ASX Leading Indicator and Stock Pricing

Bull-Bear Market Indicator
Stock Market Pricing Indicator

The gauge on the left indicates bull or bear market status, while the indicator on the right reflects stock market valuation. Stock market pricing indicates whether stocks are cheap or expensive relative to earnings, but it is a poor indicator of market timing. We do not recommend selling stocks because the market valuation is high. Still, we advise investors to be circumspect about adding new positions without carefully investigating the underlying value.

Bull/Bear Market

The ASX Bull-Bear Market indicator remains at 66%, compared to 56% six weeks ago, signaling a mild bull market.

ASX Bull-Bear Market Indicator

Five indicators from Australia and China indicate risk-on, while the ASX 200 relative to Gold (in AUD) remains risk-off. The composite index includes a 40% weighting for the US Bull/Bear indicator, which is also unchanged.

The OECD Composite Leading Indicator for China remains at a low 99.36 points for September, largely unchanged from 99.35 in August. Readings below 99 signal risk-off.

China: OECD Leading Indicator

Stock Pricing

ASX stock pricing eased to 89.79 percent, compared to a high of 92.23 percent in August and a low of 67.85 percent in April.

ASX Stock Market Value Indicator

We use z-scores to measure each indicator’s current position relative to its history, with the result expressed in standard deviations from the mean. We then calculate an average for the five readings and convert that to a percentile. The higher that stock market pricing is relative to its historical mean, the greater the risk of a sharp drawdown.

Conclusion

The ASX bull-bear indicator signals a mild bull market. However, the extreme valuation increases the long-term risk of a significant drawdown.

Acknowledgments

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