Jobs report rally, post
Labor Day issues
Stocks rallied nicely on Friday after a mixed
jobs report. The Dow jumped 97-points and the TSP stock funds were
up 1.3% to 1.8%. The bond fund was down 0.3%.
The number of jobs lost in August was 216,000, about 14,000 fewer than
expected, but the unemployment rate jumped back up to 9.7%, more than
expected and the highest rate in about 25 years.
Traders were able push stocks higher, but volume was not just light.
It was the lightest trading day of 2009. Volume should pick up
this week and we should find out what the big money really thought about
the report, and the economy going forward.
I have to say that, doing my research this weekend, I am very hard
pressed to make a call. We are seeing very mixed signals in the
indicators, data, and charts, that I am about ready to flip a coin.
Let's take a look...
The S&P 500 rallied over the last two days, at least temporarily making
a lower low on the chart. That's good. The bad news is that
the PMO indicator is on a sell signal, and the MACD has now made a lower
lower giving us a negative divergence in that indicator.
The good news is that the moving averages (20, 50, and 200 EMA's) are
all lined up nicely with the S&P 500 trading above all of them, and the
faster EMA's being above the slower EMA's. The bad news is the
rising wedge pattern that the S&P is now in, tends to break to the
downside.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The good news, last week's TSP Talk
Sentiment Survey came it at 40% bulls, 45% bears for a 0.89 to 1 bulls
to bears ratio. That is a pretty decent buy signal. The last
time we saw a reading below 1.0 to 1, the S&P 500 picked up 7% on the
week (July 13 to July 17).
The bad news is, the three surveys prior to July 13 also saw ratios
below 1.0 to 1, and the market was down 0.25%, 2.45%, and 1.93% during
those weeks.
More on sentiment, and it's not great news.
The smart money of the Wall Street
Sentiment Survey went from a bearish percentage of 24% just a week ago,
the lowest since January (bullish for stocks), to 58% last week.
Their bullish percentage has also been dipping sharply (bearish for
stocks).

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The AAII Sentiment Survey (dumb money and a contrarian indicator) came
in at a 1.0 to 1 ratio (bulls and bears both @ 38%) which is a pretty
bearish reading for the herd (close to bullish for stocks).

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The above survey is given on Wednesdays so last week's survey was taken just
prior to Thursday and Friday's rally so I would have to assume that the
dumb money is slightly more bullish now (which is more bearish for
stocks).
Now let's look at the put/call ratios: The dumb money (CBOE and
Equity) have been steadily getting more bullish for many months,
although lately they have backed off a little lately. On the other
hand the smart money (OEX) is getting more and more defensive as the
market moves higher. The smart money tends to hedge their
investments more as the market rises.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk
The smart money's 10-day moving average is now
at its lowest point (most bearish) of the year.
The Smart Money / Dumb Money Confidence indicator from SentimenTrader.com is
at 38 / 63 respectively. Any time the the smart money is below 40
while the dumb money is above 60, this indicator issues a warning for
stocks. Here we are again...

Chart provided courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com
We've talked a lot about September
being a tough month for stocks historically, the worst actually. So,
while I really like the action of the S&P 500 as far as its trend and its
position in relation to trend lines and moving averages, I am a little
worried about being too bullish given all of the above information.
I am not opposed to being a buyer of dips here, but I am also ready to pull
the plug should the positives deteriorate, which unfortunately is a good
possibility.
That's all for today.
Thanks for reading! We'll see you back here
tomorrow.
|