TAG | Behavioral finance

Apr/12

17

Is This Bull Market Over?

Is This Bull Market Over?
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, April 16, 2012: Issue #1752

Lately the market has been wilting like last week’s roses, drooping in one session after another. Is the bull finally headed out to pasture?

The market had a strong first quarter this year. The S&P 500 rallied 12% on the heels of an 11% gain in the fourth quarter of 2010. In fact, it has more than doubled from its bottom on March 9, 2009.

But lately the market has been wilting like last week’s roses, drooping in one session after another. Is the bull finally headed out to pasture?

Don’t count on it. While no one can forecast the short-term zigs and zags in the market, there are three good reasons to believe there’s still life in this bull:

  1. History shows that pullbacks don’t generally follow a strong first quarter. The S&P 500 has soared 10% or more in the first quarter eight times since 1945. According to Standard & Poor’s, the market rose three-quarters of the time in the following quarter. And the one other time the market rose 10% or more in both the fourth and first quarters, stocks gained 5% the next quarter.
  2. First quarter profits are likely to be another record. Don’t forget that corporate profits have hit all-time records in each of the last eight quarters. And – while the reporting season is just getting under way – this time isn’t likely to be any different. Yes, the gains will be more modest this time thanks in part to higher oil prices and tougher year-ago comparisons, but we’ll almost certainly see more all-time record profits for the first quarter and a few big surprises could send stocks higher again.
  3. Investors are still afraid. That’s actually a good thing. As John Templeton declared, “Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, peak on optimism and die on euphoria.” You talk to anyone lately who’s euphoric about the economy and the stock market? Me neither. And people aren’t investing their money that way, either. According to The Investment Company Institute, investors yanked $1.2 billion out of stock funds in February after taking out $423 million in January. History shows a near perfect correlation between equity fund redemptions and stock market performance. It’s when investors starting throwing cash at the market that you need to worry. And we’re a long way from that.

When you look at the fundamentals, it’s surprising just how negative the average investor is. After all, we’re enjoying low interest rates, low inflation, expanding markets overseas (especially in the developing world) and all-time record corporate profits.

What’s keeping most investors at bay, of course, is volatility. And not just lately. Investors have been clobbered by two massive bear markets in 12 years. The 2000 to 2003 bear market took stocks down 49%. It was the worst market since the Great Depression – until the 2007-2009 bear market showed up. That ripped 57% from the leading market index.

Last year, the S&P 500 fell 3% or more six times, and on one gut-wrenching day in August, 6.7%. That made microscopic money market yields look attractive.

Of course, volatility is the price of admission in the stock market. If equity accounts rose as smoothly as bank accounts, everyone would be fully invested. But they’re not. Not even close.

Paradoxically, that’s another reason stocks actually look pretty good here.

Good Investing,

Alexander Green

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May/10

6

Why the Euro Has Further to Tumble

Why the Euro Has Further to Tumble

by Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist
Thursday, May 6, 2010: Issue #1254

Being a contrarian is a lonely business.

If you’re a regular reader, you’ll know that ordinarily, I am market neutral on stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities.

The truth is that markets are reasonably efficient. So most years, I don’t stick my neck out and make any market calls on any asset class.

That’s because the vast majority of the time, most assets are neither grossly undervalued, nor wildly overvalued. Rational, self-interested investors keep prices close to true value.

But I am not an efficient market theorist. Investors are always self-interested, yes. But they are not always rational. And I most certainly do not believe that all publicly traded securities are efficiently priced all the time.

That would be lunacy…

Anomalies develop (and opportunities alongside them). Sometimes, these anomalies develop into outright bubbles. When that happens, you will always see eye-popping valuations paired with extreme sentiment. (In other words, sky-high prices and unbridled optimism or rock-bottom prices with extreme pessimism.)

What surprises me is how few investors recognize a bubble, even when it’s right under their nose and they have many thousands of dollars at risk…

Bubble Watch

For example…

  • When I warned about the dangers of Internet stocks over a decade ago – I actually quit my Wall Street firm to take possession of my soaring pension shares – most respondents told me I was clearly ill-equipped to recognize the nature of opportunities in “the New Era.”
  • Readers similarly scoffed at my warnings about the housing market five years ago. “Real estate always goes up,” they reminded me.
  • At $150 a barrel, I wrote a column calling oil “The Mother of All Bubbles.” Demand was already waning and supply was rising as oil hit a new all-time high on various “peak oil” theories. It then quickly lost nearly two-thirds of its value.
  • Five months ago – again, right here in Investment U – I predicted that the much-maligned dollar would soar against the euro. And yet again, my readers insisted that I was grossly mistaken and that a weaker dollar was “the ultimate no-brainer.”

Except it wasn’t…

Europe’s Monetary Policy Mish-Mash

Today, the euro hit a 14-month low against the dollar ($1.2689) on increasing recognition that Greece’s fiscal problems are bigger than expected, more expensive than expected and potentially contagious.

Trust me, this is far from over. The 16-member states in the Eurozone are about to start bickering like an old couple that has locked the keys in the car.

Understandably, weaker states don’t like having their economic policies dictated from Frankfurt. And stronger states don’t like spending billions to bail out their profligate brethren from years of fiscal mismanagement.

“Preposterous” Expectations for the Euro Against the Dollar

When the euro was born on January 1, 1999, skeptics rightly worried that the then-11-member states were too divergent to share a single currency and monetary policy.

These fears were well-founded. And the euro promptly plunged on world currency markets to well under $0.90. Today, we know that problems among member states aren’t just possible… not just probable… but right here, stinking to high heaven on our doorstep.

Yet the euro is still trading around $1.27.

Expect it to hit $1.10 by the end of this year – and trade at parity with the dollar sometime next year.

Sounds preposterous? Yes, so I’ve heard.

Good investing,

Alexander Green

Editor’s Note: Find out how The Oxford Club’s “market neutral” investment approach, combined with a keen eye for lucrative contrarian recommendations, led the Hulbert Financial Digest to rank the group’s Communiqué in the top five investment newsletters over the past 10 years.

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