Reuters has a piece about “Insider trading and investor sentiment signaling a market top“. Is it a self-fulfilling prophesy? Tech investors’ blood run cold on the possibility that the tech market is a reflated March 2000 bubble:
Charles Biderman at TrimTabs told Bloomberg in this video that insider selling indicates the market has topped.
As TrimTabs writes, “If the economy is starting to recover, then why are insiders buying so few shares?” That seems to be a question investors may want to consider. Perhaps it is a “done deal” that the market will decline —-but for how long and how far?
Michael Panzner highlights TrimTab’s recent news release:
TrimTabs Investment Research estimates that the U.S. economy lost 488,000 jobs in July, considerably more than the consensus estimate of a loss of 305,000 jobs. In addition, TrimTabs expects the Bureau of Labor Statistics to revise its job loss estimates sharply higher for the first half of 2009 based on the latest unemployment insurance survey results.
“While Wall Street is convinced the recession is over, the economy continues to shed jobs at an alarming rate,” said Charles Biderman, CEO of TrimTabs.
TrimTabs’ employment estimates are based on analysis of daily income tax deposits to the U.S. Treasury from all salaried U.S. employees. Historically, TrimTabs’ employment estimates have been more accurate than those of the BLS.
At least someone is using actual data to derive non-propaganda conclusions. TrimTabs continues:
“The personal income report the Bureau of Economic Analysis released Tuesday contained huge downward revisions to wage and salary growth,” said Biderman. “Now that the BEA is using unemployment insurance reports from the first quarter to estimate current wage and salary growth, its data confirms what we have been reporting for months.”
We will see what the jobs report shows on Friday…
A TrimTabs press release posits that major revisions in Q1 wages and salaries:
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SOURCE TrimTabs Investment Research







