Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side provides evidence for their views. So let’s see how traders are feeling into today’s inauguration: 1) VIX Spread – Bullish The 3-month VIX spread is at +5, which indicates traders are not concerned with volatility. This is a bullish reading. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bullish The Fear & Greed Index is at 67. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and 67 indicates that traders are moderately bullish. 3) AAII Sentiment – Neutral The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 35.8% of individual investors are bullish, which is below the long-term average of 38.5%. This is basically neutral. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio is at 0.69 with a 3-day moving average of 0.73. This indicates higher-than-average bearishness. 5) ISE Sentiment – Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index is at just 85 (85 calls for every 100 puts) this afternoon – which is a bearish reading. And the 10-day moving average is 79.2. This also indicates bearish sentiment. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have 2 bullish, 1 neutral, and 2 bearish signs. Now this seems neutral, but I’d argue that traders are actually leaning bullish. Why? Because options-based indicators (notably the ISE Sentiment Index) have become fairly detached from equity markets. Using sentiment as a signal for buys/sells is often a bad idea. And in the case of these options indicators, they seem to be losing value as times go on.
Continue Reading -->Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side provides evidence for their views. So let’s see how traders are feeling into today’s inauguration: 1) VIX Spread – Bullish The 3-month VIX spread is at +4.51, which indicates traders are pricing in very low near-term volatility. This means traders are bullish. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 49. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and 50 is neutral. So we’re right in the middle. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 32.8% of individual investors are bullish, which is below the long-term average of 38.5%. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio is at 0.71 with a 3-day moving average of 0.74. This indicates higher-than-average bearishness. 5) ISE Sentiment – Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index is at just 79 (79 calls for every 100 puts) this morning – which is a bearish reading. And the 10-day moving average is 81.3. This also indicates bearish sentiment. Conclusion Out of 5 sentiment indicators, we have 1 bullish, 1 neutral, and 3 bearish. I’ve been hearing a lot of chatter about how bullish the crowd is. But if anything, traders are leaning against the market, hoping for a fall.
Continue Reading -->Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side provides evidence for their views. So I like regularly run through a wide variety of sentiment measures to get an accurate reflection of the market’s mood. According to 5 sentiment measures I track, traders hated the market ahead of the November 8 US Presidential election. As you’ll see, that’s clearly changed. Let’s Dive In: 1) AAII Sentiment – Bullish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 46.7% of individual investors are bullish, which is well above the long-term average of 38.5%. This is the highest level seen since February 2015. 2) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bullish The Fear & Greed Index is at 62. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and 50 is neutral. This 62 reading indicates moderate bullishness. 3) VIX Spread – Bullish The 3-month VIX spread is at +4.69, which indicates traders are pricing in very low near-term volatility. This means traders are bullish. 4) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio is at 0.65, with a 3-day moving average of 0.62. This indicates slightly higher-than-average bullishness, but nothing extreme, so I’ll leave it in the neutral category. 5) ISE Sentiment – Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index is at just 79 (79 calls for every 100 puts) this morning — which is a bearish reading. And the 10-day moving average is 82.9. That also indicates bearish sentiment. ******* Pre-election, 5 of 5 sentiment indicators were reading bearish. Now we have 3 bullish indicators, 1 neutral, and 1 bearish. So Trump not only changed the minds of a lot of voters, he’s changed traders too. And if the S&P 500 makes new all-time highs again, we could easily see the bulls go 5 for 5 in our next sentiment check.
