Extreme Positioning Suggests Bears May Be Wrong

 | May 09, 2023 12:16

The COT (Commitment Of Traders) data, which is exceptionally important, is the sole source of the actual holdings of the three critical commodity-trading groups, namely:

  • Commercial Traders: this group consists of traders that use futures contracts for hedging purposes. Their positions exceed the reporting levels of the CFTC. These traders are usually involved with producing and processing the underlying commodity.
  • Non-Commercial Traders: this group consists of traders that don’t use futures contracts for hedging and whose positions exceed the CFTC reporting levels. They are typically large traders such as clearinghouses, futures commission merchants, foreign brokers, etc.
  • Small Traders: the positions of these traders do not exceed the CFTC reporting levels, and as the name implies, these are usually small traders.

The data we are interested in is the second group of Non-Commercial Traders (NCTs.)

NCTs are the group that speculates on where they believe the market will head. While you would expect these individuals to be “smarter” than retail investors, we find they are just as subject to “human fallacy” and “herd mentality” as everyone else.

What we know is that markets move based on sentiment and positioning. This makes sense considering that prices are affected by the actions of both buyers and sellers at any given time. Most importantly, when prices, or positioning, becomes too “one-sided,” a reversion always occurs. As Bob Farrell’s Rule #9 states:

“When all experts agree, something else is bound to happen.”

So, how are traders positioning themselves currently?

Let’s look at NCT’s current net positioning (long contracts minus short contracts) to gauge excessive bullishness or bearishness.

h2 All “Experts” Are Short the Stock Market/h2

As noted above, all “experts” seem to think the market is ripe for another downturn and bear market. As such, they have shorted the S&P 500 index in anticipation of a potential correction in the months ahead. The interesting thing about such negative positioning is that it tends to be a contrarian indicator. As Sam Stovall once stated:

“If everyone is bearish, who is left to buy?”

Currently, the net short positioning by NCTs in the COT data is at levels not seen since either 2007 or 2011. The difference between the two periods is notable.

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