If you didn’t know, read or watch anything before October 4, you’d think we were in the strongest economy and strongest market environment ever!
After all, the Dow rallied more than 1,220 points between the low that day and the high on Wednesday. That’s a gain of around 12 percent — the kinds of returns investors are lucky to get over an entire year, much less a week!
So naturally, many investors are asking whether they need to jump on board before it’s too late. They want to know whether this is the start of a new bull market.
My answer? Heck no!!
The March 2009 “Turning Point” Case …
Let me start by laying out the bulls’ case. I believe they’re trying to follow the 2009 playbook. They’re looking at the banking industry stress tests that the U.S. published back in March of that year — and the bank recapitalization plan the U.S. launched — and saying: “Look what happened afterward!”
In case you don’t remember, the market took off like a rocket back then. The Dow rose roughly 2,400 points over a span of just three months before finally taking a breather. Then it climbed even further, ultimately carrying stocks all the way from 6,469 to 12,876 — almost a double!
Since Europe is making noises about doing the same thing — stress testing banks and then recapitalizing the ones who need help — the bulls are just assuming the result will be the same. They’re also looking at the calendar and getting nervous.
They’re figuring they need to make up some performance before the end of the year. Otherwise, they won’t get nice, fat bonuses and won’t be able to buy Hamptons real estate or new Ferraris in 2012. So they’re chasing rallies.
Me? I’m looking at the current environment and asking: “What the heck are these guys thinking? This ain’t March 2009!”
First, the markets had been falling like a rock for several quarters when March 2009 rolled around. The Dow had ALREADY plunged 7,700 points from the October 2007 highs through March 2009.
Second, the economy had also already seen several months of dramatic, recessionary shrinkage. Industrial production, retail sales, home construction, and more had fallen substantially from their peaks.
Third, the Federal Reserve was in the midst of a massive, money-printing scheme — QE1.
Fourth, the $800+ billion economic stimulus package from the Obama administration was signed into law around that time.
In March 2009, the Fed was passing out dollars as fast as it could print them. |
The combination of deeply oversold market conditions … an economy that was primed for a recovery (even an anemic one) … hundreds of billions of dollars of free money from the Fed … and almost a trillion dollars more from the administration and Congress provided a huge amount of extremely dry tinder.
All that was needed for a major rally was a spark … and the stress test/recapitalization plan was it!
… And Why It’s Complete Bunk!
This time around, we’ve only lost about 1,500 Dow points from the peak — a pittance compared to 2007-2009! So it’s not like investors have already lost their shirts, and stocks look extremely cheap.
This time around, we’re only now entering a second recessionary period, rather than reaching the end of one. Unemployment is still on the rise, recently hitting 16.5 percent if you include all discouraged and underemployed workers. Layoff announcements surged 212 percent from a year ago in September, consumer confidence is plumbing depths it hasn’t seen since 2009, and home sales and construction activity are falling again, not rising.
This time around, there is NO QE3 plan out there to support the markets. The Fed could barely get the weak-kneed “Operation Twist” plan past his deeply divided policy committee, making another round of money printing an impossibility.
And most importantly of all, this time around governments around the world are tapped out! They don’t have the money to infuse hundreds of billions of dollars into the global banking system to prop it up, much less provide another trillion of fiscal stimulus.
Just witness the defeat of President Obama’s $447 billion jobs plan in the Senate this week, or the recent multiple-notch downgrades of the credit ratings of Italy and Spain!
Bottom line: Neither the fundamentals nor the technicals support the case for a massive bull run!
So my recommendation couldn’t be more clear: Don’t chase the year-end bonus crowd! They’re only going to regret it!
Until next time,
Mike
P.S. I’m convinced more than ever that we are entering a new bear market, and a double-dip recession. And if you do NOT follow the powerful, step-by-step instructions Martin and I give here — to both protect your wealth and profit — I believe you’re going to regret it.
{ 12 comments }
You’re missing the point! It’s all about Europe this time! I think that if people are following MARTIN & the DOOMERs that they have or will soon give back all of their profits from shorting!
US and multi-nationals are kicking butt on earnings. Inflationary pressures eased last quarter as commodity prices plummeted so companies fresh off of price increases are reaping the benefits. Future inflation IS a risk to future profit margins if it happens too fast for them to pass on to consumers.