Continue Reading -->The ISE Sentiment Index is one of my favorite sentiment measures. It is a call-put ratio (as opposed to a put-call ratio) that uses opening long customer options transactions to judge sentiment. It excludes trades like short puts (which are bullish positions) and trades from market makers and firms, which to me makes it more useful than straight put-call ratios. As of yesterday’s close, the ISE’s 10 day moving average was just 67. That is an all-time low, and it’s likely to go even lower tomorrow. As of 10:30 a.m. ET, the ISE was at just 44. If it closes at 44, the 10-day moving average will be down to 66. Over time, the ISE has fallen as equity options have increased in popularity as a hedging instrument, even for credit investors looking for protection in illiquid assets like high-yield bonds. But still, this is a pretty depressed reading. It’s lower than readings seen at the August 24, 2015 mini-crash. And prior to this 10-day stretch, the ISE averaged 87 this year. And the 10-day moving average bottomed at 76 during the February mess. In my experience, when you have technically stretched markets and bearish sentiment, we tend to see a stalemate. That said, other sentiment indicators I follow like the CNN Fear/Greed Index and AAII Sentiment paint a slightly different picture. But after the 2-day Trump bump, it’s safe to say fear is setting in again. Check out this chart of the S&P 500 against the ISE Sentiment Index: As you can see, when the ISE gets to these depressed levels, the market tends to bounce. However, we’re in uncharted waters from a political standpoint, and it still feels like we’re in an “anything goes” environment.
Continue Reading -->How to Thrive in the Future of Trading Want to go Quant without a PhD? Check out our latest live event here: https://t3campaigns.clickfunnels.com/optin10626572 I’d say Happy Election Day but there’s doesn’t seem to be much happiness out there today. So I added a question mark. If there’s one sign of the times… it’s the lack of signs. I’ve lived in Brooklyn, NY my whole life, and every election, I’ve seen tons of signs for Presidential candidates in front of people’s homes. This time around… nada. Anecdotes aren’t evidence, but I think this says something about the state of affairs. It seems like the market wants Hillary Clinton to win to avoid the Trump wild card. I guess folks will decide the ramifications of a Clinton Presidency after the fact. However, what’s most important is resolution. The market wants a clean Clinton victory without Trump disputing the results and extending the spectacle. That said, I wouldn’t count Donald out until the final vote is tallied. Reuters is saying it sees a 90% chance of Clinton winning. But Trump was never supposed to even be in this race. Yet here he is at the homestretch. The Brexit was not supposed to happen. Yet it did. Futures are down slightly this morning, which feels like run-of-the-mill profit-taking after yesterday’s big surge. One interesting story I caught yesterday was Reuters’ report of Wall Street banks prepping for Brexit-like turmoil tomorrow. That may reduce the chances of a massively negative reaction to a Trump win or a sell-the-news reaction to a Clinton victory. In recent years, investors have generally overhedged, in the process throwing away untold billions of dollars on put options. Look at the chart below of the ISE Sentiment Index since inception in 2002.: As you can see, it’s slowly drifted lower, which means that put option demand has grown relative to call option demand. We’ll soon see if the recent spate of put buying was just another big waste of investor cash. Good luck out there.
Continue Reading -->Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side ever provides evidence for their views. So I regularly run through a variety of sentiment measures to get an accurate reflection of the market’s mood. According to 5 sentiment measures I track, traders are certainly looking bearish heading into November 8’s Presidential election. Donald Trump’s wild-card image seems to be roiling traders’ nerves because of all the possible variables. Does he win? Does he lose? Does he lose and contest the outcome? Who really knows at this point? So let’s drill down to the numbers: 1) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that just 23.6% of individual investors are bullish, well below the long-term average of 38.5%. But what’s really interesting is that bullishness has been below the long-term 38.5% average for 51 straight weeks, and 84 of the last 86. 2) ISE Sentiment – Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index is at just 31 this morning — that’s just 31 calls for every 100 puts. And the 10-day moving average is 80 — that’s the type of reading you see after a major volatility spike, not before one. 3) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bearish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio has been over 1 for the past 4 days. That indicates serious bearishness. 4) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Bearish The Fear & Greed Index is at 17. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and 50 is neutral. This 17 reading indicates extreme fear. 5) VIX Spread – Bearish The 3-month VIX spread is at -0.3, which indicates traders are pricing in high near-term volatility. This is bearish. ********* So we have all 5 of these sentiment indicators pointing bearish, and they’re likely to get more bearish as traders hedge against possible post-election downside. Interestingly, I hear a lot of traders chattering about going long into the election on the assumption that downside is already priced in. We’ll certainly see!
