As the S&P 500 seems to have formed a double bottom in January and March, the question in many investors' minds must be "Have we seen the bottom?" My review of some of my market indicators indicate that it’s probably a little early to flash the all-clear signal for US equities.
In particular, the problem areas of the market, namely the investment banks, housing and employment, continue to struggle, suggesting that the worst may not be over for this bear market. Here are some of the indicators that I am watching:
Insiders are bullishMark Hulbert
reports that insiders have been buying their own stock at levels that are comparable to other market bottoms. Insider signals tend to have a very long time horizon but their actions does have bullish implications.
Investment bank valuations - more downside?
Since much of the recent stresses that have shown up in the investment banks and brokers, I go back to my rule of thumb that I would like to see a price to book ratio of 1 for the investment banks. The P/B of 1x was a good signal of a market bottom in the 1974-5 and 1981-2 bear markets.
While Lehman (LEH) did reach a P/B of 1x for one day at the time of the Bear Stearns panic, other investment banks and brokers such as Morgan Stanley (MS), Merrill Lynch (MER) and Raymond James (RJF), which is an interesting bellwether as it has no significant prop trading operations, are trading at valuations of 1.5 to 1.8 times book. Goldman Sachs (GS) is trading at valuations that are even higher than that.
I could be wrong here but my guess is that there needs to be more pain in the brokerage stocks before the market bottoms.
Smart funds defensive while overall sentiment is bullish
A check in with my group of
smart funds shows that their posture remains defensive. The accompanying chart shows the market beta of the “smart funds” compared to the “consensus funds”. Smart funds have a market beta, or implied market exposure, that is lower than the market while consensus funds are at or positive market exposure. Moreover, the recent Barron’s
Big Money Poll shows 50% of their respondents to be bullish or very bullish, compared to 13% as bearish.