Monday, January 7, 2013

Entering Into 2013 - Part 2

Before I move forward into summarising the outlook for other asset classes, I would like to further go into the US equity market outlook. My personal opinion is that there is too much complacency right now and this is usually how markets top out... especially after a four year super run like we've experienced since March 2009. Let me put forward 16 sentiment indicators I track to explain why I do not want to be anywhere near equities right now. Since there is a lot of charts to cover, I will keep it all in point form. Furthermore, apologies in advance if any of the material overlaps from the previous posts.

Chart 1: Low volume is usually a sign of distribution

Source: Short Side Of Long
  • Low volume is usually a sign of distribution, where smart money is slowly selling into strength as retail money is buying. As long as the volatility is low, the media news is bullish and trend is upward - retail money is not spooked and keeps accumulating. In my opinion, distribution has been in progress since at least March 2012.
Chart 2: Low equity volatility is usually a sign of a top
Source: Short Side Of Long
  • VIX is once again in the so called "danger zone", which usually indicates a top is either at hand or near. But it is not just equity volatility that remains very low. Consider the following chart:
Chart 3: Low global volatility is usually a sign of complacency
Source: Barry Ritholtz 
  • Volatility is extremely low across all asset classes as investors hold high confidence that both the economy and financial markets will continue to deliver for quarters and years to come. JPMorgan’s G7 Volatility Index of currencies fell to a record low reading of 7 in late December. Furthermore, Merrill Lynch’s MOVE Index covering Treasuries fell almost 40 percent from its high last year. 
Chart 4: Low financial stress readings usually occur prior to a crisis
Source: Short Side Of Long
  • Just like the VIX, the Fed's Financial Stress Index is at a very low level (inverse on the chart above). Last time we saw a similar reading was just prior to the 2010 flash crash and the 2011 sell off I believe something similar is in the cards once again.
Chart 5: Risk taking appetite and greed have prevailed since August 2012
Source: SentimenTrader
  • During such low volatility, it is only natural that complacency and high risk taking appetite flourishes. If this was a solid economic expansion, like the business cycles we saw during the 1980s and 1990s, than one could make a point that usually these conditions could go on for a lot longer. However, we are currently in a secular equity bear market and in a period of de-leverging were constant shocks are very common. It is not wise to be bullish when the herd is in love with risk.
Chart 6: Hedge funds exposure to equity markets is now higher than in 2007

Source: Merrill Lynch Fund Managers Survey
  • The Merrill Lynch research team writes: "Hedge fund net exposure to equities jumped to its highest level [in years] (net 45%). More broadly, the % of investors who say they are taking higher-than-normal risk in their portfolio is now highest since Apr’11." Exposure is as high as September 2007, while risk taking is as high as April 2011 - both of which marked very important equity tops over the last half decade.
Chart 7: Market participants hold large equity exposure with high leverage

Source: Short Side Of Long
  • According to the new data released by the NYSE, margin debt levels grew to 326.99 billion dollars. This is the highest reading since the bull market began in March 2009, when market participants held only 182.16 billion dollars. So in other words, as the market has doubled in price, so has the exposure and leverage. While not as high as the readings seen during the middle of 2007 ($381 billion), we are definitely not too far off. Speculation, leverage and over-exposure are definitely alive and well.
Chart 8: Japanese retail investors hold high equity exposure and leverage
Source: SentimenTrader
  • Speculation, leverage and over-exposure aren't only present in the US markets, but also elsewhere around the world. The chart above shows a great indicator, constructed by the Sentiment Trader service, which tracks Japanese retail investors as a contrary indicator. When ever probability reaches higher thresholds, it is usually a sign of a market top as exposure and leverage are heavily increased. What follows is a correction shake out.
Chart 9: Rydex traders hold record low short exposure
Source: Short Side Of Long
  • Rydex traders are known as dumb money and in the chart above we can definitely see why. These traders tend to accumulate large short bets just before a market bottom and remain extremely complacent just prior to a market top. Interestingly enough, last week we saw record low exposure in the Ursa fund, which Rydex traders use in order to short sell the S&P 500. Previous instances have marked an intermediate top of some kind, however since bearish interest  has been non-existent for such a long period (necessary to create a wall of worry), it is possible that we are putting in a major top right now.
Chart 10: ETF investors hold very low short exposure

