Bull/Bear Ratio

  

The Investors Intelligence Sentiment Survey takes it upon themselves to gather data from investors and investment professionals to ask whether they feel positive (or bullish) about the current market climate, or negative (bearish). They then calculate and publish a bull/bear ratio every week by dividing the number of bullish respondents by the number of bearish respondents. If the ratio is greater than one, you might want to take a more conservative investment stance, since there could be too many people feeling bullish, and the market may start to go down. (Yes, the market usually moves the opposite direction of popular sentiment.) A ratio of less than one might mean there are too many bears around, so the market may have hit bottom and could go up, making it a good time to invest.

Or by the time the survey is published, everyone could have changed their mind anyway. So like...why do they publish this thing anyway? Eh. Gives brokers something to talk about between teeing off and putting.

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Finance: What is a Bear Hug?7 Views

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Finance a la shmoop what is a bear-hug? well you remember old uncle [Uncle Larry appears]

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Larry right the former 350 pound Olympic wrestler who could braid his own chest

00:15

hair yeah kind of gross but no that's the guy well he got out of the bathtub [Larry in a bath tub]

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once while y'all were at your ski cabin in Wyoming and a real bear saw him

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through the window and well simply put fell in love yeah that's how

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Bears do it well Larry went over to the bear family [Larry wearing bear fur]

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for Christmas and when he walked in a little bear dude guy screamed Mom, there's a

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human in the cave but Larry fit right in he hugged each of the Bear Jamboree [Larry hugging a bear]

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family really hard they wanted to call it a human hug but well somehow the name

00:48

didn't stick so uncle Larry is that guy well he hugged at Christmas

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bears humans and whatever he hugged hard.. hard enough to squeeze the air out of

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anyone or anything and if he suddenly let go well you had a really hard time [Larry lets bear go and bear struggles to breathe]

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catching your breath well that's the setting of a Wall Street bear hug, a big

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hairy powerful player often recently bathed ideally yeah not still in the

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bathtub making a bid to buy a weaker competitor at a price substantially

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higher than the current market price of the target it's a hug and the target had [Larry chasing a man for a hug]

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better hugged back and be acquired or else why because if the bear hugger

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suddenly lets go while the target falls back from the $28

01:33

a share of the bear is offering to buy it falls all the way back to the 15

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dollars it was trading at before all that you know hugging started and if the

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bear walks away and the company just languishes at 15 bucks a share without [Bear walks away with company]

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any other bidders.. the board gets their pants sued off by shareholders who

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are just "robbed" of $13 a share in gains likely meaning that the

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entire company reboots and in hindsight well that it would have been oh so much

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better to let Larry just move into the cave where you know he really felt at [Larry in the cave with bears]

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home with everyone there check out those salmon..

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