Wall Street bullishness close to flashing contrarian sell signal
A Bank of America measure of their bullishness is near a level that historically has been bearish for stocks.

Stock market optimism among Wall Street strategists has risen close to levels that signaled trouble for equities in the past.
A Bank of America measure of their bullishness is near a level that historically has been bearish for stocks. The gauge assesses the average recommended allocation to equities by sell-side strategists and is very close to triggering a sell signal, a team including Savita Subramanian wrote Monday.
“The last time the indicator was this close to ‘Sell’ was June 2007 after which we generally saw 12-month returns of minus 13 per cent,” the strategists said, adding even current levels signal below-average equity returns over the next year. “We‘ve found Wall Street bullishness to be a reliable contrarian indicator.”

The S&P 500 has risen about 4 per cent so far this year, and is up about 32 per cent over the last 12 months. The Bank of America gauge climbed nearly 1 point to 59.2 per cent in February.
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