Source: SentimenTrader
  • It seems that Rydex traders aren't the only complacent group of investors. In the recent SentimenTrader update on Inverse ETF exposure, which tends to be very popular amongst retail investors, we saw that exposure is at the lowest levels seen in at least four years. This indicator has done a great job giving us contrary signals on both the bullish and the bearish side, so the current on-going complacency by the retail crowd will most likely mark a top when viewed in hindsight.
Chart 11: Retail investors hold very low short exposure

Source: SentimenTrader
  • According to the NYSE data, complained by the SentimenTrader service, small traders and other retail investors are highly bullish on the stock market as they engage into minimal shorting activity. As a contrary indicator, this is signalling at most likely a top is either here or close by.
Chart 12: Various sentiment surveys indicate that a top is close
Source: Short Side Of Long

Source: Animus X

Source: SentimenTrader

Source: SentimenTrader


Source: Short Side Of Long
  • A large number of sentiment surveys are indicating that a top is near. Some surveys show high bullish readings or extreme long exposure, while others show a prolonged period of complacency which usually signals risk off around the corner.
Chart 13: Hedge funds are piling into speculative small caps

Source: SentimenTrader
  • According to the recent CFTC Commitment of Traders report, hedge funds and other small speculators are piling into the more speculative Russell 2000 small cap index. Previous instances where we saw similar exposure was during late parts of 2010, early parts of 2012 and in September of 2012. All of them marked some type of a intermediate top, however this time around... hedge funds have gone to absolute extreme levels.
Chart 14: Low cash levels usually indicate a top is near

Source: SentimenTrader


Source: Short Side Of Long
  • Low cash levels in retail money market funds, Rydex funds, AAII retail investor survey, ICI mutual funds, various hedge fund reports and many other indicators all signal that complacency is currently the main condition within the markets. Usually, when cash levels remain at low levels for a prolonged period of time and equity prices do very well over multi year patterns, the next major event is a downtrend or a bear market (especially during secular bearish trends).
Chart 15: Smart money selling is usually a sign of a top
Source: Technical Take
  • It seems that corporate insiders, whose knowledge on corporate earnings is always far better than the rest of the Wall Street strategists, are currently extremely bearish on stocks. Previous times we saw similar patterns was in February 2011, March 2012 and right now. The first two signalled an important intermediate top and a correction of at least 10% to 15%. I expect that this time won't be different.
Chart 16: Long term top is definitely a technical possibility
Source: Colin Twiggs

Source: Colin Twiggs
  • In his recent weekly update, a well respected Australian trader by the name of Colin Twiggs stated the following: "Quarterly charts for the last two decades give a good idea of where stocks will be headed in 2013. The S&P 500 is headed for a test of its 2000/2007 high at 1550. Declining 63-day Twiggs Momentum indicates that resistance is unlikely to be broken. While this does not mean another fall to 750, it does suggest a strong correction. Apple Inc. [AAPL] is no longer leading the advance but testing primary support at 500. Failure of support would confirm the primary down-trend indicated by a 63-day Twiggs Momentum peak below zero." All in all, while stocks might move higher by several percentage points at best, I tend to agree with Colin that a downside risk is much greater. A bear market towards the middle of the decade long trading range (1550 and 750) in the coming quarters and years would not surprise me at all.
What I Am Watching

32 comments:

  1. In my opinion, sentiment indicators work well to find bottoms but you have a lot of false signals when you try to identify market tops. Looking at your charts I feel confirmed.

