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Since the first
weeks of August, 2009, I have stated the following in every weekly
summary on equity market sentiment: "Investor sentiment remains extremely
bullish. There is an upward bias until the extremes in bullish sentiment
are unwound." I also mentioned
early on that "there will be a bid under the market, and it will be
tough to short or bet against this market for the foreseeable future." I
would say that about characterizes the US equity markets over the past
2 months. Now, however, I am changing my tune.
I want to state that equities are for renting not owning at this juncture. I
am not calling for a market top, but prices should trade more in a range, and
if you intend to play on the long side, it will be important to maintain your
discipline (for risk reasons) and buy at the lows of that trading range and
sell at the highs to extract any profits from this market. The upward bias
still remains as long as investor sentiment is still extremely bullish, but
there is probably greater risk of a market down draft now than in past weeks.
Thus new equity purchases are for renting not owning; protecting profits on
existing positions is essential.
Several observations are worth noting that might keep an upward bias under
this market as we have seen over the past 2 months. One, the "Dumb Money" indicator
is still bullish to an extreme degree, and normally, such extremes in sentiment
need to be unwound before seeing the market lower; I am not calling for a lower
market, I am just stating that gains from this point will be difficult to hold
on to. Two, the Rydex market timers are bearish on equities (more below), and
it is unlikely for the market to roll over with these investors (as a representative
sample of all investors) nailing the market top. Honestly, I don't see a market
top, and a melt up is possible as short covering provides the market fuel.
Nonetheless and for now, I have to whistle a different tune. I see risk rising.
The "Dumb Money" indicator is shown in figure 1. The "Dumb Money" indicator
looks for extremes in the data from 4 different groups of investors who historically
have been wrong on the market: 1) Investor Intelligence; 2) Market Vane; 3)
American Association of Individual Investors; and 4) the put call ratio. The "Dumb
Money" indicator remains extremely bullish.
Figure 1. "Dumb Money" Indicator/ weekly

The "Smart Money" indicator is shown in figure 2. The "smart money" indicator
is a composite of the following data: 1) public to specialist short ratio;
2) specialist short to total short ratio; 3) SP100 option traders. The "smart
money" is neutral.
Figure 2. "Smart Money" Indicator/ weekly

Company insiders continue to sell shares to an extreme degree. See figure
3, a weekly chart of the S&P500 with the Insider
Score "entire market" value in the lower panel. From the InsiderScore report: "Transactional
volume slowed as trading windows continued to close ahead of Q3 2009 earnings
announcement. Those insiders who were free to conduct transactions showed a
distinct sell bias as our Weekly Score was in negative territory for the fourteenth-straight
week and companies with selling outnumbered companies with buying for the twelfth-consecutive
week."
Figure 3. InsiderScore Entire Market/ weekly

Figure 4 is a daily chart of the S&P500 with the amount of assets in the
Rydex bullish and leveraged funds versus the amount of assets in the leveraged
and bearish funds. Not only do we get to see what direction these market timers
think the market will go, but we also get to see how much conviction (i.e.,
leverage) they have in their beliefs. Typically, we want to bet against the
Rydex market timer even though they only represent a small sample of the overall
market. As of Friday's close, the assets in the bearish and leveraged funds
were greater than the bullish and leveraged; referring to figure 4, this would
put the red line greater than green line.
On a side note, it is interesting how these investors got less bullish all
last week as prices in the major indices rose. In fact, $250 million left the
bullish and leveraged camp after Monday's rally; I guess these bulls had enough
of a drubbing on the prior Thursday and Friday when the S&P500 lost about
30 points; they were happy to get out. After Monday, the market rose another
30 points.
Figure 4. Rydex Bullish and Leveraged v. Bearish and Leveraged/ daily

The last time we had the Rydex market timers betting against the market when
it was near its highs was back on September
13. They were bearish for 4 days and the S&P500 rose 1.55% before these
bears threw in the towel. Then as now I will state: "don't become fodder for
the bulls".
In summary, it would seem very little has changed in the sentiment picture
over the past weeks. The "Dumb Money" indicator is extremely bullish; the "Smart
Money" is neutral; insiders are net sellers; and the Rydex timers seem to be
on the wrong side of the trend. But even these trends can become exhausted
over time and they won't persist forever. In the absence of a melt up, meaningfully
higher prices will not be achieved until we see lower prices first. Therefore,
stocks are for renting not owning.
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