Continue Reading -->Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side provides evidence for their views. So I like regularly run through a wide variety of sentiment measures to get an accurate reflection of the market’s mood. According to 7 sentiment measures I track, traders appear to be very, very neutral, even though the S&P 500 is still within a stone’s throw of the 2193 all-time high. 1) SPX Options Prices – Bearish SPX options prices show a high put skew. I looked at 10% out of the money 6 month SPX options. There is currently a 9.6 point skew in implied volatilities on the options. That’s the 86th percentile. So relative to calls, traders are paying more for 10% OTM 6 month puts than they have 86% of the time over the past 5 years. 2) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 25.5% of individual investors are bullish, well below the long-term average of 38.5%. But what’s really interesting is that bullishness has been below the long-term 38.5% average for 49 straight weeks! 3) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index closed at 65 yesterday (81 puts for every 100 calls). And its 10 day moving average is just 101 — a level that indicates a neutral mood. 4) Wall Street Strategists – Neutral The average year-end target price for the S&P 500 is 2171, according to Bloomberg. That implies the market rises 1% into year-end. YAWN! 5) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was 0.66 yesterday, which is just below the YTD average of 0.69. This points to neutral sentiment. 6) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 48. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and 50 is neutral. So it’s basically right in the middle. 7) Investors Intelligence – Bullish Yesterday, the Investors Intelligence Survey of newsletter writers showed a slight decrease in bullishness to 46.1%. This is still a positive reading. ********* So we have 2 bearish indicators, 4 neutral indicators, and 1 bullish indicator. Blend them together and you have a moderately bearish crowd. I’m hearing a lot of bears say that everyone’s complacent… but I just don’t see it.
Continue Reading -->Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side ever provides evidence for their views. So I regularly run through a wide variety of sentiment measures to get an accurate reflection of the market’s mood. According to 6 sentiment measures I track, traders appear to be shockingly… neutral. Seriously, when I mash all the data together, I get a crowd that looks split right down the middle between bulls and bears. 1) SPX Options Prices – Bearish SPX options prices show a high put skew. I looked at 10% out of the money 6 month SPX options. There is currently a 9.6 point skew in implied volatilities on the options. That’s the 88th percentile. So relative to calls, traders are paying more for 10% OTM 6 month puts than they have 88% of the time over the past 5 years. 2) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 28.8% of individual investors are bullish, well below the long-term average of 38.5%, and below the 2016 YTD average of 28.1%. Bearish sentiment is at 27.9%,down huge from last week, and slightly lower than the 30.3% long-term average. 3) Wall Street Strategists – Neutral The average year-end target price for the S&P 500 is 2171, according to Bloomberg. That implies a 1% gain into year-end. 4) ISE Sentiment – Neutral The ISE Sentiment Index closed at 130 yesterday (130 calls for every 100 puts). This is a bullish reading And its 10 day moving average is just 94 — a level that typically indicates modest bearishness. So we’ll call it neutral. 5) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Bullish The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was 0.66 yesterday, which is just below the YTD average of 0.58. This points to slightly bullish sentiment. 6) Investors Intelligence – Bullish Yesterday, the Investors Intelligence Survey of newsletter writers showed a slight increase in bullishness to 46.7%. This is high relative to long-term averages. Bears fell to a 3-week low to 22.8%. ********* So we have 2 bearish indicators, 2 neutral indicators, and 2 bullish indicators. Blend them together and you have a crowd that looks pretty darn neutral. I’m hearing a lot of bears say that everyone’s complacent… but who are they talking about?
