear market lows and is making new record highs daily. While bullishness has rebounded recently, I would have to see a string of readings in the high 50s - low 60s before becoming concerned. We are just now getting back to more normal bull market levels in most gauges of investor sentiment.
I still see no signs of excessive optimism in our markets, outside of the Chinese ADRs. Moreover, U.S. stock mutual funds have seen outflows for modt of the past five years; domestic ETFs have recently seen improved inflows, and there has been an explosion in low correlation/negative correlation U.S. stock strategies; the quantity of research that caters to these funds has soared; permabears pundits are more popular than ever, there have been huge spikes in gauges of investor anxiety over the last couple of years on relatively mild market pullbacks; a fairly large chunk of the general public generally hates U.S. stocks and says it won't ever invest in them again; public short selling is more popular than ever, short interest on the major exchanges has exploded higher this year; S&P futures traders remain positioned near historically short levels; the mainstream press obsesses with what is wrong and what could go wrong; investors seem to always price in the worst case scenario immediately rather than the most likely scenario; and long-term investors are denigrated (I like that), while day-trading is championed as a crash is always seen as just around the corner.
I continue to believe that overall investors sentiment regarding U.S. stocks has never been worse in history with the market at records, which bodes very well for further outsized gains." From Gary at Between the Hedges