|
What
Crash History Tells Us to Expect For 2010
By
Clif Droke ClifDroke.com
January
18, 2010
Many
have wondered why the 10-year cycle peak in late September/early
October didn’t produce a more meaningful correction in the broad
market. Instead, the
10-year cycle peak produced only a marginal six percent pullback in
the S&P 500 Index (SPX) instead of the much deeper one usually
associated with the 10-year peak.
A
look at the past reveals why: the first full year following a crash
low has never produced a sizable correction in the stock market.
That historical truism certainly proved itself out in 2009.
But what of the second year after a crash?
What can we expect in the coming year based on market
history? We’ll be
taking up this question in the commentary that follows.
The
two most persistent traits that investors displayed in 2009 were
either the avoidance of the stock market altogether by remaining in
the safety of cash or else to look for opportunities to sell short
each time the market took so much as a breather.
Both of these tendencies were direct consequences of the
historic credit crisis of 2008.
It has long been observed that retail investors typically shy
away from equities for at least the first two years following a
major bear market or stock market crash.
The painful memories take time to heal and leave deep and
abiding scars.
Even
for those stalwarts who stay the course and continue trading and
investing, a market crash creates a tendency toward conservatism.
Traders tighten up protective stops on all their trades,
avoid over-trading, refuse to buy large positions in any one stock
and make a serious effort at avoiding the mistakes that were made
during the heady days of the forgiving bull market.
Indeed, the reversion to conservatism and self-examination
among market participants is one of the redeeming qualities of a
market crash. Bear
markets are purgative in that they cleanse the system of lavish
excesses and restore a sense of propriety to the market by and
large.
For
those investors who respond to the destruction wrought by a crash by
refusing to participate, the resulting effect is equally beneficial
to the overall soundness of the market.
These non-participants, who comprise the great majority of
all potential retail investors, will spend the next year building
cash reserves and restoring their personal balance sheets.
While this won’t necessarily be of any benefit to the stock
market, nor to those who make their living in the brokerage or
advisory business, it will act as a reserve – or liquidity bank if
you will – for the future. For
at some point the market will need this liquidity and by the time
those reserves are needed, the painful memories of the previous bear
market will have dissolved from the public’s collective memory.
As their confidence grows they will become more enticed by
the lure of the potential returns of stocks vis-à-vis the
low-yielding safety of the bond market.
Returning
to our original observation concerning market behavior in the 1-2
years following a crash, let’s examine some chart examples of the
past few bear markets. Perhaps
the single best example and the one that most closely correlates to
our time is the crash of 1973-74.
This particular bear market was a function of the Kress
40-year cycle, which bottomed in October 1974.
It produced a painful and persistent decline in the S&P
500 for the better part of two years, as well as an economic
recession. At the time this happened it was the worst bear market
stocks had suffered since the Great Depression.
By the time it ended the SPX had lost some 45% of its value.
As you can well imagine (and some of you may actually
remember it), the feeling at the bottom in October ‘74 was one of
unmitigated doom and gloom – a feeling that persisted in the
public’s mind well beyond 1974.
The
market was anything but forlorn in the two years following this bear
market. In the year
1975 the stock market rallied vigorously and with relatively mild
corrections along the way. The
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) rallied 100 percent in ’75, a
record performance following a bear market and one that stands to
this day. The market
continued its recovery into 1976, and although its ’76 performance
wasn’t anywhere near as stellar as the one in ’75 it remains
immune to major corrections and kept the recovery going for two full
years following the bear market low in 1974.
Of
course the market cycles which comprised the 1973-74 bear market
were considerably different than the cycles underlying the 2007-08
bear market. Yet the
market dynamics between the two eras are so remarkably similar that
the inference can still be drawn that ours is a situation analogous
to the 1975-76 recovery.
Notice
in the above chart of the Dow that the 1976 follow-up to the
explosive 1975 rally was much more volatile and less dynamic, yet it
was still a positive year overall for the Dow.
The possibility exists that 2010 could end up being a
positive year overall in spite of the 4-year cycle bottoming later
this year. The
inference that can definitely be made is that the coming year will
almost certainly show more bumpiness than 2009 and less dynamic
market action.
If
1976 holds any clues for how 2010 will play out then we can expect
more range-bound behavior from the major indices.
This means stock selection will become more important as the
sectors showing only the best relative strength, forward momentum
and earnings growth should be favored over weaker sectors.
The coming year is likely to reward good stock selection as
opposed to the “buy with both hands” strategy that played out so
well in 2009. Market
timing will also be more critical in 2010 as opposed to last year
since there are two major cycle bottoms scheduled this year: one in
the first quarter of the year and one around late September/early
October (namely the 4-year cycle).
The
next example in our survey of bear markets is the bear market of
1981-82. From the
depths of this bear was spawned an apocalyptic sentiment made
infamous by several high-profile movies with Armageddon type themes
in the early ‘80s. While
the ’81-’82 bear market wasn’t as severe as the previous one
of ’73-74, it was strong enough to exert a profound influence on
investor psychology and left the retail investment crowd with a
revulsion toward equities for the next 2-3 years.
It also launched the powerful ‘80s bull market, which
didn’t meet its apogee until the end of the decade.
