Ticker Sense is back, and apparently the bulls have returned with it. This week's poll is a new bullish record!
Blogger Sentiment Poll Participants:
24/7 Wall Street (-) Big Picture (-) Bloggin' Wall Street Blogwatch (+) Capital Chronicle Carl Futia (+) ContraHour Controlled Greed (N) Crossing Wall Street Crowder Blog (+) CXO Advisory (+) Daily Dose of Optimism (+) Dash of Insight (-) Elliot Wave Lives On (N) Fallond Stock Picks (+) Fresh Trader Global Economic Analysis Hedgefolios (-) Information Arbitrage (-) In The Money (+) Daily Blog Watch (+) Jack Stevison (-) Kirk Report Knight Trader (+) Learning Curve (+) MaoXian ChrisPerruna.com Michael Comeau Millionaire Now (N) Naked Shorts Peridot Capitalist (+) Quant Investor (+) Random Roger's Big Picture (-) SeekingAlpha Shark Report (N) Stock Advisors Slope of Hope Traders-Talk (+) Wall Street Folly Wishing Wealth (-) WindRiver Blog
Hello,
Well done for your site, your doing a great job. I was wondering if it could be possible to have a SPX chart below the poll, that could be interesting. Have a great day.
Posted by: Jean Loup | November 26, 2007 at 10:08 AM
Interesting that the bulls came back so strongly. It seems the blog poll contributors are far more bullish than most strategists on television who are predicting gloom and doom.
Posted by: Aaron | November 26, 2007 at 10:13 PM
I like the idea of the sentiment poll. Tell me, ware you tracking the ebbs and flows. Also, are the blogger bullish over the next 6 weeks, months, years?
Posted by: Walter Thatcher | November 28, 2007 at 05:04 PM
Walter:
The poll is submitted every week, and the outlook is for the next 30 days. We track the results internally.
Posted by: Cleve | November 28, 2007 at 05:11 PM
FWIW, I don't look at the market for long durations. I simply don't. It can get me in trouble so I look out over the next several days and presume that what I see then will likely last the week and MAYBE the month.
As such, my poll response will change as my view changes, which will be pretty much weekly.
Having run a weekly survey now for about 10 years (Wall Street Sentiment Survey, formerly Fearless Forecasters Survey), I've felt like it's best to just ask the prognosis for the polling period. That way, pollee's may not be pressured to second guess themselves.
Of course, it might not make any difference at all. :O LOL!
Posted by: Mark Young | December 04, 2007 at 07:42 AM