Roubini Sentiment Index — An Instant Classic!

August 31, 2010

Check out Make Money with Roubini Sentiment Indicator for a hilarious take on one media staple’s correlation with stock market performance. Nouriel Roubini has become famous in the last three years for his correct prediction of a dramatic worldwide recession and stock market decline. Roubini-mania has subsided a bit since the height of the financial crisis, but it doesn’t take many clicks on a finance website to find a mention of Dr. Doom, as he’s affectionately known.

Dr. Dogan at Insider Monkey takes a look at the raw data, using GoogleTrends to form an underlying Roubini Index which gauges Roubini’s media exposure. He then takes a look at market performance, and more specifically, the VIX.

Long story short, it turns out the Roubini Index actually leads VIX performance by about two weeks, allowing for some actionable VIX trades which have made money over the last three years.

Here is our simple trading strategy: Go long the VIX when Roubini Sentiment Index goes %25 above its four-week moving average. Following this strategy over the 2007-2010 period will earn us a weekly average return of an amazing 2.4% (If we had simply gone long VIX at all times, the average weekly return would have been 1.6%). If we hold on to our long VIX position for three weeks, the average return over this time period is 8.25%

I’d be interested to find out what the longer-term trading results are for this new indicator. What’s problematic is that Roubini was completely off the radar until 2006. Here’s a screen grab of his GoogleTrends chart – his name doesn’t start to jump until mid-2007, which would only give us 2 years of worthwhile data (we can only test forward to August, 2009 on a yearly basis).

Click to Enlarge. source: Google

Theoretically we could just use the VIX as a proxy and test the results…check back for more!

HT: Clusterstock

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Relative Strength Spread

August 31, 2010

The chart below is the spread between the relative strength leaders and relative strength laggards (universe of mid and large cap stocks). When the chart is rising, relative strength leaders are performing better than relative strength laggards. As of 8/30/2010:

We continue to see the RS Spread reflect the similar performance between the relative strength leaders and the relative strength laggards.

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