Search Results for: weekly sentiment update

Weekly Sentiment Update: The F.O.M.O. Train Is Unstoppable… for Now

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, we saw traders show less more fear after the SPX broke to new all-time highs. And the question I asked was whether we were set for a F.O.M.O.-driven ride up to SPX 2500. With markets still clawing higher, it looks like the answer is yes. So let’s take a fresh look at our 5 primary sentiment indicators to see if the ride towards 2500 has made the bulls overconfident. (click here for a primer on them) 1) VIX Spread – Bullish The VIX dropped as low as 9.65 Friday, putting it within range of the the 9.56 generational low on May 9. A couple of weeks ago, the VIX curve nearly inverted, but the 3-month curve is at +3.7, indicating traders are not pricing in much near-term volatility. Or in plain English, folks are bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 59, up from 56 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 59 is pretty much neutral. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 26.9% of individual investors are bullish. This 26.9% reading is well below the 38.5% long-term average, and implies that individual investors do not trust this bull move. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bullish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.66 yesterday with a 3-day moving average of 0.66. This is above historical averages. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index was at 84 Friday afternoon (84 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is 89.3. These numbers show higher put demand, but they’re actually in-line with recent averages, so I’ll also lump it in as neutral again. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 2 bullish 2 neutral 1 bearish So these numbers are unchanged from last week. The question to ask is whether we’re on the verge of outright forth. Last week, I said no. This week… I’m saying maybe. The AAII Sentiment Survey indicates that individual investors are pretty skittish. Typically, at tops, you see the masses wanting to get in. One possibility is that the tense geopolitical climate is preventing investors from getting too bullish, even though volatility has gone to basically nothing since the election. And the CBOE equity-put call doesn’t show rampant demand for call options, another thing we typically see at market tops. Therefore, I think there’s a reasonable chance we charge past SPX 2500 in the next couple of weeks as shorts throw the towel in, unable to withstand the bulls’ painfully slow push higher. And at that point, perhaps crossing a major round number like 2500 really gets the bulls overconfident, setting the stage for a drop. But for now, let the relentless post-election bid teach you an important lesson: the trend is your friend. And it can be your friend for a lot longer than may seem reasonable. So if you want to bet against it, have a really good reason. I’ll end with a tip: if you’re reason is “what goes up must come down,” go back to the drawing board!

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Weekly Sentiment Update: Can We Ride a F.O.M.O. Wave to SPX 2500+?

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, traders swung to a moderately bearish stance. But yesterday, the SPX blasted up to a new record high of 2418.71, so let’s see just how quickly sentiment is turning. (click here for a primer on these 5 sentiment indicators) 1) VIX Spread – Bullish Last Thursday, the VIX spiked up to 16.30, but it’s collapsed back down to 9.83, butting it within range of the the 9.56 generational low on May 9. Last week, the VIX curve nearly inverted, but the 3-month curve is at +4.0, indicating traders not pricing in much near-term volatility. Or in plain English, folks are bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 56, up from 45 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 56 is neutral. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 32.9% of individual investors are bullish, up from 23.9% last week. This 32.9% reading is below the 38.5% long-term average, and indicates that individual investors are not particulary trusting of the market. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bullish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.59 yesterday with a 3-day moving average of 60.3. These numbers are under historical norms, indicating that traders are not buying many put options. Therefore, they are bullish. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index is at 92 this morning (92 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is 92.3. These numbers show higher put demand, but they’re actually in-line with recent averages, so I’ll also lump it in as neutral again. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 2 bullish (+2 from last week) 2 neutral (-1 from last week) 1 bearish (-1 from last week) The numbers indicate that we’re seeing much less fear than last week. So the important question to ask is whether we’re on the verge of outright forth. I’m going to guess no. The AAII Sentiment Survey indicates that individual investors are pretty skittish. Typically, at tops, you see the masses wanting to get in. On a related note, a recent Gallup poll showed that just 54% of US adults have participated in the 2009-2017 bull market. From 2001 – 2008, 62% of adults owned stocks. On a second related note, have you noticed the sudden BitCoin craze? Crypocurrencies are going up 5% or 10% a day, which looks like the 1999 dot-com boom all over again. If there’s froth, it’s in BitCoin, not stocks! (not that BitCoin can’t double or triple from here…) Looking forward, I’m wondering if the bears are destined to capitulate on a sudden wave of F.O.M.O. (fear of missing out), driving up SPX to 2500+ in a blowout move.

