Monday, August 22, 2011

TIME OUT:

Like most of the stock market Buyers, I shall be taking a vacation next week, so there will be no blog next Monday ( I'll be tracking the data for cumulative statistics, however).
Despite the horrendous volatility last week, the Sentiment Indicators were much more benign than the previous week: Although the McClellan Oscillator dropped to its floor, minus 42, the Summation actually rose. Newsletter surveys, which come out midweek, were stable, but the VIX broke above 40 again, a bottoming signal at some point. Money left equity mutual funds into MMFunds.
Here are the numbers:


MktSentiment Last WeekPrev. Week 5 Yr HI 5 Yr LOW
DJIA:1081711269140936626
Nasdaq:2341250728611114
S&P 500:112311781561683
CBOE Eq. put/call: 878596-10/0846-1/03
VIX:43.036.4908.8
McClellan Osc:(42)(8)108(123)
McClellan Sum:(618)(621)1568(1514)
           Newsletter Surveys



InvestorsIntel.Bull:
46.247.36322.21
InvestorsIntel.Bear:
23.723.754.416
AAII Bull:
35.633.4n/an/a
AAII Bear:
39.844.8n/an/a
US Equity-1 week lagn/a(23.5B)
  
Money Market Flows10.2B52.8B

Baltic Dry Index:1287128711700663
Bullish %:
2223892
Insider Corporate Sellers:9:14:1235:12.4:1

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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Monday, August 15, 2011

LOCK THE DOORS !:

Don't call Congress back! Technical studies show the markets do much better when Congress is out of session (of course, this is mostly due to Holidays). MIT studies also show that not only do persons with positive attitudes lead happier and healthier lives, but are better at investing - with sharper intuition. And Felix Salmon of Reuters notes that longer term investors should welcome corrections such as these - for dollar cost averaging and mutual fund reinvesting, the lower the better. Also, bubbles such as tech stocks, Real Estate, Gold (?) usually end up badly without a respite. BTW - the CME is raising margin requirements on Gold, just as they did with silver.
Sentiment conditions still remain oversold and indicating  a strong rally: the NASD to NYSE Volume is near record lows; NYSE new highs were an incredible 20 to 1510 new lows for the week; the McClellan Summation is now negative 621.
Legal insider selling is way low at 4:1, after weeks in the 50's and 60's to 1 buyers. Money market flows did a huge flip flop the past two weeks: 66B out, then 53B back in last week (but not into stock funds). Finally, the Bullish % is at a lowly 23% of stocks on buy signals.
Here are the weekly numbers:

MktSentiment Last WeekPrev. Week 5 Yr HI 5 Yr LOW
DJIA:1126911444140936626
Nasdaq:2507253228611114
S&P 500:117811991561683
CBOE Eq. put/call: 858596-10/0846-1/03
VIX:36.433.0908.8
McClellan Osc:(8)(111)108(123)
McClellan Sum:(621)(275)1568(1514)
           Newsletter Surveys



InvestorsIntel.Bull:
47.346.36322.21
InvestorsIntel.Bear:
23.724.754.416
AAII Bull:
33.427.2n/an/a
AAII Bear:
44.849.9n/an/a
US Equity-1 week lagn/a(10.4B)
Money Market Flows52.8B(65.8B)

Baltic Dry Index:1287126811700663
Bullish %:
2330892
Insider Corporate Sellers:4:114:1235:12.4:1


With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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Monday, August 8, 2011

REVERSING THE QE II:


It may take a long time to turn ships like the Queen
Elizabeth in the opposite direction, but it didn't take
long for Bernanke's QE II to reverse, just like the QE I
in 2010 ! From 3/9/09 to 4/23/10 the S&P500 rose 80%, then
corrected 14% by 8/26/10. So far the QE II reversal is 14%
after repricing the sugar high run up of 33%.
Although there may not be a QE III, since it is debatable
how effective the first two were, word is that Ben's
secret weapon, not used since WW II, is to lower longer
term Treasuries' yields, flattening the yield curve - not
next Tuesday, but maybe at Jackson Hole later this month.
At a gala dinner event, sponsored by Schwab, at the swank
Omni Hotel inSan Francisco, the main speaker - Frank
Holmes of US Global Funds - ended his slick talk with
probably the most important statement: a MIT study showing
that people who maintained a positive mental attitude
(PMA) were not only happier and healthier in life, but had
better intuition in investing.
That said, for the first time in many months, almost all
the Sentiment Indicators I follow have lined up on the
positive, oversold side, boding for a possible short term
rally soon:
The VIX upspike over 35 has shown recently that a rally is
due;
NASD to NYSE Volume for the weak was low, meaning less
speculation.
The CBOE Equity put/call ratio jumped to a high 85%;
The McClellan Oscillator is now at minus 111, with the
Summation going negative.
The AAII Bull/Bear survey is way fearful at 27 to 50.
And although huge outflows of Money Markets occurred due
to European holdings and zero rates, money also came out
of equity Mutual Funds.
For those readers who have followed my DITM, or covered
call strategy at the blog below, it has survived the 14%
correction quite well, so far. With the hoped for future
rally, the slightly "under water" positions will improve
and, over time, allow selling a lower 5 to 10% call on
higher dividend % and richer call premium due to the
higher volatility (VIX).

Last week, the book I wrote on it - Zero (IN)Tolerance -
was converted to an eBook on most eReaders except for
Amazon's Kindle (hopefully by December); it is on iPad,
Nook, Sony, Kobo, etc. by title or author.


Here are the Sentiment numbers:
MktSentiment Last WeekPrev. Week 5 Yr HI 5 Yr LOW
DJIA:1144412143140936626
Nasdaq:2732275628611114
S&P 500:119912921561683
CBOE Eq. put/call: 856796-10/0846-1/03
VIX:32.025.3908.8
McClellan Osc:(111(84)108(123)
McClellan Sum:(275)1651568(1514)
           Newsletter Surveys



InvestorsIntel.Bull:
46.349.56322.21
InvestorsIntel.Bear:
24.721.554.416
AAII Bull:
27.237.8n/an/a
AAII Bear:
49.931.4n/an/a
US Equity-1 week lagn/a(8.8B)
  
Money Market Flows(65.8B)(37.5B)

Baltic Dry Index:1268127811700663
Bullish %:
3059892
Insider Corporate Sellers:14:137:1235:12.4:1

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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Monday, August 1, 2011

GOOGLED :

For the first time in 6 years of posting Sentiment numbers, my template sabotaged me by repeating the numbers from the week before; some little worm in there did not update the template. Rest assured, the numbers this week (and for the previous week in the template) are correct ! I think!

Mistakes will happen. Look at the GDP predictions by the best and brightest Economisseds for the past several quarters; look at Barron's stock pickers, underperforming static INDICES! And according to Prof. Tetlock of UC Beserkely, out of 27,450  future predictions barely 50% were correct, with the most egregiously wrong being the most esteemed, such as Paul Ehrlich and Paul Krugman. Stuff happens.

Looking at a yearly chart, the previous times the VIX has spiked, as it did last week, a huge rally ensued. The A/D (advance/declines on the NYSE) were 1:10, which should be a selling climax. Ergo, the McClellan Oscillator sank to a minus 84, with -50 being my buy signal.Since I started keeping track of the COT, the commitment of large (smart money) traders went positive for the first time, barely. Small traders are still looking through rose-colored glasses.
Finally, money market Outflows were huge, as were equity fund flows yet again - ETF capital remains unchanged, although margin interest has lessened for the second month.

Here are the correct numbers:

MktSentiment Last WeekPrev. Week 5 Yr HI 5 Yr LOW
DJIA:1214312681140936626
Nasdaq:2756285828611114
S&P 500:129213451561683
CBOE Eq. put/call: 676096-10/0846-1/03
VIX:25.317.5908.8
McClellan Osc:(84)13108(123)
McClellan Sum:1654601568(1514)
           Newsletter Surveys



InvestorsIntel.Bull:
49.546.26322.21
InvestorsIntel.Bear:
21.521.554.416
AAII Bull:
37.839.9n/an/a
AAII Bear:
31.430.6n/an/a
US Equity-1 week lagn/a(6.5B)
Money Market Flows(37.5B)(24.7B)

Baltic Dry Index:1278132511700663
Bullish %:
5970892
Insider Corporate Sellers:37:163:1235:12.4:1

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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