RISK RATIO INDICATES MORE CORRECTION TO COME

By Lance Roberts, CEO, StreetTalk Advisors

The current market correction should not come as a surprise to any one. There has been consistent and substantial evidence that the rally that began last October was unsustainable. We discussed the coming correction beginning in March (see herehere,here and here ). The question now is becoming whether the current correction is over or is there more to come?

It always fascinates me to watch the media during market rallies as the bullish sentiment takes hold. There is never a word of caution offered to investors that the risks of investing are rising and some caution should be taken. It is “always” a time to buy and never a time to sell. However, this is absolutely contrary to the basic premise of investing which is to “buy low and sell high.” Therefore, as investors, we are left on our own to determine when it is“…a time to reap and a time to sow.” Whether you are a trader, or a long term investor, the idea of portfolio management is the same. A portfolio, like a garden, will prosper only when it is cared for by weeding (selling losers), watering (making consistent contributions) and pruning (taking profits). A well-tended garden will produce bountiful harvests while an untended garden will eventually succumb to the weeds.

Bob Farrell’s rule #9 is: ”When all experts and forecasts agree — something else is going to happen.” This statement encapsulates the basic tenant of being a contrarian investor. As Sam Stovall, the S&P investment strategist, puts it: “If everybody’s optimistic, who is left to buy? If everybody’s pessimistic, who’s left to sell?”

Going against the herd as Farrell repeatedly suggests can be very profitable, especially for patient buyers who raise cash from frothy markets and reinvest it when sentiment is the darkest. However, being a seller in exuberant markets or a buyer in major rout is very tough, if not impossible, for almost every investor as the emotions of “greed” and “fear” overtake logical buy and sell decision making.

In order to measure the “greed” and “fear” syndrome I have taken the most common measures of investor sentiment including the volatility index, new highs versus new lows, two different polls on bullish versus bearish sentiment and the rate of change of the S&P 500 index and using weekly data combined them into a single “risk ratio.”  The reason I used weekly data rather than daily data was to smooth out the day to day volatility of the markets to focus on trend changes in the market.  The risk ratio functions as an oscillator with it rising as investors become more bullish and vice versa.  What is important to notice is that the sentiment ratio generally starts turning down before the market actually peaks.  This ratio has been a key driver of recent commentary warning about the coming correction.

If we lay out the “risk ratio” in bands we can more clearly see what actions need to be taken after various points during the oscillation cycle.  With the oscillator in the upper band and turning down it has clearly been a sign to reduce overall portfolio risk.  While the market is clearly oversold on a short term basis, and very overdue for a bounce, the risk ratio dictates that the bounce should be sold into as the longer term correction is most likely not completed as of yet.  Generally, the best buying opportunities have occurred when the risk ratio has gone from“bullish alert” or “extreme bullish” to the opposite extreme. Most importantly, it is critical to note that the buying opportunity does not come until there is a turn up in the ratio from the previous decline.

The current down turn in the risk ratio signifies that the current correction is still in progress and will likely continue for at least several more weeks.  However, as I stated above, the market is currently extremely oversold on a short term basis and will likely have a very strong counter trend rally to work off the daily oversold condition.  The current market is acting very similarly to what we saw in 2011 as a potential debt ceiling debate and Eurocrisis loom.  This opens the door to further weakness in the weeks to come.

The one aspect that can not currently be accounted for, which could quickly reverse this analysis, is the introduction of additional stimulative programs by the Fed. While I currently have little doubt that we will see further easing programs – I do not think that they will come about until we see further economic weakness and a more substantial market decline which would give the Fed the “permission” it needs to take action.

Reiteration Of What To Do Now

As we discussed in yesterday’s article “Confirmed Sell Signal Approaches” we stated:  “We will want to sell into any reversal that takes us back to previous support levels that have now turned into resistance. Currently, those levels will be 1350, 1360 and 1375ish. Do not get hung up on specific numbers – these are general areas where you want to start raising cash. If the markets are able to rally above those levels we will update our commentary at that time.