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Weekly Sentiment Update: Some Fear Is Here. But Maybe Not Enough.

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Just when everyday seemed to greet me with a smile Sunspots have faded and now I’m doing time Now I’m doing time ‘Cause I fell on black days -Chris Cornell (R.I.P.) Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, traders swung to a moderately bullish stance. But yesterday, as the Trump/Comey controversy heated up, the SPX dove -1.8% — the biggest one-day decline since September 9, 2016. That’s a span of 172 trading days! So let’s take a fresh look at sentiment and figure out whether the bears are still growling. (click here for a primer on these 5 sentiment indicators) 1) VIX Spread – Bearish This morning, the VIX is at 15.89, putting up 66% from the 9.56 generational low on May 9. The curve is nearly inverted and the 3-month spread is at just +0.1, which means that traders are very fearful. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 45, down from 63 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 45 is neutral. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that just 23.9% of individual investors are bearish, down from 32.7% last week. This 23.9% reading is well below the 38.5% long-term average, and is the lowest level since November 3, 2016 — the week before the Presidental election. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.73 yesterday with a 3-day moving average of 0.62. That 0.73 number above historical norms, but this number was also very, very low from Friday to Tuesday, so we’ll call it Neutral. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index closed at 88 yesterday (88 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is 94.2. These numbers show higher put demand, but they’re actually in-line with recent averages, so I’ll also lump it in as neutral. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 0 bullish (down from 2 last week) 3 neutral (up from 2 last week 2 bearish (up from 1 last week The question everyone’s asking is obvious: is there enough fear in the market? Now, sentiment is undoubtedly more bearish this week, perhaps best illustrated by the spiking VIX and its nearly inverted curve. However, I’m not sure sentiment is bearish enough to immediately form a bottom. The CBOE equity put-call ratio did spike to 0.73. That’s a mark of fear — but it’s not an extreme level. It actually hit 0.96 in mid-April. I’d love to see a spike above 0.90, and a dip in the ISE Sentiment Index as well. That would mean traders are aggressively buying put options for downside protection/speculation purposes, which is what you see at the point of maximum fear. In hindsight, that 9.56 extreme low in the VIX may have been a sign of true froth. At the time, other sentiment indicators were pointing bearish, but at that point, traders were pricing in almost no volatility, and thus no fear. Now we’re about to see if the volatility train is ready to leave the station after 6 months of nothing.

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Weekly Sentiment Update: The Bulls Come Out to Play

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, sentiment was very bearish, and I said “I think SPX makes new all-time highs above 2401 by Monday at 9:45 a.m. ET.” And indeed, in the aftermath of Emmanual Macron’s victory in France, the SPX did indeed squeeze to a new record high at 2401.36 at 9:35 a.m. ET. That was followed by another all-time high on Tuesday at 2403.87 before the market fell back into the range. So let’s take a fresh look at sentiment and figure out whether the bears are still growling. (click here for a primer on these 5 sentiment indicators) 1) VIX Spread – Bullish The VIX is at 10.70 this morning after hitting new 10-year lows earlier in the week. The 3-month spread is at 3.7, which means that traders are moderately bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bullish The Fear & Greed Index is at 63. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 63 means traders are moderatly bullish. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 32.7% of individual investors are bullish, down from 38.1% last week. This is below the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.65 yesterday with a 3-day moving average of 0.63. This indicates that traders are neutral. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index is at 97 as of late morning (97 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is 87.6. So the recent trend shows higher put option demand. However, I’ll consider this number neutral because it’s actually risen a bit in the past couple of weeks. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 2 Bullish (up from 1 last week) 2 Neutral (unchanged from last week 1 Bearish (down from 2 last week Traders looked pretty negative last week ahead of the April jobs numbers and the French election results, but they’ve swung to moderately bullish this week. Looking forward, we’ll probably need a meaningful surge above the new 2403.87 record high to push the market into full-on froth category. But to be fair, for 2 reasons, it could be argued that froth already set in: 1) The VIX hit 9.56 earlier this week the lowest level since February 2007 2) There’s just no volatility because the shallowest of dips keep getting bought But let’s play it by ear. Low-volatility stretches can go on for a long time before anything changes.

