Two Scenarios for the Stock Market
Stock-Markets / Stock Markets 2018 Sep 23, 2018 - 03:58 PM GMT
The Trump rally into January 2018 looked like the classic final blow-off top.
It had been advancing in a clear channel, then it broke above that in a classic “overthrow” pattern, followed by a sharp correction.
Was that the beginning of the final and greatest crash?
Maybe not, which is why I detailed, in the September issue of Boom & Bust, the two scenarios I believe we face in the months ahead.
My first problem with the idea that we saw a top at the beginning of the year was that past major bubble peaks in stocks have averaged a 42% crash in the first 2.6 months. This has been the case for seven global stock bubbles since 1929. The range for the initial crash is 30% to 50%.
But, this time around, the S&P 500 only crashed 12% and has moved mostly sideways, with an upward bias, since then.
My second problem was that such extended sideways patterns, following a strong advance, tend to break up in the same direction to new highs.
In late August, the S&P 500 followed the Nasdaq’s break to new highs. The Dow was just 3% behind the S&P in doing that. Only the broader NYSE lagged further than that.
Markets spent some time in the red on Monday, but as of this morning they were back in the green, and we’re still near record highs.
So, is this that new high that precedes a sharp 40% or so crash in the coming months, forbearing the next great bubble crash?
Or will stocks pull back more modestly after this break up, while the Trump rally continues well into 2019 before we see an even bigger blow-off top – like Dow 30,000?
Those are the two most likely scenarios as we approach the late stage of the longest bull market rally without a 20% correction.
As of yesterday, this rally from early March 2009 has lasted 3,480 days. That’s longer than the longest one from late October 1990 into early March 2000.
By that measure, we’re in new territory for bull markets.
And many classic indicators are not pointing to a major high and crash ahead.
The advance/decline line measures how broad the rally is and that tends to narrow in the late stages of a major bull market. That line has continued to make new highs with this rally and is saying it’s still healthy.
However, the FAANG stocks (high-tech large-cap leaders) are showing such narrow buying, while the tariff and trade war threats favor small caps over large, as they are less exposed. That could throw this indicator off.
The yield curve – 10-year Treasury yields minus six months – tends to invert before a major top and recession. This is approaching but has not occurred yet. And even if it does, it can be many months before the downturn starts.
Gross domestic product growth is accelerating out of the 2% doldrums of past years. Normally it would decelerate a bit before a major top.
The Fed is raising rates, which will eventually trigger a top. So far inflation and long bond rates haven’t risen enough to signal danger, as investors expect rates to rise when economic growth accelerates.
Household net worth just passed $100 trillion after peaking at $69 trillion in late 2007 and $45 trillion at the 2000 top. Compared to GDP, it has risen from just over 4.4 times in 2000 to 4.8 in 2007. Now it’s just over five times that amount.
This is another good sign the bulls tout, but I think this is one of the biggest reasons that the economy has been holding up amidst declining demographic trends and record levels of debt.
Central banks – and now Trump through tax cuts – have been able to dramatically goose financial assets and net worth while real wages continue to stagnate or fall, all the while economic growth has been subpar.
But as we’ve seen thus far and throughout history, such bubbles are fleeting and always burst.
Trump has been proposing a second tax cut through adjusting capital gains for inflation that he may be able to force through without going through Congress. That will again favor the top 1% to 10%, but not the broader economy or his supporters.
Suffice it to say, the broader consensus is that this market is not ready to top yet.
But I’ve a sneaking suspicion that we may see a surprise crash just ahead; one that almost no one expects. It’s one of the two scenarios I explore in the September issue of Boom & Bust.
The actions of stocks and some key indicators over the next few months should tell us which scenario is more likely to come… I urge you to read the latest issue of Boom & Bust for all the details.
Harry
Follow me on Twitter @HarryDentjr
Harry studied economics in college in the ’70s, but found it vague and inconclusive. He became so disillusioned by the state of the profession that he turned his back on it. Instead, he threw himself into the burgeoning New Science of Finance, which married economic research and market research and encompassed identifying and studying demographic trends, business cycles, consumers’ purchasing power and many, many other trends that empowered him to forecast economic and market changes.
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