S&P 500: Risk Vs. Internals

 | Jun 16, 2013 12:23AM ET

Over the past week our core market health indicators fell slightly, but we made no changes to our core portfolios. The details are in this post.

We’re seeing a battle between event risk and market internals. Overall our measures of market health and internal structure are constructive, while our measures of risk are signalling skittishness by investors.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX) held up fairly well last week in the face of several market scares. It seemed like every day brought some new rumor that drove the market up and down. But when the dust settled SPX only gave up a little over one percentage point. Meanwhile measures of intermediate term breadth like the percent of stocks above their 200 day moving average and the bullish percent index still have very healthy readings. Looking at market internals this appears to be a garden variety consolidation. We’re not seeing any real damage under the covers as price pulls back. SPX has held a critical support level near 1600 and bounced twice from the 50 day moving average. At the same time sentiment from the Twitter stream has improved which suggests market participants are buying at that level. All of these things suggest the market is healthy.

When we take a look at our measures of risk we get a completely different picture. Our investor contentment index has fallen sharply over the past four weeks and is now accelerating downward at the fastest pace in three years. This is in contrast to 2011 and 2012 where skittishness built slowly over several months before high levels of fear showed up from longer term investors. Our market stability indicator has fallen over the past several weeks and is now in negative territory. Our market risk indicator has all but one of its components signaling higher risk in the near term. From a risk perspective it appears that everyone is ready to jump out of their long positions at any moment. All that is needed is an event to trigger the selling.

As intermediate to long term investors this is the type of market we hate. We prefer to see recognition of risk rise slowly as it gives us plenty of time to sell the top.

Twitter Indicators

Our sentiment indicator calculated from the Twitter stream for the S&P 500 Index (SPX) continues to show fairly positive readings in the face of market volatility. The large moves in price over the past week only produced one moderately negative print on a daily basis.

Smoothed sentiment has broken out above its short term down trend line after bouncing from a longer term uptrend line. This suggests that traders were buying the dip to 1600 on SPX and also the 50 day moving average. Both of those touches on support came with higher sentiment readings than the previous dips. Smoothed sentiment stayed above zero over the past week while price fell indicating an overall positive bias by market participants.