INDICATOR INSIGHTS

Monthly Review

CATEGORY                                                       

Market Sentiment/Risk                  MO. END   CHANGE    LEVEL

Fear & Greed Index (Market sentiment)          67                +5            Greed

VIX (S&P 500 Volatility measure)                 16.7              -1.9           Neutral

MMRI (Risk measured by interest rates)        255              -17            High risk

U.S. 10yr-bond yield                                        4.24             -1.6           Decrease

Fear & Greed Bitcoin                                        52                -3             Neutral

CSI (Consumer Sentiment)                             52.2                0             Bearish (5-yr lows)

 

U.S. Economy                                        UP/DOWN       LEVEL

LEI (Overall leading indicators)                          Down             Bearish

GDP (Gross Domestic Product)                        Down             Bearish     

ISM/PMI (Producers Manufacturing Index)      Slight Up          Bullish    

CPI (Consumer Price Index)                                  Up                 Bearish       

       (Minus Food & Energy)                                  Up                Bearish

Consumer Confidence/Retail Spending         Slight Up        Bullish     

Personal Consumption Expenditures                  Slight Up          Bearish           

JOLTS (Unemployment categories)                     Even               Neutral

ADP (Jobs – non-farm payroll added)                  Down              Bearish         

         (Initial and continued jobless claims)       Slight Down       Bullish

Transports (Shipping, durable goods orders)     Slight Up           Bullish     

Real Estate (New/existing sales)                          Down              Bearish    

  (Housing starts/Construction Public/Private)   Slight Up          Bullish

  (Mortgage demand)                                          Slight Up          Bullish  

Business Activity/CEO Confidence                     Down              Bearish  

 

**This section updated on July 1, 2025

**LTE = Lower than expected (bearish) / HTE = Higher than expected (bullish)

***We may not present the most recent numbers (often revised, and unreported in the mainstream media). Actual figures and charts can be found on the internet, including the FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) website.

 

Price Action                                    UP/DOWN        LEVEL

RSI (Relative Price Strength)                          Up                 Bullish

PCR (Put to Call Ratio – 5 day avg)            Down              Bullish

ADL (Advance/Decline line)                    Up                Bullish          

MFI (Money Flow Index)                               Even               Neutral 

Institutional Trading                                     Selling             Bearish

 

Commodities                           MO. END   CHANGE    LEVEL

Gold to Silver Ratio                          91.5             -8.1           Silver bias decreasing

Crude Oil                                      64.96        +4.17         Increase/Volatile

 

** Effective January 2025, we have now added another category revealing the 20, 50, and 200-day percentage of stocks reaching cycle highs for the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite (QQQ) and Russell 2000 Small Cap Index (IWM), with periodic commentary.

 

Index Pct of Highs        20-Day   50-Day   200-Day   Level

OVERALL Markets              63           68              47          Neutral - improving

DJIA  (Blue Chips)                   73           77              60         Bullish

S&P 500  (Top 500)              71            72              53          Bullish

QQQ  (Technology)                67            70             51         Bullish

IWM  (Small Caps)              61           69              39          Bearish

                                                                                                                                         

    As introduced in Chapter 3 of our publication When to Buy and When to Sell: Combining Easy Indicators, Charts, and Financial Astrology (available on Amazon), there are several “leading indicators” that go largely unnoticed and under-utilized by the average beginner or intermediate investor. Some of these indicators measure human emotion and market sentiment that often determines shorter term price action, while others uncover the true conditions of the economy, institutional buying and selling, and risk levels. 

     In our monthly “Indicator Insights” blog (first weekend of each month) we report the previous month-end levels (pertaining to the U.S. economy and/or the S&P 500) regarding several of these easy-to-read gauges (as well as others) to provide a quick-guide for our readers, with periodic analysis when necessary. Our monthly updates in this blog section include several market psychology related gauges, including the S&P 500 Fear & Greed index updated level, although there will be no commentary, as we dedicate an entire separate weekly blog to that specific indicator. Please take a moment to review the attached figures. 

      In the last edition, covering May of 2025, we noted the sustained negative tone to most economic indicators, including the rise of mortgage loan/rent defaults, job loss, and personal debt, all continued putting pressure on the retail, manufacturing, and real estate sectors, which did not change much until the last week of the month. Despite those factors, the equity markets thrived in May after significant weakness through the first half of April (culminating in a cycle bottom on April 8). The S&P 500 ended the month with a 6.1% gain, thwarting the old “Sell in May and Go Away” theory from the past (see our previous Quick Quotes – Sell in May and Go Away blogs, dated 4-15-24 and 4-18-25). The month of June followed suit, with some initial volatility, and a strong finish, helped along by the annual Russell Re-Alignment and Quarter-End Window Dressing (discussed in our publication and recent blogs). 

      As we often mention, the Fear & Greed Index normally reacts quickly to extreme readings (below 25 or over 75). The reading, which spent most of May advancing from the Neutral level to the Greed level, then bounced around between the two in June, again ending the month in the mid-Greed level. Should this gauge reach Extreme Greed, look for a pullback. 

      “Readings of note” in the month of June included the continuation of Leading Economic Index (LEI) bearish sentiment, though slightly improved in some categories. Oil, and energy, were also highlighted mid-month with a surge in crude prices resulting from the Middle-East conflict. That, and the uncertainty regarding the ever-changing “tariff” threats between countries across the globe, kept the market rather volatile until the last week or so of the month. Some of the $7 trillion noted on the “sidelines” last month was also put to work, as Risk-On sentiment returned. This month, the Advance/Decline line again continued upward, adding to the reversal trend that began in the second half of April. This is important as it signifies a higher percentage of stocks advancing in the last 2 month or so, indicated in our Index of Percentage Highs above. 

      The Federal Reserve has continued its “wait and see” stance regarding rate policy, however the sentiment appears to changing as the mixed economic news, and potentially lower inflation, may result in cuts beginning sometime in the Summer or early Fall. This month’s GDP reading showed a 0.5 contraction, continuing the downward trajectory. Though there are several factors attributed to this number, should the global tariff issue persist, the GDP could face a larger reduction as manufacturing and production would decline further, indicating a recession and a potential rate cut sooner than later.  

      The overall markets/indexes have been climbing since that April 8 low, and now appear to be consolidating, as the DJIA and Nasdaq currently have over 50% of their holdings trading over their 200-day Moving Averages, while the S&P 500 is close at 48%. The Russell 2000 small cap index, however, continues to lag at only 32%, helping drag the overall average to 40%. This indicates that some negative sentiment persists despite the large rally since early April. July has become the 2nd most profitable month of the year over the last 2 decades, but keep an eye on these numbers if momentum starts to slow. 

      Remember to keep your stop-loss orders mental (not in the system), and keep some cash aside to take advantage of buying opportunities (in either direction). Also, short-term investors and traders should beware of any false rallies, as they occur often during bear markets, and the tariff and conflict news seems to change daily.  

 

***As always, this information is not intended to be financial advice, or any specific buy or sell recommendation, but rather a guide to assist the reader in some further understanding of current economic conditions.

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