Hulbert: Market Flashing Rare “Buy” Signal

Newsletter tracker Mark Hulbert says that the market has recently triggered a rare “buy” signal that has historically been a precursor to strong stock gains.

The indicator is termed “breadth thrust” by Ned Davis Research, the firm whose data Hulbert cites in his latest MarketWatch article. The indicator flashes a “buy” signal when percentage of common stocks trading above their 50-day moving averages rises above 90%.

The signal has occurred only 13 times since 1967, Hulbert says — and three of those instances have occurred since the March 2009 low, the most recent coming just a couple weeks ago. Historically, following the signal, the S&P 500 has averaged returns of 4.6% over the next month; 8.2% over the next quarter; 13.1% over the next six months; and 19.7% over the next year. In the worst-performing one-year period after the signal occurred, the S&P still gained 11.6%, Hulbert says.

“It’s worth noting, furthermore, that unlike many other trend-following indicators that have been biased upwards in recent years by the increasing number of interest-rate sensitive issues, Davis’ calculations are based on a subset of stocks that eliminates closed-end funds, bond funds, exchange-traded funds, and the like,” Hulbert says, though he adds that there’s of course no guarantee that the buy signal will work every time in the future.

One Response to “Hulbert: Market Flashing Rare “Buy” Signal”

  1. stupid article really. i have a chick that tells me DOW will crash soon.

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