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The "Dumb Money" indicator continues to hit new extremes despite last week's
slight down market. The Rydex market timers continue to be bullish and leveraged
to the extreme. And to round out our sentiment analysis, selling by company
insiders has hit extremes as well. It is the perfect trifecta. Whether the
perfect trifecta becomes the perfect storm (again) for investors is yet to
be determined.
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.
Figure 1. "Dumb Money" Indicator/ weekly

What I said last
week still stands, and I would apply 3 interpretations or scenarios to
the current extreme readings in the "Dumb Money" indicator:
"1) This is a bull market, and as we know, it
takes bulls to make a bull market. Extremes in investor sentiment
- just like over bought signals - are irrelevant.
2) Even though prices may be higher over time, the market is likely to
consolidate (i.e., trade in a range) over the next couple of weeks; referring
back to figure 1 and the 2003 time period, we note that the market actually
went sideways for about 13 weeks following the extremely extreme extremes
in investor sentiment. I suspect that this will be the most likely scenario
for now.There will be a bid under the market. It will be tough to short
or bet against this market for the foreseeable future.
3) The last scenario is that the current extremes in investor sentiment
will mark the price highs in the major indices leading to the mother of
all fake outs. This scenario is still very much on the table, but with
an expected bid below the market, I don't see the market making a sudden
reversal anytime soon. Market tops are a drawn out affair!"
For those who haven't read my "stuff" before, one
of my favorite aspects of the Rydex data is the amount of assets in the
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. See figure 2 a daily graph of
the S&P500 (symbol: $INX) with the Rydex leveraged bulls (green line)
versus the leveraged bears (red line) in the lower panel. Typically, we want
to bet against the Rydex market timer even though they only represent a small
sample of the overall market.
Figure 2. Rydex Bullish and Leveraged v. Bearish and Leveraged

We note that the number of those market timers that are bullish and leveraged
is once again very extreme (2.52 times) relative to the bearish and leveraged
cohort. Since this started occurring on a regular basis on August 4 (or 9 trading
days ago), the S&P500 is down over that period time. Yes, it is down only
1.5 points but what an accomplishment that is in this very bullish environment!!!
Our last look at sentiment comes from Insider
Score, which is a service that provides information on company insider
buying and selling utilizing a proprietary algorithm. See figure 3, which
is a weekly chart of the S&P500. The indicator in the lower panel is
Insider Score's "entire market" score, and this score is wrapped in trading
bands. The current value is now outside the lower band and 2 standard deviations
below the mean. This suggests significant insider selling.
Figure 3. Insider Selling/ weekly

There were 3 other prior and noteworthy extremes over the past 6 years of
data, and these are noted with the black vertical lines. They were: 1) November,
2004; 2) August, 2005; and 3) November, 2006. Two other things about insider
buying and selling are noteworthy. One, insiders continued to buy the dips
during the early stages of the bear market in November, 2007 and January, 2008;
they had no clue as to what was ahead. So sometimes insiders can get it wrong.
Two, the current value on the Insider Score data is significantly below (i.e.,
increase in selling) the value seen in April, 2008 and September, 2008. These
time periods are noted with the gray ovals over the price bar and led to major
flushes in the markets.
Over the past 3 months every technical or fundamental signal to sell the market
has been a reason buy. The bulls will tell you that this is just the "wall
of worry" necessary for stocks to go higher or this is how bull markets act.
All that may be true, but really, this is also just nonsensical dogma. On the
other hand, the data would suggest that this is not the time or place
to be making that big bet on the long side. From my perspective, there
are better risk adjusted opportunities ahead.
And finally, at this point in time, it is too early to say whether the perfect
trifecta will turn into the perfect storm.
The "Smart Money" indicator is shown in figure 4. 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 4. "Smart Money" Indicator/ weekly

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