Investor sentiment surveys are expressing overwhelming positivity, suggesting a rosy outlook, while economic surveys paint a contrasting picture, indicating a deteriorating situation. This stark dichotomy between investor optimism and the grim economic reality underscores a perplexing divergence in current perceptions.
"Basically investor sentiment surveys are saying everything is awesome again, while economic surveys are saying things are bad and getting worse."@Callum_Thomas @topdowncharts pic.twitter.com/acSp1aa8Ly
— Daily Chartbook (@dailychartbook) November 20, 2023
The massive divergence between consumer sentiment and economic reality is mind-boggling. pic.twitter.com/8pgd2BWe5V
— Alec Stapp (@AlecStapp) October 27, 2023
Hedge fund exposure to mega-cap tech is in the 99th percentile. At the start of 2023, exposure was in the 12th percentile.
via Goldman Sachs pic.twitter.com/83GhWXUCw8
— Daily Chartbook (@dailychartbook) November 16, 2023
Russell 2000 "implied-realized spread is the largest we’ve seen in years."
– Goldman Sachs pic.twitter.com/hLBvrIByRR
— Daily Chartbook (@dailychartbook) November 20, 2023
This refers to the difference between implied volatility (expected future price fluctuations) and realized volatility (actual price movements) in the Russell 2000 index. The term “spread” indicates the gap or difference between these two measures. A larger implied-realized spread suggests that there is a significant disparity between what investors expected in terms of market volatility (implied) and what actually occurred (realized). This situation may imply increased uncertainty or unexpected market movements, prompting attention due to its notable size in comparison to historical data.