With the US stock markets challenging a
major multi-year high, investors are feeling pretty complacent these days.
But unseen below the placid surface, a serious risk is arising from the
depths. With each passing day, the odds grow that a new stock bear is
imminent. As these merciless beasts typically maul the markets until stock
prices are cut in half, they are dangerous threats that cannot be taken lightly.
The stock markets perpetually march
forwards in great bull-bear cycles. All bull markets eventually mature and
top when greed and complacency grow excessive and everyone willing to buy has
already bought. Then bear markets are born, which don’t run their
course until fear reigns and everyone susceptible to being scared into
selling has already sold. And then this endless cycle begins anew, bull bear
bull bear.
The problem today is our current bull
market is long in the tooth, running longer and higher than average. And the
older any trend in the markets gets, the greater the odds of an impending
major reversal. After a bull market, a bear is absolutely inevitable. The
only question is when it will awaken from hibernation. And thanks to our
position in the bull-bear cycles today, probabilities favor that tipping
point being soon.
Understanding these bull-bear cycles is
crucial for investors and speculators. If you wrongly buy near the top of a
bull, or sell near the bottom of a bear, it will derail your wealth-building
progress for years. There are two distinct species of bulls and bears,
secular and cyclical. The secular ones persist for the better part of two
decades, while the shorter cyclical ones alternate every few years within
the secular ones.
A full secular bull-bear cycle lasts a
third of a century, or about 17 years each for the bull phase and bear
phase. Our current full secular-bull-bear cycle began way back in August
1982, but the second secular-bear half started in March 2000. We are now 12
years into this phase, which again is likely to last 17 years.
There is a widespread misconception that
secular bears drive stock prices lower like shorter cyclical bears, but this
isn’t true. A secular bear is a giant sideways grind, a
nearly-multi-decade consolidation. Stock prices are driven way too high
relative to underlying corporate earnings power in secular bulls, so in
secular bears they simply drift sideways long enough for earnings to catch up
with stock prices.
Within these mighty sideways-grinding
secular bears, there are shorter cyclical bears and bulls. The bears tend to
cut general stock prices in half over a couple years, while the bulls
tend to double them again over the next few. The net effect is a
gigantic trading range running from the preceding secular-bull highs to
halfway below them. High in its range now, today’s cyclical bull is
running out of room to run.
All this secular-cyclical stuff is a lot
easier to comprehend when seen visually. This first chart compares the last
two secular bears, today’s that started in
early 2000 (blue) and the previous one before that running from 1966 to 1982
(red). Both of these secular sideways grinds were formed by a series of
oscillating cyclical bears and bulls. And today’s cyclical bull is likely
nearing the end of its road.
After the secular bull of the 1980s and
1990s topped in early 2000, the first cyclical bear of this secular bear cut
the stock markets in half. The flagship S&P 500 stock index fell 49.1%
over 2.6 years. But out of that fear and despair a new cyclical bull was
born, which propelled the SPX 101.5% higher over 5.0 years. That was followed
by a cyclical bear which climaxed after 2008’s stock panic, a 56.8%
drop over 1.4 years.
And out of those secondary lows after
that once-in-a-lifetime fear super storm, today’s cyclical bull was
born. By its latest interim high in early April 2012, it had powered 109.7%
higher over 3.1 years. Note above that these alternating cyclical bears and
bulls within the greater secular bear have indeed formed a giant trading
range. It runs between roughly 1500 on the upside to half that on the low
end, 750.
Today’s cyclical bull is nearing
that secular resistance. The higher the SPX travels within this trading
range, the greater the odds its cyclical bull is due to fail and roll over
into the next cyclical bear. While we’re not at 1500 yet, realize
mid-secular-bear cyclical bulls certainly don’t have to hit resistance
before giving up their ghosts. Back in the 1970s secular bear, cyclical bears
often began well under resistance.
Towards the end of our last cyclical
bull that climaxed in October 2007, the SPX remained above 1400 for over a
year. So why start fearing a new cyclical bear now since we are just starting
to peek over 1400 again? Remember that 2007 was a wildly-different
environment from 2012. The US housing market, China, and commodities were
booming. Meanwhile the European debt crisis and Washington’s inability
to make any progress whatsoever hadn’t yet begun.
The general market psychology today,
with our many structural worries and intense anxiety, is far more conducive
to birthing a bear than the halcyon pre-panic days of 2007. Unless a
political miracle happens, Obama’s smothering regulations and
staggering debt growth are somehow magically unwound quickly, it is
hard to imagine today’s cyclical bull enjoying a 2007-style long
drawn-out encore topping.
While the SPX’s high position in
its giant secular trading range is important, it isn’t the primary
reason why a new cyclical bear is increasingly likely. That honor falls to
another perspective on these bull-bear cycles, how long they tend to last and
how big they tend to grow. While the first chart had zeroed axes to highlight
how cyclical bears cut prices in half, this second one zooms in to examine
what births these fearsome beasts.