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    1. I think you have a very good point.I think the trick is to use them just as the last piece of the puzzle,without over relying on them.

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  2. Great article Tiho but you let it down at the end. A bear market shock in the coming quarters would mean it makes sense to avoid stocks now. But if that bear shock is years away then won`t that mean missing out on rises between now and then?

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    1. Hi Ben.

      When I say quarter(s) or year(s), it is a rough estimate. It means that I do not know exactly when and how the bear market will start and end - because I can not see the future, I am not a fortune teller and I did not get a crystal ball for Xmas.

      Essentially the bear market could start in fall of 2013 as we are topping right now. We "could" just crash straight away like in 1987, which means it would all be over in a few weeks. Or it could be a slow declining bear market similar to late 1970s and it could go on until 2014 or even 2015 or even 2016, mainly consolidating sideways and frustrating both bulls and bears.

      Hence why I say quarter(s) and year(s). It is just a phrase and I am not implying that the market will rally for years form here. If I was, I personally wouldn't be short stocks would I? *smile*

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  3. Tiho,

    Looking at chart 14, at previous tops we have seen retail funds increase even though cash levels are very low. This would imply a potential increase of around 100-200B fund flows till topping? again agree with your analysis and sentiment. Last piece of the puzzle imho is momentum.. feel its better to get our of market/short when u see momentum indicators turn over?

    Best,

    Alex

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    1. Alex, yes you are right. These or any other indicators are not meant to be used on their own. They are meant to be used together to strength the signal. Furthermore, they are meant to be used in conjunction with fundamentals (corporate margins, revenues, earnings, economy, business cycles stages, etc). So when you put it all together, it makes more sense than on its own.

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  4. Excellent job of bringing together such huge collection of bullish sentiment extremes!

    Your readers certainly won't be able to say they didn't have fair warning!

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  5. Tiho. I agree the charts raise questions about being long at this point. And the question becomes is now the right time to be short? I have no clue.

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    Replies
    1. We will find out in coming quarters and years.

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  6. Thanks Tiho, great work! Antonio Pérez Algás ¿Could you update these charts frequently? Very kind of you.

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    1. Hi Antonio, thank you. I will definitely try. In coming updates I will be discussing commodities, bonds and currencies. I think my views and updates on the stock market are very clear for now.

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  7. Tiho,

    Thanks for your blog posts! However, we have some problem with reading the charts.

    1) If NYSE Margin doubles in millions when the market value has doubled, that obviously does NOT mean that leverage or risk has doubled. For that to be true the amound of margin must quadruple.

    2) I agree that we will reach a top when this charts are at the bottom. However, low as we are now, that doesn't mean the bottom. Risk is increased surely, but I'm not sure if we have topped yet. And neither seems Jason Goepfert on SentimenTrader which, despite these charts, is fully neutral/positive longer term.

    However, I still like other people's view, so keep up with the good work!

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    1. On 1) You are making a mistake similar to the statement that US households are not levered, because see the value of their homes increased as well. You have to understand that is was leverage that pumped up the asset price and not the other way arouns.

      On 2) I agree that the market is risky and probably when it drops it will probably go deeper than the current levels, but there is no evidence that it has topped yet. The air is getting thinner, but the move up does not seem over yet. No idea when this will happen...

      InvestorX

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  8. Thanks Tiho for the update.
    How about gold/silver? Low enough for you to start buying? Fells like retesting the late december lows.
    Jacek

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  9. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  10. Tiho:

    Any thoughts on Alcoa earnings? In particular, curious that the CEO mentioned China and Europe are doing better than people thought and helping to drive AA's numbers. Doesn't seem to jive with your observations. CEO bravado??

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    1. Looks to me like emerging market growth, weak europe and questionable us growth.

      Delete
  11. Johan Lindén - Margin debt has doubled. That means investor speculation on leverage is too high, in my view. Regardless of what the market has done, speculation is not healthy and it is always present near peaks. Regarding weather or not we have already topped, I do not know the answer to that. Market will show us soon enough.

