Tag Archives: Bear markets

The Bear Awakens, by Charles Hugh Smith

Are we in for prolonged and painful bear markets in many financial assets? Count on it. From Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com:

The bear has awakened, and it will not be limited to the stock market.

The bear awakens from a long, uneasy slumber and the everything bubble is in trouble.

I’m not going to make the bear case with charts or price-earnings ratios or sentiment readings or anything remotely financial. My bear case is a crisis of belief as faith in the religion of the Federal Reserve dissolves and the dumbfounded believers realize the Fed is a failed religion.

To understand the religion of the Fed, consider the Federal Reserve policies and actions that the market views as bullish:

— Fed lowers interest rates: bullish.

— Fed raises interest rates: bullish.

— Fed eases: bullish.

— Fed tightens: bullish.

— Fed holds steady: bullish.

— Fed changes course: bullish.

— Fed issues guidance: bullish.

— Fed is silent: bullish.

— Fed sneezes: bullish.

— Fed coughs: bullish.

— Fed caught insider trading: bullish.

— Fed increases wealth inequality to the point it unravels society: bullish.

You get the idea: merely by occupying the temple of the Fed faith, the Eccles Building, the Fed is bullish because the Fed has the supernatural power to rescind the business / credit cycle and keep the economy and asset wealth expanding forever and ever.

The Fed could reveal that all policy was decided by Ouija board sessions and the stock market would leap: whatever the Fed does is bullish by default. Any policy error can quickly be reversed and so any decline in assets can also be reversed. The occasional heretic can be banished and the true believers will again be rewarded for their faith in the One True Financial Religion.

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The Mayhem Below the Surface of the Stock Market Seeps to the Surface: Now it’s the Giants that Topple, by Wolf Richter

Eventually even the market stalwarts get sold in a bear market. From Wolf Richter at wolfstreet.com:

The market finally gets it: The Fed is going to tighten to get a handle on its massive inflation problem.

Since February last year, the hottest most hyped stocks, many of them recent IPOs and SPACS, have been taken out the back and brutalized, either one by one or jointly. The stocks that have by now crashed 60%, 70%, 80%, or even 90% from their highs include luminaries such as Zoom, Redfin, Zillow, Compass, Virgin Galactic, Palantir, Moderna, BioNTech, Peloton, Carvana, Vroom, Chewy, the EV SPAC & IPO gaggle Lordstown Motors, Nikola, Lucid, and Rivian, plus dozens of others. Some of these superheroes are tracked by the ARK Innovation Fund, which has crashed by 55% from its high last February.

This mayhem has been raging beneath the surface of the market since February last year, and in March, I mused, The Most Hyped Corners of the Stock Market Come Unglued. They have since then come unglued a whole lot more. But the surface itself remained relatively calm and the S&P 500 Index set a new high on January 3 this year because the biggest stocks kept gaining or at least didn’t lose their footing.

But now even the giants too are going over the cliff. Combined by market cap, the seven giants, Apple [AAPL], Amazon [AMZN], Meta [FB], Alphabet [GOOG], Microsoft [MSFT], Nvidia [NVDA], and Tesla [TSLA] peaked on January 3, and in the 13 trading days since then have plunged 13.4%. $1.6 trillion in paper wealth vanished (stock data via YCharts):

Mayhem Beneath the Surface of the Stock Market, by Wolf Richter

If we’re in a bear stock market, it’s not even a month old (the Dow’s last high was November 8), and already there’s been substantial damage to some old crowd favorites. From Wolf Richter at wolfstreet.com:

It’s amazing how individual stocks, at the tippy-top of the biggest stock market bubble in modern times, are getting taken out the back one by one to be crushed, but without denting the overall indices all that much.

The stock market bubble was driven by $4.5 trillion in QE in the US alone, along with many more trillions by other central banks, and it was driven by interest rate repression, even has inflation has been surging to multi-decade highs, not just in the US but globally, and not just in goods, but now also in services, particularly housing, such as rents.

After a decade of QE being relatively benign on the inflation front, giving central bankers a false sense of confidence, it has finally broken the dam, and inflation is now surging everywhere, and it’s spreading across the economy.

Central banks are now no longer denying it, and some have raised rates, and others have ended QE.

