The Will Robinson Signal

By: Guy Lerner | Mon, Nov 15, 2010
Print Email

With investors extremely bullish and company insiders extremely bearish and with the indicator constructed from the trends in gold, crude oil and yields on the 10 year Treasury flashing extremes, I am once again reminded of the robot from the hit 1960's TV show, "Lost In Space". When the boyish Will Robinson was in peril, the robot would fling his arms up and down and announce in robot voice: "Danger, danger, Will Robinson!" Historically, these set of market conditions should not be ignored. If the market hasn't topped out already, it should do so within a couple of percent of the recent highs. Rallies should be sold and stops tightened up. The market is prone to sudden sell offs. There will be better risk adjusted opportunities to buy in the future.

I first mentioned the "Will Robinson Signal" on March 5, 2010, about 2 months before the flash crash and prior to the late Spring intermediate term top. This signal uses the combination sentiment indicator and the indicator constructed from the trends in gold, crude oil and yields on 10 year Treasury bonds. As chronicled in this week's sentiment round up, sentiment is pretty bullish. Long term yields, gold and crude oil have been pushing higher to such a degree that a sell signal was generated 2 weeks ago in one of our S&P500 models. In any case, the combination of these two factors has me thinking like the robot: "Danger, danger, Will Robinson!".

Figure 1 is a weekly chart of the S&P500. The red dots over the price bars identify those instances when this "Will Robinson" signal has been in effect. Unfortunately, I only have data for the combination sentiment indicator going back to 2004. Even though the market did go higher in some instances, I can easily state that the best returns are behind us. In addition, the market is prone to severe sell offs, and yes, there will be better risk adjusted opportunities in the future.

Figure 1. S&P500/ weekly
S&P500 weekly Chart

 


 

Guy Lerner

Author: Guy Lerner

Guy M. Lerner
http://thetechnicaltakedotcom.blogspot.com/

Disclaimer: Guy M. Lerner is the editor and founder of The Technical Take blog. His commentary on the financial markets is based upon information thought to be reliable and is not meant as investment advice. Under no circumstances does the information in his columns represent a recommendation to buy or sell stocks. Lerner may on occasion hold positions in the securities mentioned in his columns and on the Web site; in all instances, all positions are fully disclosed at http://thetechnicaltakedotcom.blogspot.com/. However, their positions may change at anytime. For more information on any of the above, please review The Technical Take's full Terms of Use and Privacy Policy (link below). While Lerner cannot provide investment advice or recommendations, he invites you to send your comments to: guy@thetechnicaltake.com.

Copyright Notice: Except for making one printed copy of this newsletter or any other materials, files or documents available from, accessible through or published by TheTechnicalTake, LLC for your personal use (or downloading for the same limited purpose), none of these said materials, files and/or documents may be reproduced, republished, rebroadcast or otherwise re-distributed without the prior expressed written permission of Guy M. Lerner.

Copyright © 2004-2012 Guy Lerner

All Images, XHTML Renderings, and Source Code Copyright © Safehaven.com

SEARCH



Socionomics Summit 2012 - New Initiatives in Research and Application

INVESTOR TRAINING

Follow Professor Steven Bauer, a retired university professor, and learn the ins & outs of investing! View the entire course archive!

TRUE MONEY SUPPLY

Source: The Contrarian Take http://blogs.forbes.com/michaelpollaro/
austrian-money-supply/