Estimating Oversold/Overbought Market Conditions

 | Mar 26, 2021 07:54AM ET

Would you know an oversold or overbought market if you saw one? Wall Street is obsessed with the question. And so is every trader, and perhaps more than a few investors who otherwise think they have a long-term horizon.

Devising metrics to answer these questions (or at least provide some perspective) is a productive effort, at least in theory. In practice, however, it’s fraught with an excess of confusion and dead ends. The main challenge is that finance isn’t physics. Even if you can accurately identify periods when the market has moved to excess, that’s no guarantee that equilibrium is near.

That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t routinely monitor signs of excess. But in these efforts it’s important to manage expectations, starting with the elephant in the room: no measure of market excess is flawless and many are prone to noise.

Where to begin? Answering is tougher than it sounds because there are hundreds (thousands?) of metrics in this corner. Perhaps a reasonable first approximation is looking at what can be labeled as cyclical indicators. Here, too, there are many possibilities, ranging from technical indicators (relative strength indices, for instance) to measures of how current prices stack up against an average.

The latter category is a sensible starting point. For example, consider how the S&P 500 compares vs. its 200-day moving average. To provide some historical perspective, let’s compute the ratio of current price to average price and then translate those values into standard deviations. Two standard deviations (plus or minus) is a proxy for a statistically significant move because such changes represent about 95% of variation for a given data set.

On that score, recent market action looks relatively extreme.