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Weekly Sentiment Update: Why the Bears May Fuel New All-Time Highs

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, the overall mood of traders shifted to neutral from the prior week’s extreme bearishness. With the healthcare vote, earnings from AAPL/AMZN/FB/TSLA, and the April nonfarm payrolls report out of the way, let’s see how traders are feeling ahead of this weekend’s French election. (click here for a primer on these 5 sentiment indicators) 1) VIX Spread: Bullish The VIX dropped under 10 this morning, and the 3-month spread is at +3.98. This means that traders are fairly bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index: Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 45, down from 48 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 45 means traders are neutral. 3) AAII Sentiment: Neutral The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 38.1% of individual investors are bullish,basically unchanged from last week. This is right in-line with the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call: Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.77 yesterday with a 3-day moving average of 0.69. This indicates that traders are bearish. 5) ISE Sentiment: Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index is at 65 as of the Thursday close (65 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is just 88.2. So the recent trend shows higher put option demand. The big drop ahead of Friday’s NFP report has me slotting this number in at bearish. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 1 bullish 2 neutral 2 bearish So traders have gotten more negative since last week, when we had 1 bullish, 4 neutral, and 0 bearish sentiment indicators. Last week, I wondered whether sentiment was about to go full-on bullish, but we saw precisely the opposite occur. Traders actually got more bearish, which is vert encouraging for the bulls. Judging by yesterday’s surge in put option demand (as indicated by the CBOE equity put-call ratio and the ISE Sentiment Index), traders were hedging aggressively for today’s NFP report and this weekend’s French election. This means there’s a lot of bearish bets that will need to be unwound in a jiffy if we get a Macron victory in France. I don’t think Marine Le Pen can be counted out until the final vote is tallied, but it certainly looks like Macron is in the driver’s seat. Call me crazy, but I think SPX makes new all-time highs above 2401 by Monday at 9:45 a.m. ET. (not that 8 points is a meaningful move in the grand scheme of things…)

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Weekly Sentiment Update: The Bears Are Disappearing!

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side ever provides real evidence of their views. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, traders were undeniably bearish. Specifically, they were loading up on put options like there was no tomorrow, which provided a ton of upside fuel after Macron scored a victory in the first round of the French Presidential election. So let’s see if sentiment has lifted with this week’s surge, which drove the Russell 2000 and Nasdaq to fresh all-time highs. (click here for a primer on the 5 sentiment indicators listed below) 1) VIX Spread – Bullish The VIX has dropped like a rock this week, and the 3-month spread is at 3.27. This means traders are moderately bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is now at 48, up from just 34 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 48 is smack in the middle, meaning traders are neutral. 3) AAII Sentiment – Neutral The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 38% of individual investors are bullish, a huge jump from last week’s 25.7% reading. While this is a major jump, it’s right in-line with the long-term average of 38.5%. So it’s neutral. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.63 yesterday with a 3-day moving average of 0.62. This indicates that traders are neutral. This is a pretty big decline from late last week, when traders were scooping up puts like there was no tomorrow. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index is at 92 (92 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is just 88.4. So the recent trend shows higher put option demand. However, I’ll actually call this neutral because the ISE Sentiment index has been so down for so long that I’ll count these readings as neutral. One thing to keep in mind: for the past few months, I’ve found that the ISE Sentiment Index hasn’t been terribly helpful in terms of judging sentiment. I believe its measurement methodology is very well thought-out, but even so, the results haven’t been all that helpful. I wrote more about that topic here. So I’m taking the time to consider swapping it out with another indicator. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 1 bullish 0 bearish 4 neutral This is a big change from last week, when we had 0 bullish, 4 bearish, and 1 neutral. So we went from stretched markets with bearish sentiment, to even more stretched markets with neutral sentiment. Now, the big question is whether sentiment’s about to go full-on bullish. We’ll know more tomorrow. After the close today, we’re getting an avalanche of earnings from the likes of Google (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Starbucks (SBUX), and Intel (INTC), all of which are major Nasdaq components. Incidentally, those reports should also dictate whether SPX is about to vault over the prior 2400.98 all-time high set on March 1. And don’t forget, #1 index heavyweight Apple (AAPL) reports on Tuesday, and it too will play a key role in the near-term action. So keep an eye out — if we get stronger equity market action in the next few days, sentiment could head to full-on froth!

