Is Stock-Market Crash Imminent Or Does This Bull Still Have Legs?

 | Apr 25, 2018 11:24AM ET

Adopt the pace of nature; her secret is patience.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

For a long time, we have been stating sharp pull-backs should be viewed through a bullish lens. In this article published in Nov 2017, we stated the following;

View strong corrections through a bullish lens. This game plan will remain valid until the masses turn bullish or the trend turns negative. The stronger the deviation, the better the opportunity.

In the above article, we also noted that the trend had to remain positive and sentiment should not turn bullish. Things worked out well up until Jan of 2018. In January bullish sentiment suddenly soared to a six-year new high and at that point, we knew all was not well. For until that moment the market was soaring to new highs on negative sentiment, illustrating the principle of “a market climbs a wall of worry” to its fullest, but that all changed in January.

Interestingly, the Dow missed the low-end targets we issued in Nov by 1400 points, so does that mean the upward journey is over. Before we answer that, understand that nothing trends up in a straight line; a healthy market always lets out doses of steam on its upward journey; sometimes the pullbacks are minor, and sometimes they are very strong. At the time we noted that the markets were extremely overbought and even went on to issue possible downside targets if the markets decided to let out some steam.

While the Dow is trading in the extremely overbought ranges, any pullback will most likely end in the 21,000-21,500 ranges. For the correction to pick up steam, it would need to close below this level on a weekly basis. As the trend is still positive, the odds of the Dow crashing are very low. At the most, the Dow would test its breakout point which falls in the 18,900-19,200 ranges unless the trend were to turn negative suddenly or the masses suddenly embraced the market with gusto. At this point, the trend is strong and showing no signs of weakening. Remember that the markets can remain irrational for much longer than most traders can remain solvent by betting against it.

Instead of letting out steam, the markets overheated and continued to surge to new highs almost on a weekly basis until Jan of 2018. At that point, as we stated above bullish sentiment soared; the masses embraced the markets with gusto; in fact in Jan Bearish sentiment dropped to a multiyear low of 15% and bullish sentiment soared to 60%.

So back to the question we asked before. Does this mean the end is near? That’s the billion dollar question and articles such as the two posted below whose sole function seems to be sensationalistic rather than realistic don’t help improve the outlook for the average Joe. Both articles were published on CNBC.

Stock market looks 'pretty fantastic' despite rising yields: Art Hogan

'Epic’ market bubble is ready to burst, and stocks could plunge, strategist warns

A stock market crash is not likely at this moment, because the market has pulled back sharply several times since January and the masses are nowhere near as bullish as they were in Jan of 2018. Given the massive run, this bull has experienced the current action though painful from an emotional perspective is well within the norm. No market can trend in a straight upward line forever; the equation must balance. We expect volatility to remain an issue until bearish sentiment surges past the 50% mark; a move to the 60% ranges would be ideal

The crowd is becoming anxious as evidenced by the data below: