Wall St’s fear gauge suggests the worst is over as the reading of the VIX suggests that the correction may not happen

July 9, 2009

Growing confidence that the US is putting the worst in decades behind it has pushed the index known as ’s gauge to its lowest level since just before Lehman Brothers collapsed last September. The CBOE Volatility Index ., known as the , provides with portfolio insurance against fluctuations in the S&P 500 index .. It soared to historic highs in the weeks after Lehman’s rapid failure pushed financial markets to the brink and left an already crippled in tatters. But amid numerous signs the is on the edge of a recovery, coupled with the best quarter for in more than 10 years, the has begun to look like its old self again.” see a lesser need for protection going forward; it looks like they don’t see a revisit to the March lows,” said Andrew Wilkinson, senior market analyst at Interactive Brokers Group in Greenwich, Connecticut. The , which is calculated from Standard & Poor’s index options, tracks the market’s expectations of volatility over the next 30 days. It often moves inversely to the S&P benchmark and goes up as options premiums are raised. The S&P 500 . hit a more than 12-year low on March 9, 2009, down more than 57% from the record high it set in October 2007, after the bursting of the housing bubble spiraled into a credit crisis and then into a global . The hit an intra-day record high of 89.53 in late October, but yesterday it closed at 25.35, its lowest level since September 11, 2008, before the weekend when Lehman collapsed.”The path forward appears a less treacherous one according to what the is telling us,” Wilkinson added. Stabilization of key economic indicators such as payrolls, home prices, yields and consumer confidence, as well as the administration’s plan to reactivate the -hit , have boosted bets on the ’s outlook. are looking forward to this week’s key housing and job market data on expectations that it will show further signs that the worst is over. “I think (the ) is down primarily because the expectation is the is going to recover and we’ve started a bull market,” said Hugh Johnson, chief investment officer of Johnson Illington Advisors in , . The S&P 500 has risen + 40% from its March 9 low, and is on path to close its best quarter since the fourth quarter of 1998. But even as some market players expect a correction in the near term, the reading of the suggests that the correction may not happen. “The bears are beginning to throw in the towel on expecting a substantial stock market decline, so are beginning to sell implied volatility,” Wilkinson said. “ do not perceive there’s going to be another big crash.” But although the has returned to levels similar to those seen before financial markets imploded, analysts said that does not mean the has recovered from the hit it took last year. “We’ve gone through such a change in the that has required such drastic steps from both the Federal Reserve and the government that it is going to create a very different landscape going forward,” added Wilkinson. “We can’t relate (today’s) measures to were we’ve come from.”

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Individual Investors Not Fueling Recent Rally

June 23, 2009

The conventional is that retail , and not institutions, have powered the market’s rally off the March 2009 lows. Not so, says , CEO of Investment Research. The firm tracks the flow of in and out of mutual funds. Since the start of May, he says, “U.S. funds have taken in a modest US$7.1B” despite improved performance. Instead, retail are plowing into funds. Moreover, Biderman says that individuals did capitulate in the heat of the crisis, having been burned twice in the last ten years. The retail investor is not in the market yet, but history tells us that they will be, Biderman expects them to come in to the market in 2010.

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