BofA “Sell” Signal Triggered Any Moment… The Last Time This Happened Was June 2007

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ZeroHedge:

Back in mid-December, when stocks were melting up furiously daily amid unprecedented retail euphoria, which would only get crazier and crazier until eventually it forced Citi to use a bigger chart two months later to capture the market’s retail euphoria…

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… we reported that Bank of America’s first proprietary sell signal since February 2020 was triggered:

According to BofA., equity “barbell” strategies all the rage while (the few remaining) bears note cash levels fall to 4.0%, triggering an FMS Cash Rule “sell signal”; The last time the sell signal was triggered was in February 2020 – everyone knows what happened next.

Fast forward two and a half months and one sharp correction in stocks later, when yet another BofA sell signal has been triggered.

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As BofA’s Savita Subramanian writes overnight, Wall Street strategists continued to increase their recommended equity allocations in
February. As a result, the Sell Side Indicator (SSI), which is the average recommended equity allocation by sell-side strategists, rose by nearly 1ppt to 59.2% from 58.4%. This was the second month in a row of an almost 1ppt jump, bringing recommended equity allocation to almost a 10 year high and just 1.1ppt shy of what BofA dubs a “Sell” signal.

Why is this important? Because the last time the indicator was this close to “Sell” was June 2007 after which we generally saw 12-month returns of -13%. 

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No wonder why Subramanian concludes that “we’ve found Wall Street bullishness to be a reliable contrarian indicator.”

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