Higher Rates Are Now A Headwind For US Stock Market

The Investor's Intelligence Newsletter Writers Sentiment Survey shows this week's percentage of bullish advisors close to the 55% threshold. When the percentage gets above this level, the bullish sentiment works against stock prices. (This is an excellent sentiment survey, and has worked really well for me for years.)

I don't think a high percentage of bulls means sell, but I do think the survey favors a freeze on new purchases in the short-term.

Below is a chart of the SPX with an overlay of the 20-day Stochastic RSI of the inverted put/call. (How ridiculous! And when are they just going to create a call/put ratio?). It is kind of cool, though, and it does a decent job of showing the general buy or sell zones (I generally think of a sell zone as a time to "not buy" rather than to actually sell. Again, kind of ridiculous, but I think you get it).

This chart generally agrees with Newsletter Writers Sentiment Survey in that it is probably best to refrain from too many new purchases for the time being, and wait until the RSI indicator is in the red again.

Of course, you know this kind of sentiment analysis only works as long as the longer-term outlook is generally favorable for the stock market. Also, it is of limited usefulness when the bull market is ticking consistently upwards such as last year when sentiment analysis seemed almost irrelevant.

(Click on image to enlarge)

I like to look at this chart to remind myself that these sell offs and spikes in the VIX are usually (not always!) a good time to be buying stocks rather than freaking out and selling.

I freak out sometimes. I admit it. But it is usually when I have started selling into a rally too soon, and then the cash burns a hole in my pocket and I start buying again too soon which is usually just when the uptrend is peaking.

If I stick to my discipline, I don't freak out and I do well.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Outlook Summary:

Higher rates are now a headwind for US stocks. The recent tax cut, the 300 billion spending increase, and the already out-of-control federal deficit are a set up for a very dangerous spike in interest rates.

Something else to consider is the Mueller investigation. I worry that the headlines generated by the investigation may rattle the markets more than people are currently anticipating.

I am expecting a choppy, headline-driven, sideways market between now and the November elections.

The long-term outlook is cautious.
The medium-term trend is not sure.
The short-term trend is up. Looking for signs of a short-term peak.

Investing Themes:

Technology
Banks and Brokers
Payment Processors

Gamers
Defense
Emerging Markets

Strategy:

I have started reducing my risk, and my accounts are now about 60% stocks down from 70%. The remainder is invested in bond funds. New purchases are on hold until the short-term trend corrects down to the bottom of its range.

Buy large cap stocks and ETFs on pullbacks of the medium-term trend.

Buy small cap growth stocks on break outs to new highs during short-term up trends.

Stop buying when the short-term trend is at the top of the range.

Take partial profits when the uptrend starts to struggle at the highs.

Never invest based on personal politics.

Disclaimer: I am not a registered investment advisor. My comments above reflect my view of the market, and what I am doing with my accounts. The analysis is not a recommendation to buy, ...

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