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Today's Comments (Short Term Outlook)
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Rally now 2-months old
Stocks managed to close higher again on Friday and the S&P 500 had yet
another positive week last week. The rally is getting a little
old, but you have to respect the continued strength.
The S&P 500 has had many reasons to turn back down over the last several
weeks, but every dip has been bought and new highs continue to be made.
I talk a lot about the charts and indicators, and how news headlines
should not make your decisions, but one thing I have been overlooking
for many weeks now, is that the trend is now up. The long-term
trend remains bearish (down) but we are obviously in an
intermediate-term uptrend. How long it will last, I don't know.
This rally is now two months old, and we have seen some prior
intermediate-term trends end after two months.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
Will two months prove to be meaningful this time, I don't know.
Fighting the trend is not a great way to make money, as some of us have
seen. But we are in a volatile environment with many economical
and geopolitical influences that might have us a little more nervous
about being invested than normal.
Fear however, is not a reason to be bearish. On the contrary.
The best time to buy in 2009 turned out to be when the AAII investor
Sentiment Survey saw an astounding 70% bearish reading in early March.
This rally has pushed it up to 44%, which is actually quite bearish
itself during any "normal" market environment, but it is obviously well
off of the overly fearful levels of March.
Conversely, the current bullish percentage in the AAII survey is 36%,
compared to about 20% back in early March.
The recent TSP Talk Sentiment Survey
results were 43% bullish, 45% bearish. That 0.96 to 1 bulls to
bears ratio is not surprisingly one of the least bearish readings we've
had all year. There were only three weeks that had higher ratios.
The strength in the dollar has lost
some steam over the last several weeks. The chart is looking more
and more bearish as you can see that the weekly chart is forming another
head & shoulders pattern (which is bearish). This is no surprise
to those who believe that the U.S. is recklessly spending and printing
money.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The surprise has been that it has held up as long as it has, and we have
speculated in the past that it was not necessarily a sign of strength
for the dollar, but rather weakness in other currencies.
What does this tell us? It could be an indication that over the
next several months that the I-fund could outperform the C and S-funds.
Not that the I-fund will be strong or even be up for that matter, but in
relation to the C and S-funds, it could do better.
I'll wrap this up by saying the we are due for a pullback - but the
current trend remains higher and those fighting it (including myself)
have paid the price. How long this intermediate-term will last is
the question, but I would thing that if you made 25% to 30% in two
months, you have to be pretty satisfied and you could be pushing your
luck.
Scribbler should have a new TSP & Economic Report posted some time this
morning. Since the free trial is now over, only subscribers will
have access. More
info.
Thanks for
reading! See you tomorrow!
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