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Sell in May?

Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WuQQ/~3/284356874/sell-in-may.html
Posted on Monday, May 5th, 2008 | In Current Market News
Contributed by: Jeffrey Miller (http://www.oldprof.typepad.com) -

There are many Wall Street adages. Some seem to have predictive power, including the idea that one should “sell in May and go away.”

Such slogans have extra influence because of the catchy, alliterative qualities.

When Indicators Conflict

There are a number of conflicting adages at the moment.

There is the Presidential Election Cycle. We have not been big fans of this because the causal model is elusive. This year, however, we have both the Fed eases and the stimulus package. If ever the theory were to work, this might be the time. We also note that the popular bearish commentators embraced the theory when it suggested market weakness, but have fallen silent during the period when it suggested strength. This should be interesting to contrarian investors.

There are technical considerations. Can the market break through apparent resistance? That is the current battleground for traders.

There is the question of earnings forecasts and targets. First quarter earnings and outlooks were not as gloomy as expected. Financial writedowns? Yes. Other companies? Not so bad. It was an unexpected double-digit gain for non-financials.

Summing up the Prospects

Two of our favorite sources provide some insight.

Bespoke Investment Group notes as follows:

Bespoke readers might remember
that Goldman got rid of bullish strategist Abby Cohen when the market
was cratering in March. Cohen had a 2008 price target of 1,675 for the
S&P 500, and after replacing Cohen at the market’s bottom,
Goldman’s new strategist (David Kostin) lowered the firm’s year-end S&P 500 price target from 1,675 to 1,380.

Readers should check out the entire article. The Goldman economics team is very bearish and that has now expanded to their strategist team. These are often quite different within a single firm. This is a classic case of “global strategists” versus bottoms up analysts. It bears watching, but regular readers of “A Dash” know that we think the bottoms up guys are under-rated. Everyone is still fighting the old war of the 2000 tech bubble when companies and analysts hyped. When will we learn that the world is different now?

Muckdog wisely highlights some research from Sy Harding via Mark Hulbert. The gist of the story, which you should read for the full account, is that the “sale date” might be delayed this year.

That is consistent with our current model output, and our sense of the fundamentals. To check this out, readers might wish to revisit this article, from April 3rd.

And by the way —

What happened to “Don’t Fight the Fed”? We highlighted this as a “top secret” investment opportunity — early, but not wrong.

Last 5 posts by Jeffrey Miller





About Jeffrey Miller (http://www.oldprof.typepad.com)
Jeffrey A. Miller, Ph.D. is a former college professor with a hands-on, real world attitude. His quantitative modeling helped inform state and local officials in Wisconsin for more than a decade. A Public Policy analyst, he taught advanced research methods at the University of Wisconsin, and analyzed many issues related to state tax policy.

In 1987 Jeff began work for market makers at the Chicago Board Options Exchange. His approach included finding anomalies in the standard option pricing models and developing new forecasting techniques. Merging these quantitative techniques with specific company analysis, Jeff also generated trading ideas from sell-side analyst reports.

Through his years of experience in trading options, futures and equities, Jeff has come to be regarded as an expert in interpreting the effect of news on the markets and individual stocks. Jeff has served as a forensic expert in several cases involving such issues. He has also written a series of papers on investment management, describing both quantitative methods and those related to behavioral economics.

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