    Furthermore, it doesn't worry me who agrees or disagrees with me. I actually do not want anyone to agree with me and feel a lot more comfortable if majority remain "neutral / positive for long term". For example... if you look at the Investor Intelligence Survey, we have had no bears since at least March 2012. Majority have remained in the neutral / bullish camp, so that is no surprise at all.

    Jacek - PMs update is coming up in Part 3.

    deshy - I do not pay too much attention to earnings from individual companies, but rather the market as a whole. Furthermore, the current earnings picture has already been priced in by the market. I am not too concerned about what has HAPPENED already, as my job is more about ANTICIPATION of what will HAPPEN in the coming quarters and into 2014. I believe earnings will disappoint as profit margins mean revert.

    So just because Alcoa CEO is bullish today, because of what happened in the last quarters numbers does not really help me much. Of course he remains bullish because as a CEO or accountant of the company, he "extrapolates" numbers on the assumption that the economy will do same amount of sales next quarter, plus some growth. CEOs do not think like investors, but more like accountants. For me, investing to me is a little bit like driving. I am not going to drive by looking at the road behind me and by using the rearview mirror to "extrapolates" the road in front of me. What I try to do, when I drive, is to look ahead and anticipate the corners by adjusting steering, acceleration or applying breaks and changing gears. I try to do the same thing with investing. By the way, I am a former accountant too, so I understand how they all think! *smile*

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    1. Tiho,

      Regarding your second statement about you don't worry who agree with you, I totally agree with you on that. I almost erased that sentence after I wrote it for the same reason.

      However, I'm still confused how you look at debt level in absolute numbers. I stock market value doubles, debt should, everything else equal, double too. Then there will still be the same relative debt level.

      It would be VERY strange if debt in absolute level wouldn't increase with increased underlying value.

      If you doesn't agree with that, then I don't know...

      Delete
    2. Unfortunately, I disagree. According to the historical data from NYSE, there have been many times over the last few decades, where stocks went up a lot and yet margin debt did not rise too much. This usually occurs as the investors hold disbelief in the rally. On the other hand, when majority are piling in and the margin debt has increased rapidly, that is when one should be worried.

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    3. If stock market goes up 110% and margin debt goes up 100%, relative indebtedness has decreased. It's really not up to debate but a fact.

      Well, let us just agree to disagree about this then.

      Now, I'm eagerly awaiting your new blog posts. Thanks for sharing anyway!

      Delete
    4. Certainly, when stocks go up a lot and margin debt is flat it suggests disbelief in the rally. In such a situation if you look at margin debt relative to the market cap (or just margin debt divided by SP500) you can see clearly that falling relative margin debt makes a bearish divergence with the index. That's why I think that relative margin debt is more useful than an absolute one.
      PAT

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  12. Rising margin debt is bullish until it is not. Although fickle, when the market rolls over then the underlying margin debt becomes a powder keg that can force selling when prices are all ready depressed. The timing aspect is the high in the market..............

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  13. Great blog as always Tiho.

    My only concern is this though and it's a bit conspiratorial so bear with it. If we in the West are so collectively done for, as it appears, do you not think governments, bankers and financiers will do all they can and more to keep the thing going for longer than anyone realises?

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    1. Peter, great insight. I would say that is exactly what has happened for the at least decade or so. So yes, you are very much right. We are already there since long.

      My key indicator for when done is done is when long-term interest rates can't stay low.

      And that signal has turned yellow since the last two weeks. Would like some confirmation though before I take any serious actions. I'm still bullishly biased short-term, but with caution, and long-term very cautiously.

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  14. Bear have been absolutely crushed in the first week of 2013. S&P just closed at a 5 year high.

    I almost bought Nokia at 1.83 last Summer - am now just crying.

