Recession is a four-letter word in the financial
markets, striking terror into the hearts of everyone. And if reports since August are to be believed,
there is a recession hiding behind every tree. For a myriad of reasons, economists
have argued we are due to plunge into the next one any day now. But speculators and investors have to
understand how recession talk is spawned, sometimes leading to recession
crazes.
Often economists revel in obscuring what they are
discussing so they can sound learned and wise to laymen. But recessions are simple and easy to
understand. A recession is simply
a shrinking economy. And an economy is the total market
value of all the goods and services produced within a given country during a
year. Every last dollar you earn
and spend, in addition to everyone else’s, adds up to the economy. If we collectively earn and/or spend
less than the prior year, a recession results.
Recession crazes have whipped up a frenzy of dread
around the mere concept of recessions.
But far from harbingers of doom, recessions are typically pretty
mild. They might see gross
domestic product, the measure of the economy, shrink by 1% to 2%. If total national economic activity
slumps to limp along at 98% to 99% of last year’s, is that the end of
the world as we know it? Hardly,
it is truly immaterial.
Now I certainly don’t mean to minimize the
suffering recessions inevitably cause at
the margins. They are tragic
at a personal level for people directly affected. There is an old saying that if your
neighbor loses his job, it is a recession. But if you lose your job, it is a
depression. All too true! But the stock-market impact of
recessions happens at the overview macro level, not the zoomed-in micro level.
As a small businessman, I think about my own
company’s sales constantly.
Our venture feeds multiple families, and if customers don’t show
up to buy our products they will starve.
Every other businessman is in the same boat, sales are our
lifeblood. Yet if our sales ran
at 98% to 99% of last year’s, would we wail in despair before putting
bullets in our skulls? Realize
that 1% to 2% shrinkage is ultimately trivial.
Thus the whole popular concept of recessions righteously driving 10%, 20%, even 30%
declines in the broader stock markets is ludicrously illogical. If collective national economic
activity shrinks slightly for a few
quarters, even a year, why should stock markets be
sliced so dramatically? While it
is true stocks in sectors the recession hits hardest will fare worse, other
sectors will continue thriving.
Overall, the total impact of a recession on stock prices should be roughly proportional to that
recession’s GDP impact.
While recessions do indeed have a minor fundamental
impact, they have a major psychological one. Recession fears, which sometimes feed
on themselves to ignite recession crazes, can really alter individuals’
financial decisions. When consumers
fear recessions, they slow down their spending. When traders fear recessions, they
sell stocks. So the sentimental
impact of recessions can be huge.
The best example of our lifetimes is 2008’s once-in-a-century
stock panic. Fear was just
off-the-charts crazy, shattering its usual effective ceiling. Popular consensus, including the great
majority of respected economists, started predicting a new depression during that panic’s
dark heart. A depression is a
super-sized recession, more economic shrinkage lasting a longer time. Depressions are scary!
Speculators and investors were captivated by that
panic-driven recession craze, so they sold everything they could get their
hands on. The flagship S&P
500 stock index plummeted 30.0% in 4 weeks in October 2008! Think about that a second. Nearly a third of the value of our country’s biggest and best
corporations vanished, nearly a third of stock-market wealth vaporized, in
less than a month!
A third is an apocalyptic number, with a third being
destroyed showing up repeatedly in the Biblical judgments of Revelation! And with such epic stock-market
carnage, you’d think that the underlying economy must have faced a
similar catastrophe. Gross
domestic product is measured quarterly, and indeed the US economy suffered a
serious recession between the ends of Q2’08 and Q2’09.
Over this brutal 1-year span that straddled the
stock panic’s fear superstorm, real US GDP
shrunk from $13,311b to $12,641b according to the US Commerce Department
(which tracks the US economy).
Run the numbers and this is a 5.0% economic contraction, which was the
worst recession by far of the modern era. If you lost your job during or since,
there is no doubt it feels like a full-blown depression.
