Sunday, September 18, 2011

Market Indicators turn Bullish

Sentiment Indicators and Technical Indicators turn Bullish:

Note: Click here for latest reading..


Alert:
Both sets of Indicators turned Bullish.  Technical Indicators reach the highest levels in over a decade. 

However, we would caution from investing very high proportions into equities and bond markets as Fundamentals remain weak.  While we believe a U.S. slowdown is already factored into equities prices, the Euro-Crises has yet to see a resolution.  We believe the European Central Bank and other authorities will work on yet another "bandage" and short-term fix, with the best fix being Euro-Bonds.  However, this will not solve the European budget and economic problems.

We believe a good time to increase positions will be the next time Panic sets in.  This will likely occur in the next few weeks, based on historical ebb-flow of Euro-news.

Sentiment Chart is below:  It became bullish when the index surpassed 7 in mid-August'11.


Technical Chart is below.  It became extremely Bullish in August as well.




 BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
As a long-term investor, I believe the time for Socially Responsible Investing is now…right NOW.  Long-term investors are not concerned over the current level of the stock market and whether the Market’s going to rise or fall the next day.

I propose investors be “fully invested” in equities most of the time.  Being “fully-invested” is different for different people depending on age, risk tolerance, etc.  As a Heuristic, I suggest being 75% long equities as a “base-case” level.  The remainder would be invested in bonds, real-estate, hard assets, and alternative/exotic investments (e.g., natural gas, platinum, rare-earth anyone?).

With that being said, there are certain times that are better to invest in the market.  Rather than choosing tops and bottoms based on certain fundamental criteria (e.g. price to earnings ratio), I have developed two Market Timing Indicators.  These indicators help me maintain objectivity with regards to my investment positions, as I have no influence on them.  They were designed during late 1992 and have been updated weekly since.

The two major indicators are:

1.    Sentiment:  based on human behavior, and supported by theories backed by Behavioral Finance. 

2.    Technical:  which measures market breadth, or underlying strength in the broad market.

These indicators are used to obtain my Portfolio's Investment Position.  Note, they do not know, or represent market levels.  They are measures of perceived risk, especially the Sentiment Indicators.  I have often taken mental notes of how everyone seems to clamor to buy things when their expected rate of returns are minimal compared to their inherent risks. 

This website will include three simple colored (traffic) signals.  Green for “Buy” (i.e, low-risk levels) which means allocate your portfolio to a fully-invested equity position.  For me, that’s about 75-80% invested, but it could be lower for a more-risk adverse, or retired individual.  Yellow, means caution, risk levels rising.  Red means “High-Risk”; investors should reduce their investment positions to conservative levels perhaps 30-40% equity.  The remainder could be in treasuries, gold, high-grade corporate bonds, etc.

Helios and Matheson: I’ve seen this movie before, and it ends badly !

Summary:   My career as a penny-stock equity analyst gives a unique perspective to the issuer  HMNY is insolvent and the likeli...