Happy Monday! The big question weāre tackling today: Has the market bottomed? Plus, weāre unpacking Scott Bessentās Sunday comments, cheap big tech stocks, and more. First time reading? Join 190,000 self-directed investors gaining an edge every morning. Sign up here.Ā
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Sentiment as a vibe check
When the bears get loud, it could be time to turn bullish.Ā
The S&P 500 just saw its fifth-fastest correction in seven decades, yet it notched its best one-day performance of 2025 on Friday, raising speculation on whether the market has bottomed.Ā
No one can know for sure whether thereās more pain to come, but unpacking the āvibesā on the market suggests a bullish shift.Ā Ā
Historically, sentiment can be taken as a contrarian indicator. We can trace this back to Warren Buffettās advice āto be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful.ā
Indeed, investor sentiment has soured over recent weeks:Ā
AAII Sentiment Survey: The latest American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) survey showed more respondents are now bearish than bullish
Investors Intelligence Sentiment Index: This index, which tracks sentiment across financial publications and newsletters, has also turned more negative on the outlook for stocks
āFor now, sentiment indicators are very bearish, which is bullish from a contrarian perspective,ā strategists at Yardeni Research wrote in a note Friday.Ā
Several other market signals are worth noting here:
CBOE Put/Call Ratio: Itās climbed to a bearish 0.94, above its average of 0.66, suggesting traders are positioning for the market to fall
Gold prices:Ā The safe-haven asset just breached $3,000 an ounce for the first time ever
Consumer Sentiment: The University of Michiganās latest survey dropped from 64.7 to 57.9, the weakest reading in over two years
Steve Sosnick, chief strategist of Interactive Brokers, pointed out that the previous low for the Michigan data registered on November 30, 2022.
That, he observed, turned out to be a ārather opportune time to buy stocksā as the market bottomed.Ā
Meanwhile, the AAII survey at the time hovered at similar levels as it does today, with about 60% of respondents bearish. Over the next 12 months, the market rallied roughly 20%.
This pattern echoes what followed the worst days of the Great Recession. In March 2009, over 60% of AAII respondents were bearish, yet the S&P 500 went on to close that year more than 22% higher.Ā
To be clear, much of investorsā current apprehension is justified.
Markets crave certainty and clarity ā two words that donāt exactly describe the Trump administrationās early months of governance.Ā
The president has flipped tariffs on and off like a light switch, federal spending cuts have disrupted government agencies, the labor market appears to be weakening, and some Wall Street firms have slashed their growth estimates.
The Federal Reserve, too, still has to decide whether to cut interest rates sooner or later.
Yet as history has shown, pessimism and investment opportunities often peak at the same time, particularly for those who can look beyond immediate uncertainty.Ā
Risks are still present, but when people act fearful, as they are now, it pays to pay attention.
š¦Ā Scott Bessent says the White House is preventing a financial crisis. The Treasury Secretary said Sunday that his team is focused on averting a downturn: āWhat I could guarantee is we would have had a financial crisis. Iāve studied it. Iāve taught it. And if we kept up at these spending levelsā¦everything was unsustainable.ā (CNBC)
šĀ Big Tech stocks are much cheaper now. The valuations of Magnificent Seven names have come down from lofty heights over recent weeks, but they remain above the lows seen in 2018 and 2022. Some analysts are hesitant to snap up shares now in case the broad market continues to fall. (Bloomberg)
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Rapid-fire:
A drop in global risk appetite is pushing emerging-market investors into higher quality dollar bonds (Bloomberg)
China is outspending the US in nuclear energy and building projects at record speed (CNBC)
Marco Rubio said once the US has imposed tariffs on its major partners it could engage in new talks for trade deals (Reuters)
Housing affordability concerns extend beyond renters and first-time buyers (ResiClub)
Baidu launched two new versions of its AI model Ernie (TechCrunch)
The national debt is a serious problem and the US has become dependent on government spending (Pomp Letter)
Last thing:
Gina Martin Adams @GinaMartinAdams
After two weeks of significant underperformance vs the globe, the U.S. is still one of the most expensive stock markets in the world by any measure, and the only market still trading at P/E over 20x.
9:56 AM ⢠Mar 16, 2025
141 Likes 31 Retweets
10 Replies
About me:
š° Iām Phil Rosen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Opening Bell Daily. Iāve published books, lived on three continents, and won awards for my journalism, which has appeared in Business Insider, Fortune, Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg and Inc. Magazine.
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