Monday, September 13, 2010

September Rally Pulls Timing Outlook Back To Positive, But Still Not Re-Entering Market

1. Summary

An early September rally has pulled the Timing Outlook back into positive territory, up to 6.0 this time from a negative 4.5 last time.

For over four months, the S&P 500 has been stuck in a trading range of 1040 to 1130. The Timing Outlook has not performed well during this period, as the market’s drifts up and down have been timed nearly perfectly to repeatedly reverse the Timing Outlook, which I re-compute about every other week. So the Timing Outlook has been out of phase with the market’s short-term “trends.” There has been no long-term trend up or down; it has been sideways.

While the short drifts up and down have been long enough to keep the Timing Outlook off balance, they have been too short to pass my other criteria for being invested in stocks, so my Capital Gains Portfolio has been 100% cash since early May. The additional criteria, again, are:

• 9% rise over two weeks, with at least 7/10 days positive
• 3% rise over 3 weeks, with at least 10/15 days positive
• 4% rise over 4 weeks, with at least 14/20 days positive
• 5% rise over 5 weeks, with at least 17/25 days positive
• Etc.



The criteria are close to being met. Check out the chart above (click on it to enlarge it). It shows that the S&P 500 has risen about 6% during the past 10 trading sessions, with 8 of the past 10 sessions being positive. If the market’s rally continues a few more days, the criteria go to the three-week line, requiring a 3% rise with 10 out of 15 days being positive. We’re almost there. But patience is the watch-word. Don’t plug in hope as a substitute for actual performance. Waiting for the right entry point can be tedious, but avoiding losses is as important to overall success in investing for capital appreciation as scoring gains.

My Dividend Portfolio remains 100% invested after the changes described last time. By the way, I have begun to work on the 2011 edition of The Top 40 Dividend Stocks. I will keep you up to date on its progress. I hope to release it in January.

2. Market Performance Since Last Outlook
(“now” figures are as mid-day, Monday, September 13, 2010)

Last Outlook (8/25/10): 4.5 (negative)
S&P 500 last time (8/25/10): 1048
S&P 500 now: 1122 Change: +7%

S&P 500 at beginning of 2010: 1115
S&P 500 now: 1122 Change in 2010: +1%

S&P 500 at close 3/9/09 (beginning of bull market): 677
S&P 500 now: 1122 Change since 3/9/09: +66%

3. Indicators in Detail

Conference Board Index of Leading Economic Indicators: No new report since last time. This index has been gyrating the past few months, rendering it ambiguous for our purposes. I require three straight monthly increases or decreases to label this as positive or negative. Indicator remains neutral. +5

Fed Funds Rate: No change. With the Federal Funds rate near zero, this indicator remains positive. +10

S&P 500 Market Valuation (P/E): Morningstar pegs the current P/E of the S&P 500 at 13.7, down from 15.2 last time. This indicator is in positive territory at any value below 17.4. +10

Morningstar’s Market Valuation Graph: Morningstar’s proprietary market valuation graph is at 0.96, up from 0.91 last time. It is still in the neutral range, which is any value between 0.90 and 1.10. +5

S&P 500 Short Term Technical Trend: This short-term technical indicator uses the two shorter simple moving averages (SMAs) of the S&P 500. The configuration (see the blue and green lines on the chart) is Index > 50-day > 20-day. That is ambiguous, reflecting the back-and-forth nature of the market over the past several months. Neutral. +5

S&P 500 Medium Term Technical Trend: The mid-term indicator uses the two longer SMAs (50-day and 200-day, the blue and red lines on the chart). The lineup is Index > 200-day > 50-day. The recent 2-week rally has flipped this from last time, moving the indicator from negative to neutral. +5

DJIA Short Term Technical Trend: This chart looks similar to the S&P 500 chart. Neutral. +5

DJIA Medium Term Technical Trend: Same as the S&P 500. Neutral. +5

NASDAQ Short Term Technical Trend: The NASDAQ’s chart has the same configuration as the other two. Neutral. +5

NASDAQ Medium Term Technical Trend: Same as the other two. Neutral. +5

TOTAL POINTS: 60
NEW READING: 60 / 10 = 6.0 = POSITIVE