Bearish Sentiment Claws Its Way Above 40%

June 29, 2012   |   June 2012 Bond Updates
The percentage of individual investors describing themselves as bearish rebounded by 8.5 percentage points to 44.4% in the latest AAII Sentiment Survey. Meanwhile, both bullish and neutral sentiment declined. Bullish sentiment, expectations that stock prices will rise over the next six months, fell 4.2 percentage points to 28.7%. This is the seventh time in the past 12 weeks that optimism has been below 30%. It is also the 13th consecutive week that bullish sentiment has been below its historical average of 39%. Neutral sentiment, expectations that stock prices will stay essentially unchanged over the next six months, fell 4.3 percentage points to 27.0%. The historical average is 31%. Bearish sentiment, expectations that stock prices will fall over the next six months, jumped 8.5 percentage points to 44.4%. This is the 11th time in 12 weeks that bearish sentiment has been above its historical average of 30%. This week's changes brought pessimistic levels back to where they were near the start of June. We are continuing to see ongoing pessimism among individual investors about the short-term direction of stock prices. The current 13-week streak of below-average bullish sentiment is the longest since a 14-week stretch from December 20, 2007, through March 20, 2008. The current eight-week streak of above average bearish sentiment is the longest since a 14-week stretch from July 21, 2011, through October 20, 2011. AAII members continue to be casting a wary eye toward events in Europe and are concerned about the slowing pace of economic growth in here in the United States. This week's special question asked AAII members what near-term catalyst would change their sentiment toward stocks. The largest number of respondents said some type of resolution to the European sovereign debt would be a positive catalyst. Other potential bullish catalysts included stronger U.S. economic growth, the outcome of the U.S. presidential election (respondents differed between whether a win by Mitt Romney or a President Obama would be a positive catalyst) and a resolution to the forthcoming expiration of tax cuts and the implementation of spending cuts (the so-called "fiscal cliff"). Special Offer: Now that the Facebook brouhaha is over it’s time to get back to investing basics. The good news is there are plenty of great value stocks in the land of tech giants. Click here for 7 Tech Stocks Value Investors Will Love. Some members foresaw potentially negative catalysts. These members cited a worsening of the European sovereign debt crisis and slower economic growth in either the U.S. or China. Here is a sampling of the responses:

View more at: http://www.forbes.com/sites/investor/2012/06/29/bearish-sentiment-claws-its-way-above-40/
 
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