July 18 and the week that follows.
Although there is nothing anyone can do about it now, July 18 is
historically a poor day. One of the worst of the year in terms
of percentage of time this date is positive.
| Day
/ Date |
%
Positive |
Avg
Ret |
| July 18th |
28% |
(0.30%) |
|
11th trading day of month |
44% |
(0.02%) |
It also happens to be the Monday
following options expiration week, typically a below average return
week.
Jason Roney from Minyanville.com website tells us, “The Monday
after the July expiration has the highest percentage of negative
closes for the S&P 500 futures. Since the inception of the futures
in 1982, the Monday after July expiration closed down 19 of 23 years
by an average of -.58%. The bias is just as negative if the S&P was
near highs going into expiry (as is the case currently). In 12 of
the 23 years, the S&P had recorded at least a 5-week high during the
week of expiration, and on the following Monday, the S&P closed down
10 of those 12 years by an average of -.99%.”
On Wednesday and Thursday, for the first time since October 5, 2000,
the S&P 500 has closed in positive territory for two days in a row
at the same time there were more declining stocks on the NYSE than
advancing ones both days. This has happened 12 times in the past
eight years. 10 days later, the S&P 500 was lower 8 of the 12 times,
with an average return of -1.3%.
Let's take a look at how the last six weeks have played out.
On 6/03 I decided to start moving out of stocks in steps. I
went from 100% stock funds in early June, to 75%, to 50% to 30% to
0% over the course of about two weeks ending 6/15. Points A to
B on the chart below.
|
Effective Date |
Transfer |
|
06/15/05 |
100% G |
|
06/08/05 |
70% G, 30% S |
|
06/07/05 |
50% G, 25% C, 25% S |
|
06/03/05 |
25% G, 50% C, 25% S |

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
The market behaved nicely and just at the point I went 100% G fund,
the market started to give way with a couple days of big losses,
going from points B to C.
The indices floundered for a while and I anticipated one more good
push down expecting the chart to mimic the 1994 chart which would
have brought the S&P 500 down to about 1150. On the morning of
July 7th, the day of the London terrorist attacks, the Dow futures
were off over 220 points. It looked as if the catalyst came
for that next push down. Instead, the S&P 500 actually
reversed the early morning weakness and baffled me by ending the day
in positive territory and we obviously ended up at point D.
The market always seems to do what we least expect. Some say
they expected it but I doubt on the morning of July 7th they were
very confident about it.
I was still not convinced that we had put in a bottom as there were
way too few bears out there. But for five days the market
surged forward. As we saw late last week, the bearish
percentage of those polled in the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey
dropped to 14%. The new high that the S&P 500 made last week
was a bit of a surprise but it brought my indicators even deeper
into caution mode.
Now we face the dreaded week following options expiration week and
the market is going to be up against some resistance. There
will be a lot of earnings reports announced this week with Tuesday's
list containing some major company's reports. I feel the
market will sell on the news, whether it is good or bad news.
It's a good possibility that those reports will be strong because I
can't see why the market rallied so strongly in front of the
reports. As I've always said, the market seems to know before
anyone else. I'm not talking insider trader, but rather a
mastermind type activity. Like when the market dropped 10%
during the two weeks leading up to 9/11/2001.
Don't get me wrong, the strength of the market over the last week
makes me wish I had been invested up until now, but I don't think
TSP will let us go back change that. We have to decide what to
do next. I don't like to move in and out of stocks as much as
I used to. It is a combination of not being able to access the
during working hours anymore, and trying not to confuse those who
follow these transactions. When I jump around people end up
being a day or two behind because for one reason or another and they
end up frustrated. I have the emails to prove it.
Hence, I've been making fewer moves.
That's all for today.
Today's the last day to take this week's TSP Talk Sentiment Survey.
It is over in the left hand column if
interested. You can also
sign up to take it via email.
Currently 100% G fund.
Thanks for reading.