But from a macro perspective, a 5% decline in
economic activity means that 95% still kept humming along in the scariest
financial episode of our lifetimes.
19/20ths of the US economy was effectively unscathed! Yet between May 2008 and March 2009
over this recession span, the benchmark S&P 500 lost a breathtaking 52.6%
of its value! Should a 5% decline
in economic output be leveraged 10x
in stocks?
I sure don’t think so,
it’s the height of irrationality for a relatively-small fundamental
event to be amplified by an order of magnitude psychologically. This extreme stock-panic example also
begs a key follow-on question.
How on earth did the US economy remain so resilient through such
crippling fear? Simple, the vast
majority of economic activity is not
optional. We really have no
choice but to keep consuming.
In the US, consumer spending now accounts for around
70% of our nation’s total economic output. Some deride this as problematic, but
it makes perfect sense. We all
drag our sorry carcasses out of bed to get up and go to work every morning
because we want to and need to
provide for our families. The
vast majority of our earnings not stolen through excessive taxation are spent
on necessities like shelter and food.
We constantly need goods and services just to live, and we have to
work to be able to buy them.
Recession or not, regardless of how high popular fear
and anxiety creep, we still have to pay our bills and go to the grocery store
every week. We have to educate
and clothe our kids whether the stock markets are booming or busting. In our highly-specialized modern
civilization where few own enough land, let alone have the expertise, to be
self-sufficient, we all have no choice but to continue earning and
spending. So the economy
continues marching on, nearly at full-steam, even in severe recessions.
And most recessions are far milder than that stock-panic
one. Nevertheless, trivial 1% to
2% shrinkages in US GDP still often lead to 10% to 20% declines in the
broader stock markets. Again this
makes no sense. If companies as a
whole are doing 98% to 99% of the business they normally do even in a recession,
why should their stocks be discounted so
deeply? Sentiment is a
wildly-irrational force.
In light of this background, consider our latest
recession craze. It all started
with a single economic data point.
As September dawned, expectations for the August report on US jobs ran
at 25k to 50k jobs created. And
these were pretty low since August was such a scary month after Obama’s
profligacy forced the first-ever US Treasury downgrade in history. But the actual number for this
most-highly-anticipated economic report came in even worse, with zero US jobs created!
This shocking surprise ignited widespread recession
talk among economists that snowballed throughout September. The S&P 500 ended up plunging 7.2%
that month, its worst performance since May 2010. And as the stock markets ground lower,
recession fears grew. Like most
psychology in the markets, once a line of thought has momentum it tends to
take on a life of its own.
Traders start ignoring contrary data and become married to their recession
theses.
On the second-to-last trading day in September, the
Commerce Department actually revised up
US GDP growth in Q2 to a 1.3% annual rate. The very next day, a prominent think
tank widely seen as the most-authoritative voice in the markets on economic
cycles declared a recession was indeed upon us. The Economic Cycle Research Institute
published a report declaring “the U.S. economy is indeed tipping into a
new recession. And there’s
nothing that policy makers can do to head it off.”
It warned, “If you think this is a bad
economy, you haven’t seen anything yet.” The next trading day as October dawned, this dire forecast drove a major down day which
bludgeoned the in-progress stock-market correction to
new lows. A recession craze had
taken root, and with the most-respected economists trumpeting it traders
rushed for the exits. Sadly they
sold right at the correction lows,
as the underlying economic realities didn’t support this emotional
craze.
Later that week, the US Labor Department released
its September jobs report. Not
only were the 103k jobs created way better than the 60k expected, that
original August report that spawned the recession fears was revised much
higher. Instead of zero jobs
being created as originally reported, the revised
number showed +57k which was above the high end of original
expectations! The whole recession
craze in September was based on one
erroneous data point subsequently revised away!
And with recession fears easing, the US stock
markets rocketed higher out of their hyper-oversold
levels from early October. By the
time that month gave up its ghost, the S&P 500 had soared 10.8% in its
best month in two decades! And
right as October was ending, the Commerce Department released its initial
estimate of US GDP in Q3. It
reported that our economy grew at a 2.5% annualized rate, which was the best
economic growth this country has seen in
a year!
