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Library Home Street Smart Report Home
BEING STREET SMART
by Sy Harding
THE RALLY! March 20, 2009.
I was
subjected to considerable incoming flak over my recent columns, in which I
predicted the extreme oversold condition of the market below its long-term
200-day m.a., and the record level of investor fear and bearishness, indicated
the market should take off into a significant bear market rally very soon.
Having
been in the business for 22 years the flak was expected, reflecting the data
that showed 70% of investors were extremely bearish - each one able to quote
many reasons why, with the economy headed into the next Great Depression, and
S&P 500 earnings declining sharply, the market could only plunge still
further.
But, while
the market moves in the long-term on its expectations for the economy and
earnings, thus cycles back and forth between bull and bear markets, it moves in
the intermediate-term by cycling between being overbought and oversold,
conditions that are usually verified by investor sentiment being either very
bullish (at the overbought rally tops) or very bearish (at the periodic oversold
lows).
With the
S&P 500 up 17.4% in just seven days, the skepticism has died down some,
again confirmed by data that investor sentiment has already come down from the
extreme of bearishness seen a couple of weeks ago.
For
instance, the weekly poll of its members by the American Association of
Individual Investors reached a record
level of 70.3% bearish, only 18.9% bullish, a couple of weeks ago (March 5). My
research firm considers bearishness to be extreme to the point where we need to
watch for a potential upside reversal by the market, any time the poll shows
more than 55% bearish and fewer than 25% bullish. As noted, the poll on March 5
showed a record 70.3% bearish. The poll on March 12 (three days after
the big rally began) showed 54.5% were still bearish, which is typical.
But this
week's poll shows quite a reversal already, with only 38.3% bearish and 45.1%
bullish.
Such a
quick reversal in sentiment is a reason to be cautious about the staying power
of the rally. In positioning our subscribers for the rally we told them we would
not expect the rally to end until bullishness reached 55%, and bearishness
dropped below 25%, which normally takes several months.
So
sentiment will bear watching. If the market experiences a few days of
profit-taking and pullback as we expect, that would likely bring back some fear
and bearishness, which would be a positive as far as the rally continuing.
The second
situation concerns the market's technical situation, in which the market is at
an important juncture. That can be seen in two charts I put on
my free blog post last Wednesday. You will see that the first, a short-term
chart, shows how the major indexes have broken out above the short-term overhead
resistance at their 21-day moving averages. That is a positive. But will the
rally only last until the market becomes short-term overbought above the moving
average, where it will also run into a short-term trendline of resistance? Or as
shown in the second chart, a long term chart, will it continue into an
intermediate-term rally of several months duration? The long-term chart shows
how substantial such a rally could be, given how extremely oversold the major
indexes are beneath their long-term 200-day moving averages.
One reason
to expect the latter is that, as the chart shows, the S&P 500 and other
major indexes are even more oversold than they were at the oversold lows in the
2000-2002 bear market, from which significant bear market rallies were launched
in that bear market. In fact, the Dow has only been this oversold beneath its
200-day m.a. once in the last 75 years, and that was at a low in 1930, just
before the Dow launched into the 50% bear market rally that took place in the
middle of the granddaddy of them all 1929-32 bear.
But
investor sentiment might come into play if sentiment becomes too bullish too
soon.
So while
most investors are spending a lot of time and energy stressing over events that
are sideshows to the market; the bonuses paid to Wall Street executives, the
$trillions being thrown at the slowing economy, what the massive debt will mean
to future generations, and looking for signs of improvement in economic reports;
their investments (and therefore their ability to weather the catastrophes they
expect) might be better served by ignoring the sideshows and focusing on what
the market is telling them with its overbought/oversold conditions and investor
sentiment.
Just a
thought.
Sy
Harding is President of Asset Management Research Corp., and publisher of the
financial website www.StreetSmartReport.com,
and the free blog www.SyHardingblog.com.
He also authored the timely 1999 book Riding the Bear - How to Prosper in the
Coming Bear Market, and 2007's Beating the Market the Easy Way - Seasonal
Strategies that Double the Market!
Back to the Top Library Home Street Smart Report Home Sy's Free Daily Blog.
