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Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Don't be too complacent, Beware of Coyotes

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
My friend sent me this interesting post about the current market sentiment on the eve of Thanksgiving. Thought to share with you as part of a friendly reminder of being cautious right now!
Don't become a turkey on the table😏

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Relaxed Turkeys, Beware of Coyotes

By Jeff Clark, editor, Market Minute

Yesterday I discovered a turkey carcass on the hillside behind my house.

I guess coyotes celebrate Thanksgiving too.

On the previous morning, I stood on my porch and watched a flock of wild turkeys scratching around my backyard, hunting for whatever it is that turkeys hunt for. It seemed odd to me that these birds felt so comfortable in my presence.

Didn't they know Thanksgiving was this week? Didn't they know a relative of theirs was on the menu? Didn't they fear they'd be put on the menu as well?

Apparently not.

I ventured off the porch and walked out among the feathered creatures. They hardly noticed me.

Oh sure, if I got within a few feet of any of them, the flock would saunter away in the opposite direction. But, rather than cackling and flapping their wings and scattering, they casually just strolled away – putting a little extra distance between us.

"Pretty darned relaxed," I thought – for turkeys to be so fearless and complacent this close to Thanksgiving.

They reminded me of investors.

On Monday, the CBOE Put/Call ratio – one of the best tools for measuring investor sentiment – closed at 0.65. That's one of the lowest levels of the year. Folks are jumping over themselves buying speculative call options.

Investors, just like the turkeys that frolicked in my backyard, are relaxed and comfortable – maybe too comfortable.

Of course, that's what happens when the stock market makes new highs just about every day… And, that's what happens when the biggest declines we get are just one or two percent, and last only a couple of days.

Investors, like country-club turkeys, stop worrying about the potential dangers of their environment.

For the past couple of weeks, we've been warning about the dangers of complacency. But, when stocks are running higher, no one wants to hear that sort of thing.

It's kind of like the grandmother who hurries through the sand to tell all the teenagers at the beach party to wear sunscreen. The teenagers nod politely and thank her for her advice. But then they roll their eyes once she moves on.

Of course, at the end of the day, someone always gets burned.

It seems as though almost everyone is bullish right now. Traders are buying call options like crazy. The talking heads in the financial media are suggesting there's nothing to worry about. It's nothing but blue skies and new highs for the stock market.

At this point, though, with the Dow hitting 30,000 for the first time ever, and with the S&P 500 trading at its highest level of the year, it may make sense to cackle, flap our wings wildly, and scatter in all directions.

Otherwise, we might end up as coyote food.

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