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  15. What i'm watching:

    http://insider.thomsonreuters.com/link.html?cn=share&cid=1016080&shareToken=MzU0Mzk6YTc1NGU0ODYtZDA3NC00MzQ4LTk3OTEtODQzNDljODU0Yzhl&playerName=ReutersNews

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  16. BMO’s Visch ’Reluctant’ Bull as he Worries About China’s Economy (Bloomberg)

    The countdown to a bear market, which seemed likely to hit in 1Q, has been reset by the recent, broad-based rally in stocks around the world, said BMO technical analyst Russ Visch in phone interview yesterday. “I wouldn’t be surprised if in 2H of this year a more pronounced bear market gets underway” within secular bear market since 2000. Visch “skeptical” of recent optimism of a Chinese economic recovery: Says market-based signals regarding China, such as South Korea’s Kospi, Asian dollar index or Aussie dollar showing upticks that are “not that strong.” Kospi still below 2012 peak which is well below 2011 peak. Among London metals prices, only zinc reversing 2-yr downtrend line. Asian dollar index, Aussie dollar have “improved,” yet “not acting as strong as I’d expect if there was a real, sustainable Chinese expansion on the way.” Says divergences that gave bear market signs in Nov. were erased by expanding breadth of the recent rally.

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  17. Jpy down 12% since "extreme 7 year negative sentiment"- contra-indicator...

    Like I said, be very careful when retail investors place record bets when contrarian. (Jpy was around 5 year high when record short bets came in)

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  18. [b]How rising bullishness could trigger a market meltdown by June[/b]

    http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2013/01/10/how-rising-bullishness-could-trigger-a-market-meltdown-by-june/

    [b]5 Bearish Stock Market Charts Pointing To A Pullback[/b]

    http://etfdailynews.com/2013/01/10/5-bearish-stock-market-charts-pointing-to-a-pullback/

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  19. I generally agree with Tiho's views. Overall it is very difficult to be correct in markets as these are obeying in stochastic processes and most often non-linear equations, as it is the current phase we are through. Continuous interventions sharpen non-linearity, which causes extreme volatility and crashes, in effect little black swans. It is likely it will get worse, with a potential end outcome being that all asset classes crash in the end.

    A potential scenario worked out could be a Crash-Rebound-Crash (CRC) unfolding for equities, supporting a thesis about a double crash in the latter part of 2013, early 2014 (based on a number of risk indicators, could also come earlier but mind that topping is a process and not an event). The stock market cycle peak is long-delayed (there are both fundamental and technical arguments) by the go-round money printing and perhaps it could push higher than the average pessimist expects. As stock markets are now climbing higher at the margin they are going to inflict pain to long volatility holders and shorts forcing increasing stop loss-taking. Eventually however, for as long as this cycle is delayed we will have a quicker down, with a double crash pattern possibility, which will trigger the financial system's purge process. In history something that can not go on forever, simply won't even though it will always tend to overshoot just to persuade even the most hardline disbelievers.

    We have been hearing a lot about such a negative outcome in the process but eventually as currency wars progress and the treasury bubbles burst, equities will plunge and money will flow aggressively in commodities (which are currently correcting by time and/or price), pressuring further overgeared societies and the middle classes and ending up in higher violence occurrence throughout the world. This is how things always develop in history. In the end, the reset will refocus countries and regions on productivity and coupled with the next industrial revolution, equities will re-emerge (2018-2020?).

    The risk of this scenario not materializing is: 1) the amount of money printed around the world equaling the total deleveraging amount, so the global economy develops escape velocity 2) a new industrial revolution taking place soon enough, eg biotechnological innovation, mass space travelling or other. If nothing like this happens within the current decade, there will be a massive third recession that will cause the financial system's reset even if this is temporarily displaced by more money printing. Of course the world will not end and we will continue to exist, but the state and status of each one of us may be radically changed during this process.

    Disclosure: Some gold and silver but nothing much to make a difference.

    ReplyDelete