The last secular bear running 16.5 years
between 1966 and 1982 enjoyed four cyclical bulls, while today’s
12-year-old secular bear starting in 2000 has seen two so far. Since we are
trying to game when today’s is likely to fail, it is best to exclude it
from the averages. Before it in the entire modern history of cyclical bulls
within secular bears, their average duration is 34.8 months. And this is even
skewed high.
Thanks to that housing bubble in 2007
and the massive economic impact of the Fed’s inflation and cash-out refinancings, the previous cyclical bull lasted much
longer than they generally do (60 months). If you just include the 1970s
cyclical bulls, the average drops dramatically to 28.5 months. The general
rule of thumb for the lifespan of a cyclical bull within a secular bear is a
few years. Today’s cyclical bull is beyond all of these.
It was born in March 2009 at the
secondary panic lows, which made it 36.8 months old at its latest high in
early April 2012. But as of this week, the SPX was within spitting distance
of edging up to even better levels. If we see a new high soon, this cyclical
bull is already 41.0 months old today. Thus this bull is long in the tooth, well past mature by any mid-secular-bear
cyclical-bull-lifespan metric you want to use.
But even that may be conservative. Remember
that the last cyclical bear climaxed in 2008’s stock panic. Such epic
fear maelstroms are so exceedingly brutal that secondary lows are unheard of.
Yet we had two secondary lows after that panic’s initial lows.
They were both driven by political fears, by the rise of a man who won
the US Presidency on a scary platform of Marxism (class warfare) and
Socialism (theft via taxation).
In a single month in the heart of
the stock panic, the SPX had plummeted 30.0% by late October 2008! A third of
Americans’ vast stock wealth had vaporized in weeks. And that should
have been the ultimate low, the climax of both the stock panic and cyclical
bear that spawned it. Indeed over the next 6 trading days, the SPX blasted
18.5% higher. All throughout history, a singular decisive low like this ended
every panic.
But the day that post-panic bounce
reached its peak was Election Day. And after the results came in that night
and investors learned Americans had inexplicably chosen to elect a Marxist
and Socialist, the markets tanked. Investors were terrified of Obama’s
campaign threats of higher taxes, crushing regulations, ballooning big
government, and job-destroying class-warfare rhetoric. So the SPX plummeted
25.2% over the next 12 trading days immediately after Obama won!
That too should have been the ultimate
panic low, 11.4% below the initial one several weeks earlier. And that
November 2008 low was when fear peaked, the VXO fear gauge hitting a
staggering 87.2 on close compared to 86.0 at the October low. But there was
one more secondary low, much later in March 2009. That was a political
anomaly as well. Obama certainly didn’t shift to the middle after
winning like many on Wall Street somehow expected.
Right after his Administration took
office in late January 2009, the toxic class-warfare rhetoric exploded. Obama
railed against investors, saying our already-high taxes were far too low. He
wanted the biggest tax hike on investors in the history of this nation, and
socialized medicine, and endless new regulations. So the stock markets
slumped in despair into early March 2009. The SPX fell another 10.1% under
November’s secondary low.
But it is fear that marks the
climaxes of stock panics and cyclical bears, and the VXO fear gauge merely
hit 51.5 at that March 2009 low (54.0 a couple trading days earlier). This
was a far cry from the unprecedented high-80s reads seen during the
stock panic! So there is a strong academic case to be made that the true
stock-market bottom should have been October 2008’s, the original
decisive fear climax before Obama’s awful anti-American politics
hammered the markets further.
So it is entirely reasonable to consider
October 2008 the end of the previous cyclical bear instead of March 2009.
This rendering makes the current cyclical bull 41.2 months old at its recent
April 2012 peak and 45.4 months old today. Once again this is well beyond the
average lifespan of the rest of the mid-secular-bear cyclical bulls of modern
times (34.8 months). Today’s bull has already enjoyed a long and full
life.
And boy, has it
been fruitful too! Remember that cyclical bulls tend to double stock
prices back up to the preceding secular bull’s highs. This isn’t
as readily apparent in the 1970s secular bear above because I used SPX data
for comparability, and this index wasn’t prominent back then. But if
you look at the main stock index of the time, the classic Dow 30, the
cyclical bulls were closer to doublings back then too.
In today’s secular bear, the last
cyclical bull climaxing in October 2007 ran 101.5% higher, a perfect
doubling. Meanwhile today’s cyclical bull had already climbed a
whopping 109.7% higher by its early-April high! It is already the biggest
mid-secular-bear cyclical bull in modern history, and could get even bigger
if the SPX edges to marginal new bull highs soon. A cyclical bull this big is
unprecedented.
