The upcoming calendar has plenty of data in a holiday-shortened week. There could be OPEC, or Black Friday news. In spite of this avalanche of information, I expect commentators to look for an organizing principle. In a week when many will be giving thanks, there will be scrutiny of the new market highs.
Many will ask: Are investors too complacent?
A Personal Message
It has been a very good year for WTWA and our followers. I have had a lot of help, so I have personal thanks for many.
I must not leave out Mrs. OldProf, who has given up many Saturdays and Friday nights while I was writing. I might take off next weekend or do an abbreviated column while enjoying the visit of her family.
Prior Theme Recap
In my last WTWA I predicted that media would focus on commodities, with special attention to the rebound potential. Instead, there was plenty of discussion of the Fed Minutes and the energy discussions were all pretty bearish. Even looking at the week’s history it might be hard to come up with a single theme.
By the end of the week, Melissa Lee and the Options Action traders were discussing some of the rebound action in commodities, with a focus on FCX (which I have been using as an example). But no excuses. Sometimes the theme is difficult to capture in advance.
Feel free to join in my exercise in thinking about the upcoming theme. We would all like to know the direction of the market in advance. Good luck with that! Second best is planning what to look for and how to react. That is the purpose of considering possible themes for the week ahead.
This Week’s Theme
There is plenty of economic data this week, mostly crammed into two days of releases. On Friday those who are working will be greeted with the results of the OPEC meeting and early releases about Black Friday sales. It is a very tough week for my “Guess the theme” challenge.
I am going to fudge the exercise just a bit this week by discussing “complacency.” This has been a frequent recent pundit theme and is certainly a candidate for a week where it could be confused with “giving thanks” for past gains and warnings to take profits. I will venture out onto that limb and suggest that the week will feature the question: Have investors become too complacent?
The basic argument for this viewpoint is twofold:
The theme is worth a separate post, but let me highlight the most obvious responses:
I emphasize risk control and have special methods for avoiding complacency. You should, too. More about that in today’s conclusion. But first, let us do our regular update of the last week’s news and data. Readers, especially those new to this series, will benefit from reading the background information.
Last Week’s Data
Each week I break down events into good and bad. Often there is “ugly” and on rare occasion something really good. My working definition of “good” has two components:
The Good
The news last week was mostly good, even better than stock prices suggested.