Continue Reading -->Want to Earn Serious Income With Options? Then click here to check out Doug Robertson’s special live trading event! Permabulls always say everyone’s bearish. And permabears always say everyone’s bullish. Neither side provides evidence for their views. So I like regularly run through a wide variety of sentiment measures to get an accurate reflection of the market’s mood. According to 7 sentiment measures I track, traders appear to be modestly bearish, even though the S&P 500 is still within a stone’s throw of the 2193 all-time high. 1) SPX Options Prices – Bearish SPX options prices show a high put skew. I looked at 10% out of the money 6 month SPX options. There is currently a 9.8 point skew in implied volatilities on the options. That’s the 94th percentile. So relative to calls, traders are paying more for 10% OTM 6 month puts than they have 94% of the time over the past 5 years. 2) ISE Sentiment – Bearish The ISE Sentiment Index closed at 81 yesterday (81 puts for every 100 calls). And its 10 day moving average is just 78 — a level that indicates bearishness. 3) AAII Sentiment – Bearish The latest AAII Sentiment Survey shows that 24.0% of individual investors are bullish, well below the long-term average of 38.4%, and below the 2016 YTD average of 28.1%. Bearish sentiment is at 37.1%, down a bit from last week, but well above the 30.3% long-term average. 4) Wall Street Strategists – Neutral The average year-end target price for the S&P 500 is 2169, according to Bloomberg. That implies the market does nothing into year-end. 5) CBOE Equity Put-Call – Neutral The CBOE Equity-Put Call ratio was 0.66 yesterday, which is just below the YTD average of 0.69. This points to neutral sentiment. 6) CNN Fear & Greed Index – Neutral The Fear & Greed Index is at 50. F&G operates on a 1-100 scale, and 50 is neutral perfectly neutral. 7) Investors Intelligence – Bullish Yesterday, the Investors Intelligence Survey of newsletter writers showed a slightly increase in bullishness to 45.2%, snapping a 4-week losing streak.Those calling for correction are at 31.7%, the highest since June 29. ********* So we have 3 bearish indicators, 3 neutral indicators, and 1 bullish indicator. Blend them together and you have a moderately bearish crowd. I’m hearing a lot of bears say that everyone’s complacent… but who are they talking about? P.S. Don’t forget to sign up for Doug Robertson’s FREE options event!
Continue Reading -->Global equities are down for the first time in 5 days as profit-taking sets in. We’ve had a nice central bank-driven surge over the past 2 days and markets are taking a break. Crude oil is red but off morning lows after Bloomberg reported that Saudi Arabia may have offered to cut production if Iran agreed to freeze output. This seemingly increases the probability of some type of coordinated output freeze/cut at next week’s OPEC meeting in Algiers. However, keep in mind that the OPEC news flow has been all over the place. I wouldn’t be surprised to see headlines this afternoon saying there’s no chance of a deal. I’m long oil, so this chatter is good for my portfolio, but the back and forth is getting exhausting. Today’s economic calendar is pretty light, with thee Markit US Manufacturing PMI at 9:45 a.m. and the Baker Hughes Rig Count at 1:00 p.m. We’ll also have Fed heads speaking today. Harker, Mester, and Lockhart will appear together on a panel at the Philly Fed conference at 12:00 p.m., while Kaplan will speak in Houston at 12:30 p.m. Overnight, the euro-area IHS Markit PMI fell in September due to weakness in Germany. Facebook (FB) is taking a hit this morning after it announced it over-inflated video views. Facebook insists that the issue did not impact billing to advertisers, but it certainly raises questions about platform engagement. Yahoo (YHOO) is also off on continued fallout from its security breach. Sentiment is still pretty mixed, so it’s hard to get a gauge of just how overheated (or is it underheated?) the market is. Thus far, the bears have been failing at every turn, so let’s see if they can change that today. I’d still key on biotech (IBB). It’s hard to break the market when biotech’s strong, so that’s a primary area of interest right now. IBB broke above $300 yesterday for the first time since January on a solid string of good news including mergers (both real and imagined) and positive drug data. Good luck out there.
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