Sideways to slightly
higher
Stocks took a little breather on Friday as the
Dow and S&P dropped modestly, but the Nasdaq managed to stay positive.
The TSP funds were mixed: F and I up; C and S down.
The S&P 500... yawn... has been moving basically sideways for several
days, although it continues to ride the upper resistance of the rising
wedge(s). Except for the minor pullback earlier in August, this
rising resistance pattern has persisted for weeks.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The chart is certainly bullish with the trend remaining distinctively
up, all of the faster moving averages (EMA's) being above the slower
EMA's, and there has been a series of higher highs and higher lows.
Combining that with the fact that early September has been historically
positive leading up to the holiday weekend, and you'd think everyone
would be quite bullish.
You'd think, but there has been an
increasingly bearishness humming going on around us, which is quite
interesting. The "dumb money" is usually quite bullish when stocks
are rising and making new highs, but that is not what we are seeing.
Last week we posted that the TSP Talk Sentiment
Survey System had a bulls (44%) to bears (41%) ratio of 1.07 to 1.
During a bull market, which we are defining as the 50-day EMA being
above the 200-day EMA, a 1.07 to 1 ratio is overly bearish (anything
under 1.25 to 1), and is actually flashing us a buy signal. Again,
very interesting considering the new highs last week.
The AAII Investor Sentiment Survey, also a "dumb money" indicator, came in
at 37% bulls, 49% bears for a ratio of 0.76 to 1. Also overly
bearish and very unusual in this market environment.
I decided to take a look at the Wall Street Sentiment Survey, which is
considered a "smart money" indicator. It can be much more
volatile, switching from overly bullish to over bearish, or vice versa,
from one week to the next. The latest survey taken this past
Friday shows us something interesting. While the bullish
percentage has fallen from the prior week, the 24% bearish percentage
figure is the least bearish the smart money has been since last January.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The "smart money" is supposed to be more savvy
than the dumb, and it appears the smart money may not be looking for a
pullback as much as us dumb money is - at least according to the sentiment
surveys. This is not what we are used to seeing when the market is
near yearly highs. As a matter of fact you'd expect the results to be
the complete opposite of what we are seeing. Very interesting, indeed.
A quick look at the NYSE overbought/oversold indicator shows us that while
still slightly overbought, the indicator is well off of an extreme reading.
the 347 reading is actually right in the middle between the rising support
line of this indicator, which is connecting the lows, and the upper end of
our range near 1000.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
That's
all for today. I will leave the September seasonality charts below one
more day for anyone looking to make a decision based on the new month, which
brings with it a new batch of interfund transfers, new seasonal tendencies,
and the holiday trading.
Thanks for reading! We'll see you back here tomorrow.
-------------------
Here is some seasonality data for
September and the days surrounding the Labor Day holiday weekend. If
history repeats, Friday September 4th (day -1 below) would be the best day
for stocks. Thing get a little more shaky after the holiday (+1 on
after).

The month of September is the worst month of the year historically.

During the 56 years between 1950 and 2005, it was up just 41% of the time.
By far the worst.
Returns-wise, it is also no contest.

Chart provided courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com
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