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Weekly Sentiment Update: The Bears Are Still Raging!

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, traders were definitely feeling bearish. We had an inverted VIX curve, big put option demand, and significant negativity among individual investors. Now that the S&P 500 is slamming up towards last week’s highs, let’s take a fresh look at the numbers. 1) VIX Spread – Bearish The VIX is dropping, and the 3-month spread is at +1.0. This shows that traders are moderately bearish. Related: read our primers on VIX basics and VIX curves. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bearish The Fear & Greed Index is at 34, up slightly from 28 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 34 means traders are moderately bearish. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 25.7% of individual investors are bullish, down from 29% last week. This is well below the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.70 yesterday with a 3-day moving average is 0.64. This is indicates that traders are basically neutral. I expect this number to shrink by today’s close. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index is at 92 (92 calls bought for every 100 puts). The 10 day moving average is just 84.4. So the recent trend shows higher put option demand. However, I’ll actually call this neutral because the ISE Sentiment index has been so down for so long, that today’s 92 reading actually counts as pretty neutral activity. Please note: I am strongly considering dumping ISE Sentiment from this weekly update simply because it’s almost always reading bearish no matter what happens in the market. I may replace it with the CBOE Skew Index, which measures how much traders are paying for protection against tail risk. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 0 bullish 3 bearish 2 neutral We’re not seeing much change from last week’s sentiment report. So my market thesis is unchanged too — I think we could be stuck in a range for a while, though I’ll add I see a better chance of a breakout to new all-time highs than a sharp decline. The current action is reminiscent of last summer, when we consistently had mixed-to-bearish sentiment and stock prices that looked stretched. The result was a seemingly endless sideways grind, because bearish sentiment and high valuations are a good recipe of a whole lotta nothing. The bear case remains the same — what goes up must come down. So the question is whether market volatility has been low enough for a long enough time for a trend change to actually occur. When that changes, I don’t know. But the fact that traders are so bearish implies that the snoozefest could go on for quite a while.

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Weekly Sentiment Update: Bears Are Everywhere and They’re Killing Volatility!

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. In last week’s sentiment update, the data indicated that traders had gone bearish even before the US missile attack on Syria and the nonfarmpayrolls miss. Yesterday, we clearly saw even more bears coming out of their caves. So let’s take a complete look at where we stand ahead of the long holiday weekend. 1) VIX Spread – Bearish The VIX is near a 6-month high and the 3-month curve has inverted. Typically, we see this after the market gets wrecked — not when the SPX is less than 3% off all-time highs. This is definitely bearish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bearish The Fear & Greed Index is at 28, down from 43 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 28 means traders are most definitely fearful. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 29% of individual investors are bullish, up slightly from last week’s 28.3% reading. This is well below the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.69 yesterday with a 3-day moving average is 0.70. This is indicates that traders are bearish. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index is at 139 (139 calls bought for every 100). The 10 day moving average is just 87. So the recent trend shows higher put option demand. However, I’ll actually call this neutral because the ISE Sentiment index has been so down for so long, that today’s 139 reading counts as pretty bullish activity. Please note: I am strongly considering dumping ISE Sentiment from this weekly update simply because it’s almost always reading bearish no matter what happens in the market. I may replace it with the CBOE Skew Index, which measures how much traders are paying for protection against tail risk. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 0 bullish 4 bearish 1 neutral This is reminiscent of last summer, when we consistently had mixed-to-bearish sentiment and stock prices that looked stretched. The result was a seemingly endless sideways grind, because bearish sentiment and high valuations are a good recipe of a whole lotta nothing. The bear case certainty seems the same — what goes up must come down. So the question is whether market volatility has been low enough for a long enough time for a trend change to actually occur. Here a chart of the S&P 500 along with realized volatility from last July. I marked the Snooze Periods so you can see just how long the present on has persisted: As you can see, it’s been trending down since October — that’s a pretty long stretch considering how much news we’ve gotten. When the trend changes, I don’t know. We’ve had catalyst after catalyst and the market’s shrugged it all off. There’s been the Fed, a lot of economic data and news, a heavy flow of political news, and an explosion in geopolitical tensions. But the fact that traders are so bearish implies that the snoozefest could go on for quite a while.

