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Is the Crowd’s Cheery Mood Reason to Fear the Rally’s End?

On Wall Street, it typically pays to fear the cheer.

When a broad enough selection of professional and individual investors starts to feel happy about the stock-market outlook, it often means risks are going overlooked, most likely buyers have done their buying and the market is due for a rest or a retreat.

Synthesizing the present investor mood through a multitude of surveys and statistical gauges of behavior and emotion, it’s fair to say investor optimism is climbing toward the upper end of its long-running range, a caution flag that implies the tape is vulnerable to a pullback, or at least a stall. Yet, the crowd’s contentedness isn’t yet wildly out of step with the market backdrop of the indexes stretching to a five-year high.

Buttressing this equivocal conclusion, such long-tenured indicators as the weekly polls from the American Association of Individual Investors and Investors Intelligence both show bullish feeling rising toward the highest readings of last year - but not quite matching them.

The AAII split between self-professed bulls and bears this past week quite closely matches those of mid-March 2012, which reflected a very strong start for stocks last year and came a few weeks before the S&P pushed to a four-year high, before the spring-summer correction turned things nasty until August.

CNN Money maintains a weekly Fear & Greed Index made up of several “real money” measures of risk appetite, including stock momentum, junk-bond pricing and options activity. http://money.cnn.com/data/fear-and-greed/ It scaled its way into the “extreme greed” territory the past two weeks. In recent years such a move has coincided with short-term rallies running their course.

The CBOE Volatility Index (^VIX), a measure of prices for protective index options, is a component of the CNN Money index. Its drop to a post-June 2007 low Friday just above 13 prompted plenty of chatter about mass complacency. For sure, it reflects a becalmed market that would not easilyabsorb even a minor shock. Yet again, its absolute level in itself is not far out of line with general market conditions at the moment.

Jason Goepfert, founder of www.SentimenTrader.com, tracks a multitude of investor-attitude signals, always placing them in the context of how much optimism one should expect to see given how the market itself has been performing. Late last week, taking note of the accumulation of upbeat readings, he concluded that short-term pullback risk is elevated but otherwise there are few clear run-for-the-hills indicators.

“Really, the only negatives I'm seeing (from a contrary sentiment point of view) are in the one- to three-week time frame,” he says. “After that, it looks OK in terms of sentiment not being excessive.”