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Once Risk-On Switches to Risk-Off, the Bottom Is Far Lower Than Anyone Believes Possible, by Charles Hugh Smith

In a bear market, it takes a long time before the “buy the dip” crowd realizes they’re trying to catch a falling dagger. Generally they quit trying after impaling themselves repeatedly. They withdraw to lick their wounds, and end up selling their losing positions pretty close to the bottom. From Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com:

So here we are, witnessing the switch from risk-on to risk-off in real time.

All bubbles share common characteristics: during the euphoric expansion, participants are richly rewarded for buying every dip and for confidently embracing the belief that this time it’s different.

(Exactly how it’s different changes from bubble to bubble, but the core mechanism is identical: for these entirely rational and “mathy” reasons, this time is truly different.)

The common characteristic when bubbles pop is the eventual bottom is far lower than anyone believes possible. This confidence in the bubble’s permanence permeates the entire financial system and encourages a faith that buying every dip will continue to be the road to easy wealth.

When euphoric risk-on switches polarity to risk-off, buying every dip becomes the road to ruin as the eventual bottom is incomprehensibly lower than the first stairstep down.

Here’s a composite of what happened during the dot-com bubble burst. An Internet company that hit $90 per share has slipped to $60, and investment banks are recommending it at $60 based on “the Internet has endless growth ahead” and the loss of a third of its valuation makes it a relative bargain. The I>buy the dip crowd has already lost money buying every stairstep down, but a 30% decline must ne the bottom, right?

Perhaps a 30% decline is the bottom in a risk-on market, but in a risk-off market, the eventual bottom isn’t $60, it’s $6 per share. In the optimistic, euphoric “this is permanent” risk-on phase, a $15 drop from $90 to $75 is a screaming buy. A decline to $60 is literally incomprehensible.

The decline to $40 is a shock to the system because the rebound to $90 was the near-universal expectation. Those who could have sold at $85, $75, $65, $55 and $45 but did not are now so shell-shocked they cannot grasp that selling at $40 is the fantastic opportunity of a lifetime compared to selling at $9 or the eventual bottom at $6.

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Getting Out Before the Crash… 5 Secrets to Spot Market Tops, by Doug Casey

You could do worse than just take the opposite tack of what popular magazine covers are suggesting you do. From Doug Casey at internationalman.com:

International Man: Markets have extreme emotions. They can go from irrational exuberance—where it seems everyone is swinging from the chandeliers—to a bottom-of-the-barrel bear market where people don’t even want to look at the business section.

Why is assessing the psychology of the market so important?

Doug Casey: The market, as Warren Buffett has pointed out, can be either a weighing machine or a voting machine. You can make money in the market either way, but you have to recognize which machine is giving you signals.

Although Mr. Market sees and knows almost everything, he pays the most attention to the voting machine, because he’s basically bipolar, a manic-depressive. As a result, not only do you have to deal with the psychological aberrations of millions of other people who are running in a crowd and voting with their dollars, but much more important, you have to deal with your own psychology. You are, after all, part of the market.

The only thing you can control, however, is your own psychology, not that of the market’s other participants. Once again quoting Buffett, “Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful.”

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The Freak Chart, by the Northman Trader

Long-term stock market charts are perhaps sending a message that US equity markets may in for a lengthy period of consolidation at best, and perhaps a long bear market. From the Northman Trader at northmantrader.com:

I got a freak chart for you that’s stunning, but bear with me here because it requires some background and patience. Most of us are focused on the daily or weekly action and it’s easy to lose sight of big cyclical trends. We don’t think of them as they take a long time to unfold and the daily noise is so much more dominant.

With the advent of permanent central bank intervention sparked by the financial crisis all of us have come accustomed to markets always going up with the occasional correction in between and the timing of corrections have seemingly become shorter and shorter. Big fat bottoms that happen after just a few days of temporary terror. We haven’t seen a true bear market since the financial crisis and even that one lasted barely more than a year as central banks stepped in. The last longer term bear market came after the technology bust in 2000 when markets bottomed in 2002 and 2003 and then proceeded onto the next bull market.