That whole recession craze that had flared up so
brilliantly in September was totally discredited by the end of October. Instead of slowing towards shrinkage,
US economic growth was actually accelerating. By the dawn of December, the famed
Economic Cycle Research Institute had quietly removed its bold recession
forecast from its website’s homepage. With the current Q4 GDP growth widely
expected to come in above a 3% rate, this bad call would face increasing
ridicule.
Why were these expert economists so wrong? Because they fell into the deadly trap
of allowing the state of the stock
markets to color their own sentiment. Stock markets rise and fall
continuously for endless reasons.
Usually stocks sell off simply because they had grown too overbought
and a healthy retreat was necessary to rebalance sentiment. Selloffs are sentimental phenomena, usually having little to do with
fundamentals like economic growth.
But unfortunately speculators, investors, analysts,
reporters, and economists alike
make the mistake of assuming weak stock markets are making fundamental
predictions. They can’t
accept that stocks sell off merely because greed was excessive. They get frightened like everyone else
by falling stocks, and they try to rationalize their fear that extrapolates
into the belief stocks will continue falling. So they develop a natural selection
bias that overweights all negative news while
ignoring any positive news.
And the easiest way to justify selling low when
everyone else is scared is to believe a recession is approaching so stocks
are doomed to sink much lower still.
Stocks must be selling off because the economy is weakening,
right? Economists act like they
are coldly rational and logical, but “the dismal science” is as
emotional as any political debate.
Economists are weathervanes reflecting
the stock markets.
While elite organizations like the Economic Cycle
Research Institute have done some good work, their approach is based on leading economic indicators. LEIs are a broad range of data points
that tend to change before the economy as a whole does, such as
manufacturers’ orders. But
the Achilles’ heel of LEIs is they are highly correlated with the US
stock markets. One flagship LEI
index, the ECRI’s Weekly Leading Index, actually has a 90% correlation with the S&P 500
according to Deutsche Bank!
So the movements of the very tools the experts use
to forecast recessions are simply a hard extension of what the stock markets
are doing. Thus economists share
in the widespread euphoria near major stock-market highs, assuming economic
growth is accelerating. And they
get sucked into the popular fear near major stock-market lows, assuming GDP
is rolling over into shrinkage.
Recession forecasts peak, even morph into crazes, right when stock
markets are the most oversold and due for a major rally!
As speculators and investors, it is absolutely
critical to understand this core truth of the markets. When you hear recession forecasts,
fears, and anxiety, before believing this stuff you have to first consider
the stock-market technicals. If the stock markets have been weak,
they are trading near lows, and fear and anxiety are high, then any recession
calls have to be taken with a big grain of salt. The economists are simply reflecting
popular fear, nothing more.
And of course the sole mission of speculation and
investment is buying low and selling high. And the best time to buy low is when
others are scared after the stock
markets have sold off. And since
it is these very times when economists are the most vocal about trumpeting an
imminent recession, widespread recession talk itself is a fantastic buy
signal. Economists will never
admit they are frightened, but the more adamant they become about a new
recession the more scared they are.
As contrarians are rare among traders, they are also
rare among economists. It takes
years of intense psychological struggles to steel yourself
to overcome our natural human need to seek comfort and acceptance by running
with the herd. Contrarians have to
fight this instinct to be brave when others are afraid and afraid when others
are brave. This enables us to buy
low when everyone is scared so stocks are cheap, and later sell high when
everyone is excited so stocks are expensive.
And while traders realize the endless war between
greed and fear is what drives short-term price action, economists generally
dismiss sentiment. Since
sentiment can’t be measured like GDP, since it is ethereal and
touchy-feely, they tend to ignore it in favor of hard data. But ignoring stock-market-driven
popular sentiment is as dangerous for economists as it is for traders, as it
insidiously taints their worldview and leaves them slave to groupthink.
