Client Sentiment Survey Results - 11/23/12

December 4, 2012

Our latest sentiment survey was open from 11/23/12 to 11/30/12. The Dorsey, Wright Polo Shirt Raffle continues to drive advisor participation, and we greatly appreciate your support! This round, we had 73 advisors participate in the survey. If you believe, as we do, that markets are driven by supply and demand, client behavior is important. We’re not asking what you think of the market—since most of our blog readers are financial advisors, we’re asking instead about the behavior of your clients. Then we’re aggregating responses exclusively for our readership. Your privacy will not be compromised in any way.

After the first 30 or so responses, the established pattern was simply magnified, so we are fairly comfortable about the statistical validity of our sample. Some statistical uncertainty this round comes from the fact that we only had four investors say that thier clients are more afraid of missing a stock upturn than being caught in a downdraft. Most of the responses were from the U.S., but we also had multiple advisors respond from at least two other countries. Let’s get down to an analysis of the data! Note: You can click on any of the charts to enlarge them.

Question 1. Based on their behavior, are your clients currently more afraid of: a) getting caught in a stock market downdraft, or b) missing a stock market upturn?

greatestfear 2 Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 1: Greatest Fear. From survey to survey, the S&P 500 rose by just over 2%, and our indicators responded as expected. The fear of downdraft group ticked slightly lower, from 90% to 89%, while the upturn group managed to rise from 10% to 11%.

greatestfearspread 1 Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 2: Greatest Fear Spread. Another way to look at this data is to examine the spread between the two groups. The spread dipped from 80% to 78%.

Question 2. Based on their behavior, how would you rate your clients’ current appetite for risk?

avgriskapp 49 Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 3: Average Risk Appetite. Average risk appetite bounced ever so slightly with the rising market, from 2.42 to 2.43.

riskappcurve Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 4: Risk Appetite Bell Curve. This chart uses a bell curve to break out the percentage of respondents at each risk appetite level. This round, over 90% of all respondents wanted a risk appetite of 3 or less for the second survey round in a row.

riskappcurvegroup 1 Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 5: Risk appetite Bell Curve by Group. The next three charts use cross-sectional data. The chat plots the reported client risk appetite separately for the fear of downdraft and for the fear of missing upturn groups. We can see the upturn group wants more risk, while the fear of downturn group is looking for less risk.

avgriskgroup 7 Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 6: Average Risk Appetite by Group. This round, both groups’ average managed to move slightly lower, while the overage average ticked barely higher.

riskappspread 49 Client Sentiment Survey Results   11/23/12

Chart 7: Risk Appetite Spread. This is a chart constructed from the data in Chart 6, where the average risk appetite of the downdraft group is subtracted from the average risk appetite of the missing upturn group. The spread remained unchanged.

The S&P 500 rose around 2% from survey to survey, and our indicators nudged themselves into the right direction. The fear of downdraft group fell by a measly 1%. Overall risk appetite increased by a whopping .01 point, indicating a very tepid response to a short-term move higher in the market. Things still look bad sentiment-wise.

No one can predict the future, as we all know, so instead of prognosticating, we will sit back and enjoy the ride. A rigorously tested, systematic investment process provides a great deal of comfort for clients during these types of fearful, highly uncertain market environments. Until next time, good trading and thank you for participating.

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Nimble Enough to Adapt?

December 4, 2012

Institutional Investor says that the Australian dollar is no longer a risk-on currency:

currencies Nimble Enough to Adapt?

If true, will investors be nimble enough to adapt? Certain securities or asset classes can exhibit a given risk profile for an extended period of time…until they don’t. It can be a very risky proposition to say “this” is a safe asset class, “this” one is risky, “this” one goes up when “this” one goes down…

Alternatively, relative strength approaches asset allocation from the perspective of a meritocracy: Does its relative strength justify inclusion in the portfolio? If so, it’s in (or overweighted); if not, it’s out (or underweighted).

Dorsey Wright does not currently have a position in the Australian dollar. A list of all holding for the trailing 12 months is available upon request.

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Relative Strength Spread

December 4, 2012

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 12/3/2012:

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