We’re Not in the Millionaire-Making Meme-Stock Days, But It’s Not All Doom and Gloom
We're Not in the Millionaire-Making Meme-Stock Days, But It's Not All Doom and Gloom
When the hit television show “The Office” ended, Andy Bernard, a character who was always dressed to impress and wouldn't let anyone forget he went to Cornell University, was quite poignant when reflecting on his time working at the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company.
Source: Twitter
Looking at the markets for most of 2022, many folks wish they knew that the time following the COVID-19 market crash would be considered the good old days.
Everyone was flush with cash, thanks to the Federal Reserve's runaway money printing and the stimulus checks from Washington, D.C.
Locked down at home with little else to do, millions of new day traders put their stimulus checks straight into the stock market.
Meme-stock investors were born, and many got rich quick.
Online brokers like Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) reported record numbers of new accounts and record cash inflows. Practically bankrupt companies like AMC Entertainment Inc. (AMC) and GameStop Corp. (GME) went through the roof. Gains in the hundreds of percent were common and occurred practically overnight.
Ah, the good old days of post-pandemic, easy-money investing.
Lots of those newly minted, get-rich-quick day traders now long for the return of those glory days… well, minus the pandemic part, of course.
Analysts at SentimenTrader.com recently pointed out that all that easy money earned by pandemic-era retail investors has vanished.
Specifically, small stock options traders earned more than $1 billion in quick profits in 2020. But they are now in the hole to the tune of more than $500 million in losses since then.
Easy come, easy go.
But for anyone yearning for better days and feeling leery about this recent rebound attempt, I'm still seeing some light at the end of the tunnel.
The chart above displays call premiums minus put premiums for small retail option buyers going back more than 20 years. As you can see in the chart above, small options traders are more bearish right now than ever before. And that's bullish!
Two things stand out to me:
Record-high speculation in call options near the top in 2021.
Record-high speculation in put options today as stocks may be at or near a bottom.
If the Robinhood option jockeys were long and wrong as the market peaked, I'd say it's a good bet they're also wrong today with record short positions.
That's another great contrary indicator that stocks are extremely oversold and overdue for at least a bounce.
But there's more.
Source: Bespoke Investment Group
The table above from Bespoke Investment Group tells you just how extreme the selling has been this year. The S&P 500 Index was down more than 23% in the first half of 2022 when this information was released, and such relentless selling has happened just eight times since World War II.
Well, you can see in the table what happened next.
After these other extreme sell-off signals, stocks surged higher by an average of 31.36% over the next year.
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First, record bearish option bets on the part of wrong-way retail traders. Second, a historically extreme stock market decline in the last six months.
All of this tells me that stocks are far more likely to move higher over the next year than lower. Heck, there are favorable odds that stocks will be higher by the end of 2022, which is just six months from now.
Add it all up and it makes a very strong case that the bottom is already in, or at least very close. Note from the table above that the S&P dropped 29.43% in the fourth quarter of 2008 during the financial crisis. Stocks then slid another 11.67% in the first quarter of 2009.
There could certainly be some more downside, but the reward-to-risk ratio is sky-high: a potential 31% reward versus an 11% risk.
I'll take odds like that any day.
Mike Burnick Senior Analyst, TradeSmith
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The chart below represents the best-performing open positions over the last two years, as recommended by our software.
TradeSmith is not registered as an investment adviser and operates under the publishers' exemption of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The investments and strategies discussed in TradeSmith's content do not constitute personalized investment advice. Any trading or investment decisions you take are in reliance on your own analysis and judgment and not in reliance on TradeSmith. There are risks inherent in investing and past investment performance is not indicative of future results.
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