The Dow Jones was in fine summer condition putting in the best July performance since 1989 and its best month since 2002. Are we in thin air territory yet? To find out, check out the sentiment summary for this past week:
AAII
After 6 weeks of the bears continuously trouncing the bulls in the AAII weekly sentiment poll - something we hadn’t seen since the low in March earlier this year! - the bulls are back. The most recent survey of retail investors shows that optimists rose 10% points to reach 48% and the bears fell 11% points to just 31%.
We need the retail investor to return to the stock market for there to be a real and prolonged recovery. But such a jump in sentiment is troubling. Previously it has not supported higher prices going forward.
Investors Intelligence
The percentage of bulls jumped to 42.4% and the bears decline to 31.1%. So we continue to see a healthy amount of optimism from the average stock newsletter editor, although not excessively so. And this week’s numbers take us back to where Investors Intelligence sentiment was at the beginning of this month - when the S&P 500 was trading some 110 points lower.
Money Market Cash Levels
Believe it or not, there is more than $3 trillion sloshing around in money market funds. But the nominal amount of funds isn’t really that helpful to us since just like GDP it continues to grow along with the economy. What is helpful in determining where we are in the big scheme of things is the movement between equity markets and money markets.
Obviously when investors are fearful, they sell anything and everything ‘risky’ and put their money in the protective but less lucrative vehicle of money market funds. That’s exactly what we saw in March of this year: Tsunami Of Cash Just Waiting To Be Invested. Unbelievably, the total assets of money market funds was higher than equity funds!
That has now returned to its normal historic ratio with total money market funds decreasing to just $3 trillion. But it isn’t only the return to the historical pattern that is noteworthy. What we’re seeing is not an orderly and mild shower of liquidity but a veritable tsunami as both retail and institutional investors move massive amounts of assets from cash. Not only are they moving record shattering amounts, they are doing so in just one month’s time. So whether this recent rally is the real thing or not, large and small players are reacting to it with the reflexes of a cobra.
While this may be interpreted as very bearish, you have to note that not every single dollar taken out of money market funds is automatically put in the equity market. In fact, only a small portion is destined there. Had every single dollar been invested in the stock market by the way, we would probably bee looking at the S&P 500 at least 30% higher from where it is. The rational take away from this measure then is that the participants in the financial markets are recovering from the shell shock they suffered earlier this year and late last year.
Option Traders
Yesterday when we briefly broke above 990 on the S&P 500 index, the CBOE put call ratio (equity only) hit 0.50 - that magically half point marker is significant because it shows the average option trader’s raucous disregard for risk as they reach for the long side. Historically, it takes the market a few days to digest this before reacting lower. However, the last time the put call ratio plumbed these depths was in mid-April, earlier this year. And it was totally ignored by the market on its merry way higher.
On Wednesday (July 27th 2009) the ISE sentiment index (equity only) reached 220. That’s the highest level since June 15, just before it started a protracted decline from the June swing highs. As well, we’ve seen several days of higher ISEE data so the 10 day moving average that I track has inched higher as well. The last time the short term moving average was around 170 was in early June, just as the market ran out of steam.
Rydex Market Timers
Traders in the Rydex family of mutual funds have once again reached for the stars. These are fast, market timers who switch between the Nova/Ursa (bull/bear) funds to make money on either side of the market. As a group, they are a good contrarian indicator when they reach an extreme. As they have now.
The last time they caused us to mind their positions was back in mid June 2009 when they had a herded into a bullishly lopsided extreme.
Insiders Selling
Corporate insiders are once again selling their own company’s shares at a pace that is alarming. According to Vickers Weekly Insider Report, more than 4 shares are being sold now for every 1 share bought by an insider. To find a higher ratio we need to go back to October 2007. While this may appear to be a bright, red blinking light, there’s more reason to treat it as a cautionary yellow.
That’s because insiders, for all their reputation, do not have such a great track record in timing their own shares. They obviously do have an edge on others but they aren’t perfect and certainly can be wrong. But more often than not, they are right but tend to act too early - by about a year.
Money market asset levels fluctuate much less than their equity counterparts. The general trend for cash holdings is to increase steadily every year. There are some cyclical effects for bear and bull markets. As people become fearful in the face of a bear market, they horde money and as the become convinced they are losing money by not being invested in a bull market, they reduce their cash holdings.
This bear market has given us a lot of unprecedented market situations. We are now seeing a rare exception to the norm of equity fund assets dwarfing money market assets. This has been caused by a double whammy. As the stock market has been pummeled mercilessly, losing 60% of its value since late 2007, the asset value of equity funds has shrunk. And on the other side of things, retail and institutional investors consistently raised their cash assets. In September 2008 I pointed out that there was an unmistakable stampede towards cash as retail investors hoarded cash. Not surprisingly then, in November 2008, we saw a rare occurrence: more assets sitting in money market funds than in equity mutual funds:

Source: Bloomberg Chart of the Day
The last time this happened was 16 years ago, in September 1992. The data for April isn’t available yet but I’d bet it shows money market fund assets almost equal to equity fund assets. Not because people have put the cash to work but because the market has been able to hang on to gains and thereby increased the value of the equity assets.
But as Jason Goepfert of SentimenTrader points out, this is not an automatic buy signal for the market: A Major Buy Signal! Well, Maybe… All we can definitively say is that there is a massive load of cash just sitting on the side, waiting.
A build up of cash is normal in a bear market but before we can transition to a bull market it needs to be put to work. As people become convinced that the worst is behind us, they start to take more risk and begin to put their cash into the market. So unfortunately, just noticing a massive pile of cash doesn’t really help us unless we can somehow pinpoint when and with what intensity this billowing mass of liquidity will start to be invested in the stock market.
But to give you an idea of the sheer monstrosity of the potential tsunami of cash, consider this: it currently represents 50% of S&P 500 total capitalization. Needless to say, that is jaw dropping. As it is put to work, even in a trickle, it will put an impregnable floor on almost all equity indices and then drive prices higher. When that may be, can not be determined by this metric itself but by other technical, monetary and sentiment measures.
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