The stock panic explains much of this
outsized gain, since the extreme secondary lows driven by Obama’s scary
politics pushed the SPX below its 750 secular support. Provocatively at the
November 2008 panic low just after the elections, the SPX bounced at 752
right on this line. The lower the starting point for a cyclical bull, the
easier it is to get outsized gains. I even predicted a bigger-than-average
cyclical bull just months after the panic.
But this still doesn’t change the
fact that the recent years’ cyclical bull is considerably bigger than
anything else seen in modern times. The longer a cyclical bull powers higher,
and the greater its gains grow, the higher the odds it is due to roll over.
At some point greed and complacency peak, all available buyers have already
bought which leaves only sellers. And then the bull gives up its ghost to
yield to the subsequent bear.
Could this analysis be all wrong? Could
the 2000s secular bear finally be over? Highly unlikely. The Long Valuation
Waves that encompass full secular bulls and bears are remarkably consistent
in their third-of-a-century duration, as are secular bears which run for the
second halves of these waves. The previous two secular bears ran 16.5 years
(1960s) and 19.8 years (1930s). Today’s is only 12.4 years old.
So the averages suggest we have the
better part of five years left, and even in a best-case scenario there should
be a few more. I suspect that one more cyclical bear will take us back down
near secular support (750 SPX) over the next couple years or so. And then the
subsequent cyclical bull will once again eventually regain resistance (1500)
over the following three years. And then this secular bear will end.
Also realize that the primary reason
secular bears exist is valuations. Valuations, or how high stock
prices trade relative to the underlying earnings their companies can
generate, are propelled to unsustainable bubble extremes late in secular
bulls. The mighty companies of the SPX were trading at an astounding 43.8x
earnings back in early 2000 when today’s secular bear was stealthily
born!
Secular bears typically don’t end
until the general-market price-to-earnings ratio falls back down near 7x
earnings, half the historical average of 14x. The
1970s secular bear didn’t end until the SPX was trading at 6.6x, way
after it started at roughly the same SPX level 16 years earlier but then
priced at 24.1x. If the SPX’s P/E ratio was down under 10x today, then
we could consider the possibility of this secular bear ending early.
But it’s been nowhere close. Near
the SPX’s latest cyclical-bull high in early April, the elite component
stocks of this flagship index were collectively trading at 19.4x earnings.
There is no way a secular bear, which exists to force stocks sideways from
extreme overvaluation to extreme undervaluation, would end on such a high
metric. This bear’s valuation work is only about half done so far, with
lots of drifting left to go.
And not even that crazy stock panic or
the Obama scares afterwards pushed the SPX to secular-bear-ending territory.
Its P/E ratio was still 11.6x heading into the March 2009 secondary low, and
was 13.0x at the end of October 2008. Secular bears
are a valuation thing, and valuations have never been anywhere close to
levels that could send this decade-plus bear back into hibernation early.
In light of all this, the risk that a
new cyclical stock bear will soon be upon us is high and growing. This has
enormous implications for investors on multiple fronts. If you want to plow
new surplus capital into stocks, late in a cyclical bull is the wrong time to
do it. After the subsequent cyclical bear cuts the markets in half again, the
same cash will buy twice as many shares at very cheap prices. Don’t buy
high late in a bull.
If you are going to need to sell
significant stock positions to raise cash anytime in the next five years or
so, it is prudent to do it soon while the SPX is still high in its secular
trading range. I say five years because a cyclical bear can run for two and
then a cyclical bull for another three before we get back up near resistance
again. As an added bonus, capital-gains tax rates remain low for the rest of
2012.
Provocatively not every sector gets
sucked into cyclical bears, there are isolated areas that thrive when the
rest of the markets are selling off. Chief among them is gold, and
therefore its leveraged subsidiary plays of silver and the precious-metals
miners. In the last cyclical bear when the SPX lost 56.8%, gold rallied 24.8%
over that exact span! In the one before that when the SPX lost 49.1%, gold
climbed 12.6% even though its secular bull didn’t start until the
middle.
So at Zeal, we’ve been exiting our
general commodities-stock positions that leverage stock-market downside and
migrating back into elite precious-metals stocks which leverage gold’s
upside. Even if the stock bear somehow tarries, the setup in gold and silver
today for massive autumn rallies is amazing. With the stock-bear risk
high and growing, the oversold and unloved precious metals are a fantastic
contrarian play.
The bottom line is the stock
markets’ cyclical bull of recent years is getting long in the tooth. It
has both lasted longer than the average mid-secular-bear cyclical bull and
powered considerably higher. Greed and especially complacency run high, with
the flagship S&P 500 stock index nearing the top of its giant
secular-bear trading range. All of this is increasing the odds a new cyclical
bear will be born anytime now.
These dangerous beasts are not to be
trifled with, as they tend to cut the stock markets in half. The losses in
popular high-beta sectors are even greater. The surest defense is boring old
cash, as falling stock prices greatly increase its purchasing power. But a
far-more-profitable and exciting alternative is gold, which has continued
rallying through each previous cyclical bear of this long secular bear.
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