The recommended course of actions are:

  1. Liquidate weak and underperforming positions as the market approaches the 1350 and 1360 levels.
  2. Rebalance winning positions by taking profits and resizing positions back to original weights at the 1350 and 1360 levels respectively.
  3. Look for rotation into precious metals as a “safe haven” investment which is currently very oversold.
  4. Short duration fixed income is still an alternative as rates will likely remain under pressure from the rotation out of stocks.
  5. Be careful with dividend yielding stocks — while they will likely hold up during a correction they are already overbought in many cases.
  6. Our call to buy bonds over the past month has played out well. They are currently overbought and extended. Hold current positions but be selective on new additions at this time. Wait for a move in interest rates to 2.2% on the 10-year treasury before aggressively adding more.
  7. Hold cash for a buying opportunity when the next “buy” signal becomes apparent.”

Remember, it is the psychology of market participants that ultimately drive prices higher and lower as they respond to the external stimuli of the economic, fundamental or political landscape. This is the value of the “risk ratio” indicator in measuring those “fear” and “greed”factors.

The most important asset destroyed by reversion processes is “time.”  It is the one commodity that you have a very limited supply of and no ability to replace.  By using tools to measure, analyze and understand the environment that we face today, and will continue to face in the future, can help us make better decisions in both our planning and investment process.  The management of the many inherent investment risks is critical to long term survival.  For individuals it is important to recognize that the “return of capital” is always far more important that the “return on capital”.  

Lance Roberts

Lance Roberts

Lance Roberts is the CEO of Streettalk Advisors. The mission of Streettalk Advisors is simple - lead our clients to financial success by actively managing their assets while limiting risk to capture returns. Through the utilization of economic and technical analysis, historical research, and risk controls, we build portfolios which will create long-term investment results.

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7 Comments

  1. VII VII says:

    Unless the bulls can pull something out and reclaim some areas…this thing is going straight down. I agree with Lance.

    It won’t be long before Smokey{after Craig(ice-cube) knocks out debo} runs up to Debo(played by the SPX) and yells ..”you got knocked da FB$$ out!”…

  2. Mike C says:

    Excellent note.

  3. AWF says:

    Good article–but 6/7 recommendations are dubious: Good Idea: #7
    “Street Talk” is a good site for ideas/updates–read regular

    From the kitchen table: Update: 05/18/2012

    ALL of our IT indicators are on SELL!

    Confidence ratio: review

    Bond/Bond ratio: Safety: Last Signals 01/20 & 02/17-posted this previous and noted this trend is fully vetted/visible

    Stock/Bond ratio: Safety: NEW Signals 05/04 & 05/18-Sell stocks: Rem # 7

    Commodities have left the building: On Sell

    Industrial Metals: on Sell

    Oil : on Sell: Last signal 05/04

    Gold: on Sell: Posted 12/16

    DAX:on Sell, VWO: on sell, China: on sell

    DJ Tranny’s : on sell–posted previous the price action in the Transports would make the Dow Theorist “wet” BUT,BUT,BUT probable bounce at this price level
    http://blogs.stockcharts.com/chartwatchers/2012/05/dow-theory-sell-signal-now-in-force-indu-tran.html

    Is there a “Bull Market” somewhere: NO

    “Charts” Indicate Multi Wk “Head and Shoulders” Top:
    Check out $XVG or VWO the on Stock charts site:
    April 2010 High, April 2011 Higher High, April 2012 Lower High
    http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$XVG&p=W&b=5&g=0&id=p52850492166
    http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=VWO&p=W&yr=3&mn=0&dy=0&id=p75557581095
    XVG is the “Unweighted” Value line Index
    VWO is the “Emerging Mkts ETF from Vanguard
    Here is a note: Decision Point http://blogs.stockcharts.com/chartwatchers/2012/05/correction-low-may-be-weeks-away.html

    What to do: Working thesis: Hold T,VZ,MO
    Smoking and Drinking while Conversing about how F**Ked the world economy finds itself–semms like an idea.

    What would change outcomes:

    1) Greeks find 10 tons of “gold” under the acropolis–short term bounce only their still in Debt!!
    2) Romney with a 20 point lead in the Pres race:
    In 2008 we had “Hope and Change”
    In 2011 We have “Hope and Pray”
    3)QE-something from the FED–not likely the FED would commit “Seboku” with a program now–they risk “Independent” vs “Politicized”
    Plus: Ron Paul would have Ben Bernaakes liver with some fava beans and a good Chiianti

    This is an educational post only: Not investment advice

    Seek psychiatric care before Investing

  4. Peter F says:

    ??? Take a close look at the chart. The correlation is often not good. Really early sell signals, multiple times in error.

  5. YR says:

    Agreed with Peter. the correlation is complete crap; you would get your face ripped off with some of those peaks.

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