Bulls Get By in Poll

 

The bulls recaptured sentiment in TheStreet.com RealMoney Barometer survey this week, although not by much, considering how the stock market boomed last week.

The bulls took 37% of the vote, while the bears got 30%. Neutral sentiment was high at 33%. In the sectors, integrated oil was seen as most likely to rise, as crude oil prices continued their move north of $60 a barrel.

Homebuilding once more was seen as most likely to fall, and more bad data come out on housing sales, with the subrpime meltdown providing a backdrop. Energy equipment and services was the second-most bullish sector, and airlines were the second-most bearish.

Stocks were trading lower on Monday. Contributing to the pullback was a report from the Census Bureau that sales of new dwellings fell 3.9% to 848,000 annualized units in February, from a revised 882,000 in January. Economists had expected sales to rise to 985,000.

"The weather uncertainty, coupled with the inherent unreliability of these numbers, makes us very reluctant to run with the headlines and argue that this is the start of the second leg down in home sales," said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist with High Frequency Economics. "We have to wait for the March and April numbers."

Inventories rose 1.5% to 546,000 homes at the end of February. That represents 8.1 months of supply at the current sales rate, and is the highest level since the early 1990s, the last major U.S. housing downturn.

High amounts of inventory on the market remains bad news for homebuilders, and shares of builder stocks fell on the news.

Treasury prices were rising after the housing data. The 10-year note was up 10/32 to yield 4.57%, while the 30-year bond added 17/32 to yield 4.77%.

Also weighing on stocks was a rise in the price of crude oil. Futures at one point passed $63 a barrel as tension built between the West and Iran, which remains steadfast about its nuclear program and continues to hold 15 British sailors and marines after seizing them in the Persian Gulf Friday. Crude oil futures were recently trading at $62.54.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was recently trading at 12,427, down 54 points. The Nasdaq Composite was off 7 points to 2442, and the S&P 500 was trading at 1432, down 4 points.

Below are the complete poll results.

Date Bullish Bearish Neutral Week Ending
S&P % Change
Bullish
Sector
Bearish Sector
March 26 98
(37%)
80
(30%)
86
(33%)
Integrated Oil Homebuilding
March 19 188 (29%) 297 (46%) 166 (26%) + 3.5% Precious Metals Homebuilding
March 12 421 (38%) 339 (31%) 341 (31%) - 1.1% Investment Bankers and Brokers Homebuilding
March 5 694 (27%) 1133 (43%) 776 (30%) + 1.1% Precious Metals Homebuilding

Sector Total Votes Percentage
Aerospace and Defense 6 2%
Airlines 2 1%
Automobiles 2 1%
Beverages and Food Products 11 4%
Biotechnology 10 4%
Commercial Banks 9 3%
Consumer Nondurables 2 1%
Energy Equipment & Services 48 18%
HMOs and Hospitals 3 1%
Homebuilding 5 2%
Insurance 4 2%
Integrated Oil 51 19%
Internet, Software Services 5 2%
Investment Bankers and Brokers 22 8%
Media 2 1%
Multiline Retail 2 1%
Pharmaceuticals 8 3%
Precious Metals 29 11%
Semis, Semi Equipment 11 4%
Telecom Equipment 9 3%
Tobacco and Alcohol 16 6%
Utilities 5 2%
Wireless Communications 1 0%
Source: RealMoney.com

Sector Total Votes Percentage
Aerospace and Defense 3 1%
Airlines 31 12%
Automobiles 10 4%
Beverages and Food Products 4 2%
Biotechnology 11 4%
Commercial Banks 20 8%
Computers and Peripherals 12 5%
Consumer Nondurables 6 2%
Energy Equipment & Services 5 2%
HMOs and Hospitals 1 0%
Homebuilding 56 21%
Insurance 3 1%
Integrated Oil 16 6%
Internet, Software Services 7 3%
Investment Bankers and Brokers 9 3%
Media 4 2%
Multiline Retail 10 4%
Pharmaceuticals 6 2%
Precious Metals 10 4%
Semis, Semi Equipment 16 6%
Telecom Equipment 11 4%
Tobacco and Alcohol 4 2%
Utilities 1 0%
Wireless Communications 7 3%
Source: RealMoney.com
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David Morrow is editor-in-chief of TheStreet.com. In keeping with TSC's editorial policy, he doesn't own or short individual stocks, though he owns stock in TheStreet.com. He also doesn't invest in hedge funds or other private investment partnerships. He appreciates your feedback; click here to send him an email.

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