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Monday, November 25, 2024

SAUT: DON’T WAIT FOR MAY TO GO AWAY

I.e., you don’t have to be the last guy out the door… – Ilene 

SAUT: DON’T WAIT FOR MAY TO GO AWAY

stock market predictionsCourtesy of The Pragmatic Capitalist 

Interesting commentary from Jeff Saut, Chief Equity Strategist at Raymond James this morning on the old investment saying “sell in May and go away.”  Mr. Saut believes investors should be selling before May in anticipation of what other investors might do:

“Obviously we have modified that old axiom this morning given our statement – “Don’t wait for May to go away!” Nevertheless, despite having been too soon’ly cautious since S&P 1150 – 1160, which is tantamount to being wrong, we are “stepping up” our cautionary counsel this week.”

Saut’s cautious tone is driven by a series of technical and sentiment factors that are often followed by weaker market action:

“Our increased caution is driven by a number of metrics. To wit, preliminary data suggests last Friday was the first 90% Downside Day since February, our sentiment gauges are back to as bullish as they were in 1987 (read that bearishly), the CBOE equity put/call ratio is at 0.32, for its heaviest “call volume” relative to “put volume” since August of 2000, stocks are the most overbought since the rally began in March 2009, some of the leading stocks are not responding to good news, Thursday was session 34 in the “buying stampede” that began on February 26th (rarely do such skeins last more than 30 sessions), we’ve gotten that peak-a-boo “look” into the long envisioned target zone of 1200 – 1250, volatility is back to the complacent 2008 levels, and the list goes on.”

But that doesn’t mean Saut is turning full-blown bearish.  He still sees upside in the market following a near-term correction:

“As for the ‘here and now,’ we are increasingly cautious, believing a near-term “top” in the equity markets has been registered. Longer-term, we remain bullish, thinking the profit-cycle recovery is alive and well. To that point, it’s worth considering that bottom-up operating earnings peaked in 2007 at ~$91 per share for the S&P 500 (SPX/1192.13). And, except for Japan, price-to-peak earnings power (PPE) has always made new highs, cycle after cycle. Again, as the good folks at GaveKal note, ‘Except during the bubble years of 1997 – 2001, the PPE for the SPX has fluctuated in a range of 10x to 20x (peak earnings); it currently stands at a moderate level of ~13x.’”

Source: Raymond James 

Photo: Courtesy of Jr. Deputy Accountant

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