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Weekly Sentiment Update: The Bears Were on Patrol, Even Before Syria and the Weak Jobs Report

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. With the US missile attack on Syria and the NFP report miss, now is the perfect time for a sentiment update. Last week, the bears were out in force as we digested near all-time highs. But with the bulls still holding steady, let’s see if anything’s changed. 1) VIX Spread – Neutral The VIX spiked a bit post-Syria, but interestingly enough, it’s now DOWN on the day — even after the NFP miss. That has the 3-month VIX spread is at +2.16 which indicates that traders are starting to grow skittish. Readings around +2 are neutral. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bearish The Fear & Greed Index is at 43, up slightly from 34 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 43 means traders are moderately fearful. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 28.3% of individual investors are bullish, down from 30.2% last week. This is well below the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.66 yesterday with a 3-day moving average is 0.63. This is indicates that traders are slightly bearish. 5) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index is at 108 (108 calls bought for every 100). The 10 day moving average is just 90. This indicates that demand for put options continues to outstrip that for calls. However, I’ll actually call this neutral because the ISE Sentiment index has been so down for so long that 90 is actually high relative to recent history. Please note: I am strongly considering dumping ISE Sentiment from this weekly update simply because it’s almost always reading bearish no matter what happens in the market. I may replace it with the CBOE Skew Index, which measures how much traders are paying for protection against tail risk. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 0 bullish 3 bearish 2 neutral This shows even more bearishness than last week. Note that the all of these indicators except for the VIX spread, were released BEFORE the attack on Syria and the nonfarm payrolls miss. So it’s not like the market was necessarily braced for good news, even though traders were optimistic about NFP because of the recent ADP and jobless claims beats. It is indeed possible that the next readings of the 4 others may grow more bearish in the near future. And interestingly enough, the SPX just slipped into the green, thoguh small caps and banks are underperforming. It should be an interesting day, to say the least…

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Weekly Sentiment Update: The Bears Are Growling, But No One’s Listening

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Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. But let’s look at the actual numbers to see how the crowd actually feels. Last week, bears started sneaking out of their caves just in time for Spring. And with the bulls continuing to hold steady in the face of doubt, let’s see if anything’s changed. 1) VIX Spread – Bullish The VIX spiked to 15 early Monday, but it’s back down under 12. That has the 3-month VIX spread is at +2.69 which indicates that traders are moderately bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bearish The Fear & Greed Index is at 34, up slightly from 30 last week. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and a reading of 34 means traders are bearish. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 30.2% of individual investors are bullish, down from 35.3% last week. This is well below the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was at 0.64 yesterday with a 3-day moving average is 0.67. This is indicates that traders are slightly bearish. 5) ISE Sentiment – Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index is at 83 (83 calls bought for every 100). The 10 day moving average is just 90. This indicates that demand for put options continues to outstrip that for calls. However, I am strongly considering dumping ISE Sentiment from this weekly update simply because it’s almost always reading bearish no matter what happens in the market. I may replace it with the CBOE Skew Index, which measures how much traders are paying for protection against tail risk. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have: 1 bullish 4 bearish 0 neutral This shows even more bearishness than last week. So while the bears are pushing an age-old theme — everyone’s complacent — I’m getting the feeling that traders are waiting for another shoe to drop, even though we’ve seen improvement in the action below the surface. Yesterday, the Nasdaq and Russell showed relative strength, and on Tuesday, we saw great upward action in the banks. So while some of the so-called “Trump Trade” has unwound itself, the bears’ growing isn’t adding up to much. But there’s an important question to ask here: how can sentiment be bearish if the SPX is 2% from all-time highs? We’ve seen this over and over throughout the bull market — markets hovering near record highs, but sentiment reading negative. My guess is that there’s inherent distrust in the market, and traders are eager to turn bearish on even small declines. And those that are buying often appear to be doing so reluctantly. It’s more of a “I might as well buy” attitude than “I’m buying because we’re going straight to SPX 3000.” And that’s a big difference from the last two bull markets.

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