ASX Market Snapshot

Bull-Bear Market Indicator
Stock Market Pricing Indicator

The gauge on the left indicates whether the market is in a bull or bear phase, while the one on the right reflects the current valuation of the stock market. Stock market pricing indicates whether stocks are cheap or expensive in relation to earnings, but it is a poor indicator of market timing. We do not recommend selling stocks when market valuations are high, but we advise caution when adding new positions.

Bull/Bear Market

The ASX Bull-Bear Market indicator remains at 66%, up from 56% six weeks ago. Three of four indicators from Australia and two from China indicate a risk-on stance, with a combined 60% weighting, while the US Bull/Bear indicator, which accounts for the remaining 40%, is more bearish.

ASX Bull-Bear Market Indicator

The only Australian bear signal is the ASX 200 decline relative to gold (in Australian Dollars), which started four years ago.

ASX 200/Gold in AUD

Stock Pricing

ASX stock pricing declined to 79.44 percent from 80.70 percent last week, compared to the August high of 92.23 percent and an April low of 67.85 percent.

ASX Stock Market Value Indicator

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

Conclusion

The ASX bull-bear indicator is in a mild bull market. Most leading indicators are declining but remain above the risk-off threshold. Valuation has retreated from the August high, but does not yet signal a buy opportunity.

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