And this recession-craze phenomenon sparked by weak
stock markets is not just an American thing. For months now we’ve been
hearing Europe is doomed to spiral into a deep recession. Yet in mid-November when Germany and
France reported their Q3 GDPs, they were actually growing at 2.0% and 1.6% annual rates. They are still expected to grow by 3.0% and 1.6% this year, and grow again in 2012! Yet you didn’t hear much about
this in the media since economists want
to be bearish when stocks are low.
Like pretty much every other aspect of popular
sentiment, recession talk and especially recession crazes are excellent
contrary indicators. Recession
talk usually peaks after every
major stock-market correction, right when stocks are near their lows and
anxiety runs high. So rather than
believing whatever the economists happen to be sagely opining, consider their
views in light of the stock markets.
If the S&P 500 has just fallen and fear is considerable, then
recession fears can be discounted as weathervaning.
Unfortunately there is no recession-talk indicator,
so this can’t be measured directly. Nevertheless, recession fears are a
classic sign of bottoming stock
markets. The more intense the
recession fears, the greater the odds the economists are wrong and a major
stock-market rally is imminent.
And when recession fears occasionally balloon into full-blown
recession crazes, this is even more bullish.
At Zeal we’re hardcore contrarian traders,
fighting the crowd to buy low when others are scared and sell high when
others are greedy. The knowledge
of how recession psychology works has helped us keep things in perspective
near lows over the years. It has
certainly contributed to our stellar track record over this past challenging
secular-bear decade. Since 2001,
all 591 stock trades
recommended in our subscription newsletters have averaged annualized realized
gains of +51%!
Our bread and butter is
commodities stocks, which are even more influenced by recession fears than
the general stock markets. A
recession implies lower commodities demand, exacerbating the selling pressure
on commodities producers. So
these recent recession fears have led to radically-oversold commodities
stocks, incredible buying opportunities for brave contrarians tough enough to
fight the crowd. We detail all
this in our acclaimed weekly and
monthly
subscription newsletters. Subscribe today and
start thriving!
Gold stocks are the latest casualty to be sucked
into the global-recession bandwagon.
Fortuitously, we just finished our latest 3-month deep-research
project digging into the entire universe of junior gold producers listed in the US and Canada. We whittled down around 100 to our
dozen favorites, which are profiled in depth in our fascinating new 34-page fundamental report
just released this week. You can
enjoy the fruits of our hundreds of hours of expert world-class research for
just $95 ($75 for subscribers). Buy yours today
while the junior golds are still incredibly cheap!
The bottom line is recession fears and crazes are a
psychological phenomenon driven by the stock markets. Economists are people too, and despite
all their feigned stoicism weak stock markets frighten them just as much as
any trader. So they attempt to
rationalize their fears by forecasting recessions, by assuming major
stock-market weakness is always a fundamental prediction of a weakening
economy.
But sentiment, collective greed and fear, is really
what drives short-term stock-market price action. Overbought markets simply need to
correct while oversold ones have to rally, sentiment must be kept in
balance. Once you understand that
recession talk peaks right near stock-market lows when everyone is the most
scared and anxious, you can capitalize on economists’ weathervane
groupthink by buying low.
Adam Hamilton,
CPA
Zealllc.com
So how can you profit from this information? We publish an
acclaimed monthly newsletter, Zeal Intelligence, that details exactly what we are doing in terms
of actual stock and options trading based on all the lessons we have learned
in our market research. Please consider joining us each month for
tactical trading details and more in our premium Zeal Intelligence service at
… www.zealllc.com/subscribe.htm
Questions for Adam? I would be more than happy to address
them through my private consulting business. Please visit www.zealllc.com/adam.htm for more information.
Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com. Due to my staggering and perpetually increasing e-mail load, I
regret that I am not able to respond to comments personally. I will
read all messages though and really appreciate your feedback!
Copyright 2000 - 2006 Zeal Research (www.ZealLLC.com)
|