Top Advisors Corner

Tom McClellan: Too Fast of a Sentiment Swing

Tom McClellan

Tom McClellan


 The latest numbers out of Investors Intelligence show that bulls are now up to 47.4% in their survey of newsletter writers and investment advisors, and bears are now down to 27.8%.  That takes the bull-bear spread up to its largest value since August 2015, and higher than the peak seen at the November 2015 price highs. 


On its own, the bull-bear spread is not yet at a super-high level which would mandate a price top.  But there is additional information in the rapid nature of the change in that spread.  When the bull-bear spread changes rapidly in a short amount of time, that can sometimes be more important than the actual level to which the spread moves.

Here is a chart showing the 4-week change in the bull-bear spread:

 When it goes outside of +/-20 percentage points, it says that sentiment has changed too quickly, and thus an exhaustion event is happening.  Following the exhaustion event should be a rest period lasting a few weeks, to restore balance to The Force.  It is hard to keep a move going after this indicator posts this sort of rare and extreme reading.  It is much more sustainable when excessive bullishness or bearishness develops more slowly.

For a deeper understanding, here is a further look back showing the behavior of this indicator from 2005-2011:

Usually an excursion above +20 percentage points is a call for prices to pause and correct.  Occasionally, however, there have been excursions above +20 that have been followed by continued upward movement.  Those appeared during strong upward trends, and were extremely rare.  The much more common interpretation has been that a reading above +20 is a sign of too much eagerness, and that a corrective period is needed to set up for whatever is next.

Tom McClellan

The McClellan Market Report
www.mcoscillator.com