Saturday, March 03, 2007
Market Week in Review
S&P 500 1,387.17 -4.41%*
Click here for the Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.
BOTTOM LINE: Overall, last week's market performance was very bearish. The cumulative advance/decline line fell, every sector declined and volume was heavy on the week. Measures of investor anxiety rose sharply. The AAII percentage of bulls plunged to 36.63% this week from 53.85% the prior week. This reading is now below average levels. The AAII percentage of bears soared to 39.60% this week from 22.31% the prior week. This reading is above average levels. The 10-week moving average of the percentage of bears is currently 31.4%, an above-average level. The 10-week moving average of the percentage of bears peaked at 43.0% at the major bear market low during 2002. Moreover, the 50-week moving average of the percentage of bears is currently 36.8%, a very high level seen during only two other periods since tracking began in the 1980s. Those periods were October 1990-July 1991 and March-May 2003, both being at major market bottoms.
Notwithstanding the recent pullback, I continue to believe that steadfastly high bearish sentiment in many quarters is mind-boggling, considering the 14.9% rise in the S&P 500 in less than nine months, the 87.8% gain for the S&P 500 since the 2002 major bear market lows, the cumulative advance/decline line recently hit a new record high, one of the best August/September/October runs in U.S. history, the fact that the Dow made another all-time high just nine days ago and that we are in the early stages of what is historically a very strong period for U.S. equities after a midterm election. As well, despite recent gains, the forward P/E on the S&P 500 is a very reasonable 14.9, falling from 16.2 at the beginning of the year, due to the historic run of double-digit profit growth increases and recent stock pullback. The S&P P/E multiple has contracted for three consecutive years. It has only contracted four consecutive years two times since 1905. Each point of multiple expansion is equivalent to a 6.6% gain in the S&P 500. Bears still remain stunningly complacent, in my opinion. As I have said many times over the last few months, every pullback is seen as a major top and every move higher is just another shorting/selling opportunity. I see few signs of capitulation by the many bears and their crowded ranks are swelling by the day on sub-prime and emerging market worries. Even most bulls have raised substantial cash of late, anticipating a meaningful correction.
As well, there are many other indicators registering high levels of investor anxiety. The 50-day moving average of the ISE Sentiment Index just recently crossed above the 200-day moving average for the first time since November 2005 and is already rolling over. The ISE Sentiment Index plunged to depressed levels in the low 90s three days this week. The NYSE Arms Index hit 15.98 on Tuesday, the highest level since record-keeping began in the 1960s. It also hit 7.99 on Thur., higher than at anytime during the major bear market bottom of 2002/2003. The four-day moving average of the NYSE Arms is an amazing 4.68, also the highest on record. The VIX had its largest one-day percentage increase in history on Tuesday. The CBOE total put/call ratio four-day moving average is 1.37, the highest since at least 1995 when Bloomberg began tracking the number. Nasdaq and NYSE short interests rose again last month and are very close to record highs. Moreover, public short interest continues to soar to record levels, and U.S. stock mutual funds have seen outflows for most of the last year, according to AMG Data Services. The percentage of U.S. mutual fund assets in domestic stocks is still the lowest since at least 1984, when record-keeping began.
There has been an historic explosion of hedge funds created with absolute return, low correlation or negative correlation U.S. stock strategies that directly benefit from the perception of a stagnant or declining U.S. stock market. Commodity funds, which typically have a low or negative correlation with stocks, have been created in record numbers. Research boutiques with a negative bias have sprung up to cater to these many new funds that help pump air into the current US "negativity bubble." Wall Street analysts have made the fewest "buy" calls on stocks this year since Bloomberg began tracking in 1997. "Buy" calls have been trending lower for eight months.
Many of the most widely read stories on financial sites are written with a pessimistic slant to gain readers regardless of their accuracy. Investment blogger bullish sentiment just recently turned a little bullish for the first time in months and is now at 32.4% Bulls, 29.7% Bears. Finally, the UltraShort QQQQ ProShares (QID) continues to see soaring volume. There is a high wall of worry for stocks to climb substantially from current levels as the public and many professionals remain very skeptical of this bull market and continue to trade with "one foot out the door."
I continue to believe this is a direct result of the strong belief by the herd that the U.S. is in a long-term trading range or secular bear environment. There is still overwhelming evidence that investment sentiment by the general public regarding U.S. stocks has never been this poor in history, with the Dow registering all-time highs almost weekly. This is serving to further widen the so-called "wealth gap." I still expect the herd to finally embrace the current bull market this year, which should result in another substantial move higher in the major averages as the S&P 500 breaks out to an all-time high to join the Dow and Russell 2000.
It is hard to believe, after the recent bombardment of pessimism and "crash" calls, that the average U.S. stock is still higher for the year. Based on the action so far this year, even more cash has piled up on the sidelines. I continue to believe that a significant portion of this cash will be deployed into true "growth" companies as their outperformance vs. “value” stocks gains steam throughout the year. Finally, I still believe the coming bullish shift in long-term sentiment with respect to U.S. stocks will result in the "mother of all short-covering rallies."
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