Investors Run From Stocks At Record Pace

 | Dec 10, 2019 04:43AM ET

BIGGEST WITHDRAWALS ON RECORD/h2

There is a lot of relevant information in the text below from a Wall Street Journal article dated December 8, 2019 :

“Investors have pulled $135.5 billion from U.S. stock-focused mutual funds and exchange-traded funds so far this year, the biggest withdrawals on record, according to data provider Refinitiv Lipper, which tracked the data going back to 1992.”

DOES 2019 LOOK ANYTHING LIKE THE MAJOR PEAK IN 2000?

Given we know extreme sentiment can be a powerful contrary indicator, we would expect exuberant investors to rush into stock-based investments near a major stock market peak, which is exactly what happened in the year 2000. From a Federal Reserve Bulletin dated December 2000:

“Mutual fund investors returned vigorously to equity funds, increasing the pace of net new cash flows into those funds to a record level over the first eight months of 2000.”

Keep in mind, the S&P 500 peaked in March 2000 and investors were still adding to stock-based funds at a record pace through the end of August 2000, which looks nothing like what we have seen in 2019.

HOW DOES 2019 COMPARE TO OTHER PERIODS?

As shown on December 2, when investors made a mad dash for the equity fund exits, it occurred near major stock market lows in 2002, 2009, 2011, and 2016.