In March 2009 FASB was pressured into suspending mark to market…and we know the Europeans have no trouble allowing their banks to lie if it “saves” the system and buys time…plus the amounts of backs-stops and debt guarantees being proposed (with foreign pressure) in Europe is HUGE. But this won’t cost as much as you think because governments will both backstop the debt but also allow banks to lie and carry it at overly inflated valuations. Banks will raise capital by selling off some of their “good” assets (since their stock prices are so depressed).
BULLS always win!
1500 from the peak??…last week it was 2000???……hmmmmm..hmmmm….
Wait till you see the record shatttering #’s from the iPhone release….yaw…da consumer is dead…
I’m so glad I didn’t sell all my stocks as Mike recommended…. I wouldn’t be making money hand over fist on my covered calls…
Yaw…sit around an wait for a drop is a great Bear Market strategy…yaw…just as the dollar is dropping….
this group is great at identifyng the devaluation of the dollar and then has you sit on your money and wait for something to happen…..great strategy..
Even a stopped clock is rght twice a day…
Read this column carefully. Mike is agreeing with your good buddy Frances. There is going to be a rally into year end. He admits it in the headline and in the body.
However, his strat is to do nothing. In fact, he suggest selling all stock positons from last week’s column.
So get ready to sit back and do nothing for the next 3-4 months, bears. Great way to make money
Re what you said about heading for the “double-dip” recession, I don’t think we ever came out of the first one.
Yaw…the consumer is dead….dis is goud…
http://www.cnbc.com/id/44906873
I am willing to hold onto my stock positions because they also create dividens which helps control the jitters of the crazy market moves. In my opinion is not what the markets are doing as most weak hands are out of the game since they were waffled in ’01 and again in ’08. The real question is has the American worker if he or she is still working going to keep cutting spending and increase their savings. I doubt they will or can since frugality went out long ago; after all who wants to drive an obsolete 4 year old car or two? The wealth that was decimated by the stock market erosion and the housing market crash are not going to return to the good ole days any time soon. I do not think consumers have gotten the new economic reality yet.
You’re wrong about the market technicals. They do in fact support a bull run that will probably last until the end of the year. There’s even a chance the market could break out to a new yearly high in this run negating the bears altogether. There is also no reason why investors couldn’t use short term trading vehicles like options to profit from this run. Just because your fundamental outlook is negative doesn’t mean the market can’t rally. When the sky looks like it is falling, and it is always falling at Weiss Research, that is when the market goes up.
I’m just another bull joining all those here to reaffirm that the Dow indeed will continue to rally higher. Mike Larson and the Chairman continue to give bad advice to readers with get out of stocks, etc.
What can I say ML, it must hurt to be wrong so often. I am still hearing that W is losing customers.
Mike Larons says “In case you don’t remember, the market took off like a rocket back then. The Dow rose roughly 2,400 points over a span of just three months before finally taking a breather.”
Yes, Mike. I remember and you know what else I remember? Your Chairman telling subscribers to go short because the Dow was going to plummet from 7500 to 5000.
In fact, I remember entries on the Chairman’s blog from people wondering when their bearish bets would pay off because the Dow kept rising. In the end, the W pundits missed the bull market run big time and cost a lot of their subscribers money in 2009. They leave a lot to desire for in the area of trend recognition.
here’s the poop….Mike is advising not to chase the rally….really understand what he is saying…he is saying he doesn’t know what is going on….you can “chase rallies” when you know how to play them.
If he really understood and ahead of the curve, he should have said….60 days ago..”Do not chase the COMING rally”…which would have been bad advice but at least he would have demonstrated he understood the data and what was about to happen……
In this column, he unwittingly and completely undermines himself…at the end of his own pen..he’s completely unnerved and has lost confidence… structure, form and content from a English major from BC…he’s no linguistic genious.
Who care who buys a luxury car??…..is it better to give my money to you guys or an established profitable broker???..
As I’ve clearly stated in other columns….well before today…the coiled snake is ready to spring..
For the investor (not the trader), what has happened to the principle concept that, over time, volatility erodes returns?