Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
Is aggregate investor sentiment a useful trading indicator? For what kinds of stocks is sentiment trading most likely to work? In their December 2006 paper entitled "Investor Sentiment in the Stock Market", Malcolm Baker and Jeffrey Wurgler summarize a top down approach to addressing these questions, focusing on the measurement of aggregate sentiment and its relationship to stock returns. They devise a long-run sentiment index based on the six indicators: trading volume as measured by NYSE turnover; the dividend premium; the closed-end fund discount; the number of and first-day returns on Initial Public Offerings; and the equity share in new issues. Using this index and stock return data for 1966-2005, they conclude that:
The following chart, taken from the paper, shows average monthly equal-weighted and value-weighted market returns (in percent) according to sentiment level in the preceding month. It shows that poor returns tend to follow very high sentiment levels and that equal-weighted returns (emphasizing small-capitalization stocks) are more sensitive to sentiment than value-weighted returns.

The data use to construct the long-run sentiment index are available at Jeffrey Wurgler's NYU web page.
In summary, aggregate investor sentiment offers some value in forecasting stock returns, especially for the most speculative stocks.
For related research, see Blog Synthesis: Sentimental Journey.