- Investors are taking on a record amount of debt to buy stocks, and it's a bullish sign for the market, according to Bank of America.
- FINRA margin debt hit $799 billion in January, representing a new all time high for the indicator.
- "Contrary to popular belief, new highs for margin debt are not bearish," Bank of America said.
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Record highs in the
Investors are taking on a record amount of debt to buy stocks, and contrary to popular belief, it's a bullish sign for the
FINRA margin debt hit a record high of $799 billion in January, surpassing its previous high of $778 billion in December.
Previous new highs for margin debt occurred in January of 2007, January of 2013, and January 2017. After each of those instances, the S&P 500 rallied 7.7% into the October 2007 secular bear market peak, 40.7% into May 2015, and 23.9% into January 2018, according to the note.
The new January high in margin debt "confirms the new highs for the S&P 500," BofA said.
And margin debt has more room to run higher relative to the market cap of the S&P 500, according to the note.
"Investors are not over-levered in terms of margin debt as a percentage of the S&P 500 market cap, with room to run when compared to 2007 through 2018 peak levels," BofA said.
The January high in margin debt represented just 2.55% as a percentage of market cap for the S&P 500, well below prior peeks in the 2.90% to 3.07% range.
Bank of America's view continues to be that US stocks are in a secular bull market.
"We cannot rule out pullbacks along the way, but the big move in the z-score from oversold to overbought in 2020 points to a major equity market low for the COVID-19 recession," BofA concluded.