It didn’t always used to be this way. Going back to 1900 there were multiple extended periods of stock markets going nowhere and trading in wide chop ranges:

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Experience Is The Only Cure, by Lance Roberts

Most of the lessons speculators, traders, and investors learn, they learn the hard way. From Lance Roberts at realinvestmentadvice.com:

I recently penned an article which discussed the Fed and the risk of a monetary policy error in the future. This isn’t a possibility, it is a probability given that every Fed rate-hiking campaign in the past has led to a financial market-related event, recession, or worse.

Of course, when you publish views on a regular basis it always attracts those“individuals” who want to consistently deride and distract an otherwise informed debate. Normally, I don’t respond to comments because there is nothing to be gained in trying to persuade someone who is already convicted of their beliefs.

As my dad use to tell me growing up: “The only permanent cure of ignorance, is experience.”

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Bear Markets, Recessions and the Bewildered Fed, by Michael Pento

If you harbor the suspicion after last week’s confusion that the Federal Reserve does not know what it is doing, this article will not allay that suspicion. From Michael Pento at davidstockmanscontracorner.com:

A popular Wall Street myth is that bear markets are caused by recessions. The contention is as long as the economy isn’t in a recession stock prices won’t drop by more than 20 percent. And since the cheerleaders who dominate Wall Street never predict a recession, it should come as no surprise they never foresee the bear market that always precedes two negative quarters of GDP growth. The truth is Bear markets and recessions do not occur simultaneously, bear markets both predict and help engender a recession to occur.

Typifying this myth is Capital Economics’ Chief Economist John Higgins as he recently argued, “Major declines in the S&P 500 — that is to say, bear markets in which prices drop by at least 20%, which is roughly twice the drop that occurred between 10th and 24th August–have only tended to occur in, and around, recessions…And we doubt very much that one of those is around the corner.”

But the truth is bear markets always precede a recession–those who argue otherwise have it exactly backwards. The stock market is a forward looking indicator: it anticipates economic activity yet to come, it doesn’t report on economic conditions that are occurring.

Recent history proves all recessions were preceded by bear markets. Even though the market is guilty of over anticipating a recession, it has never missed predicting one.

For example, the 1987 stock crash brought the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 508 points, a decline of 23%. However, despite the market’s recessionary signal, the US economy did not enter into an economic contraction at all.

Thirteen years later, record valuations drove the NASDAQ down 78% from its highs in the 2000-02 bear market. The market reached its peak on March 10, 2000, with the NASDAQ topping out at 5,132 during intraday trading. However, the economy didn’t produce a negative GDP print until the first quarter of 2001. If you had waited for validation of an economic slowdown you would have lost a lot of money.

Ironically, the economy never entered a true recession with two consecutive quarters of negative GDP data. Instead, we had a negative GDP read in the first and third quarters of 2001, of -1.1% and -1.3%.

Finally, the S&P 500 peaked in October of 2007 but we didn’t see consecutive quarters of negative GDP until the 4th quarter of 2008 (GDP 2008: Q3 -1.9%, Q4 -8.2%). And the recession was still in full force by the time the market reached its bottom in March of 2009. Indeed, Q1 GDP was still shrinking by a -5.4% annual rate.

The jury is still out on whether this recent market sell-off is predicting an official recession. The recent selloff that caused a 12% drop in the S&P 500 may be indeed foreboding a worldwide recession. But unlike the Wall Street carnival barkers who always have good news, the market is at the very least anticipating global economic weakness and the eventual normalization of interest rates. Investors should ignore the message of markets at their own risk.

But the biggest fallacy promulgated on Wall Street today is that the Fed won’t raise rates unless, in divine fashion, it knows the economy will continue to grow at a pace strong enough to sustain a rate hike. This belief suggests the Fed is an oracle of markets.

However, history has proven that the Fed is always clueless about the economic direction. In the FOMC minutes leading up to the 2008 financial crisis, Mr. Bernanke was predicting robust GDP growth and contemplating hiking rates as late as the second quarter of 2008. By this time the markets had declined 15% from the top.

To continue reading: Bear Markets, Recessions and the Bewildered Fed

They Said That? 8/4/15

An old Wall Street adage:

Bull markets climb a wall of worry.

From Robert Prechter, market technician:

Bear markets descend a slope of hope.