BofA Sees Near-Term Stock Rally as Signal Flashes Contrarian Buy

Investor positioning in stocks has become so bearish that it’s triggered a “contrarian buy signal” in a custom Bank of America Corp. indicator, setting up the asset class for a short-term rally, according to strategist Michael Hartnett.

The BofA bull-and-bear reading dropped to 1.9 from 2.2 in the week through Oct. 18, driven by outflows from emerging market debt funds, high-yield bonds and global equities, as well as a jump in allocation to cash, Hartnett said. A drop below 2 is seen as a contrarian signal of a near-term rally.

In the three months following 20 such occurrences since 2002, US stocks showed a median gain of 5.4% and global equities a 7.6% advance, the strategist wrote in a note dated Oct. 19.

“Investors are sufficiently bearish” for the S&P 500 to hold above 4,200 points and the yield on the 10-year Treasury to find a ceiling at 5% for the next three-to-four weeks, Hartnett said. “Put another way, if the index can’t hold at 4,200 with this level of bearishness, then there may be imminent risks of a credit event or hard landing,” he added.

S&P 500 Hasn't Hit 200 Day Moving Average Since March