Friday, August 27, 2010

Bullish Sentiment Plummets to Credit Crisis Low

By: John Melloy Executive Producer, Fast Money

The number of individual investors who have a bullish outlook on the stock market for the next six months plunged to 21 percent, from 30 percent last week, according to a widely followed sentiment survey.

What’s more, this is the lowest weekly reading from the American Association of Individual Investors since a March 2009 level of 19 percent, which occurred just before the S&P 500 collapsed to a 12-year low of 676.

S&P 500 INDEX
(.SPX)
1047.22 -8.11 (-0.77%%)
INDEX

So effectively, individual investors feel as good about stocks as they did at the very depths of the credit crisis, even though the S&P 500 is still more than 50 percent higher than that low.

Looking at the events of the past five days (the survey is completed every Wednesday) not much comes to mind that would trigger such a surge in pessimism. There was the record plunge in July existing home sales on Tuesday, but the stock market actually almost finished higher that day as traders speculated that was just the after-effects of a tax credit that pulled sales forward. (more)

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