Long Term Composite Indicator Hits Extreme
3 Comments Published January 28th, 2008 in Technical AnalysisThe Investor’s Intelligence Long Term Composite Indicator is a proprietary indicator generated from the scores awarded to over forty indicators. These indicators have been selected across a wide range of disciplines covering index trends, breadth, sentiment, money-flow and financial/economic factors. The scores awarded to each indicator are weighted to create an indicator that generates signals at market extremes…

The last time this aggregated indicator reached similar extremes were in August 2007, summer of 2002, and October 1999. So although the II sentiment measure is stubbornly stuck in bullish mode, their Composite indicator is most definitely flashing a buy signal.
My guess is that it is because of the rapidity of the decline as well as the low bullish percent indices for so many sectors.
A “stamp duty” or “stamp tax” is an archaic form of tax which is basically a prerequisite for a document to become legally binding. For example, where levied, you would have to pay a stamp duty when you buy a house to have the deed reflect the new buyer’s claim on the property. Or when you buy stocks, to reflect the new owner.
Only a few developed places levy such taxes anymore: UK, Ireland, Australia and Hong Kong (now part of China). Usually the level of the tax is left untouched. In England for example, it has been at 0.5% since 1986.
But in China not only is it levied, stamp duties are one of the dials that the communist beaurocrats love to tweak up and down. The latest “tweak” was the announcement last week that it would be tripled to 0.3% effective this Wednesday (June 6th 2007).
I showed this graph before to demonstrate that there had been an even crazier bull market in China in the early 1990’s. In this new version it shows the dates of the previous stamp duty or stamp tax changes:

I think it is fairly probable that this increase in transaction costs will greatly reduce the mania in the Chinese equities market. It may not cause a full blown crash - although the market is down overnight as I type and is at a five week low. If you want to play the Chinese market here’s how to play it from the US.
The real question now is, where will all that money flow next? You can’t dam capital. It will find its way out, one way or the other. All you can do is try your darndest to channel it.
If they ask me (and they haven’t) I would say open the gates so that the Chinese can invest outside China.


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