Let’s
turn our attention specifically to the 1-2 years following the
’81-’82 bear market. As
you can see in the following chart example, the first full year
following the bear market low saw no major correction in the SPX.
Even 1984, which saw considerably more volatility than ’83
due to the bottoming 10-year and 30-year cycles, wasn’t as bad a
year as it probably should have been.
This
is significant for several reasons.
Consider that 1984 by all indications should have been a
bearish year, yet it wasn’t that bad for stocks in the overall
scheme in spite of the fact that a major long-term Kress cycle was
bottoming. The reason
for this was because the public was still scared to the point of
non-participation and the lingering abhorrence to equities following
the bear market from two years prior was still a major factor.
This can’t be is emphasized enough.
As ephemeral as crowd psychology can be, when the retail
investor is paralyzed with fear and revulsion toward stocks, the
market enjoys a strong support regardless of the cycles that may be
leaning against stocks as long as tight money conditions aren’t
prevalent. At extremes,
negative crowd psychology is strong enough to contend even with the
cyclical forces of the stock market up to a point, and assuming
money isn’t inordinately tight.
The
next bear market in our survey was one of the shortest in history.
I’m referring of course to the stock market crash of
October 1987. Its
after-effects in the public mind were profound to say the least.
The SPX launched a recovery rally early in 1988 and continued
its recovery into 1989 with nary a correction along the way.
The ’88-’89 period is an example of a 2-year period
following a bear market with nothing bigger than an eight percent
correction along the way.
Next
we come to the bear market of 1990.
The year 1990 was a
painful one for stock market investors as it heralded a bear market
and a serious crisis for savings and loan institutions.
The year 1990 was the single worst year of the S&L crisis
and saw the failure of more than 100 small banks.
The SPX declined sharply between July and October, when the
24-year cycle bottomed. Following
this important cycle bottom, the stock market regrouped and began a
new bull market that lasted until the 30-year cycle peaked in late
1999. For our purposes
we will only observe that the two years following the October ’90
bottom saw the SPX launch a recovery that saw only mild periodic
corrections along the way.
Next
we come to the summer 1998 market crash and mini bear market.
According to history we should have seen a 2-year recovery
off the September ’98 low. Instead,
the turn of the century witnessed the commencement of the 2000-2002
“Tech Wreck” which saw the NASDAQ bubble burst.
Internet stocks were particularly hard hit in the 2000-2002
period. The more
conservative Dow 30 Industrial stocks fared considerably better than
the tech stocks in 2000, which was the second year of the post-’98
crash period, however. The
year 2000 proved to be more or less a lateral trading range in the
Dow, which prepared the way for the next crash that was to follow in
2001-2002. The year
2000 was one of the rare exceptions to the 2-year recovery rule that
normally follows a crash. It
failed to extend the rally of 1999 because by ’99 the Internet
bubble had peaked, the Fed had begun tightening the money supply and
conditions were simply ripe for a bear market to come one year
earlier than normal.
Going
back 100 years, the only other exception to the 2-year recovery rule
we can find occurred in 1922-23 following the stock market crash of
1921. The market
rallied the year following the ’21 crash but didn’t follow
through in the second year, as per the norm.
In fact 1923 was similar to the year 2000 in that it saw the
Dow undergo a volatile trading range, closing for the year at
roughly break-even. Even
when the second year after a crash fails to show a clear upward
bias, as in 1923 and 2000, the market still at least shows a
relatively neutral bias and has rarely if ever experienced a
decisive downward trend in the second post-crash year.
This
brings us to the present. With
the most recent bear market almost one year behind us, we’ve seen
an extended market recovery since March 2009 with nothing worse than
a six percent correction along the way.
Our historical survey tells us to expect more headwinds in
2010 due not only to the above mentioned cyclical factors but also
to the fact that the market will be running into more overhead
resistance. Volatility
is almost sure to become a bigger factor in 2010 than it was in 2009
and history shows that the second year following a market crash is
nearly always more variable and bumpy than the first year.
The two major cycles scheduled to bottom at various points in
2010 will be a factor in producing this anticipated volatility.
While
the second year normally shows a gain for the broad market averages,
the gain is usually considerably less than the first year.
At worse, the market trades in a more or less lateral trend
and closes largely unchanged on a year-over-year basis.
Accordingly, technical strategies that utilize trading range
opportunities will be important in the year ahead.
Moving
Averages
With
the return of volatility anticipated in 2010, it will be important
to have a technically sound trading discipline.
Classical trend line methods can be useful but they aren’t
particularly suited for a fast-moving, dynamic market environment.
This is especially true where turning points occur rapidly in
a market that is subject to cyclical crosscurrents as 2010 is likely
to be. That’s where
moving averages come in handy.
With
a good moving average system a trader can be reasonably assured of
catching most of the important moves in an actively traded stock or
ETF while eliminating many of the whipsaws that attend trading
choppy markets. In the
book “Stock Trading with Moving Averages” we discuss some
market-tested methods that have proven successful across most major
stock sectors and industry groups, and is especially geared toward
the gold and silver mining stocks and ETFs.
Here’s what one reader had to say about the book:
“...you were the one who supercharged my charting with your
moving average book ‘Stock Trading with Moving Averages’ and
your constant analysis of the double and triple moving average
series.”
Moving
averages offer another advantage over trend lines in that they can
be tailored to closely fit the dominant short-term and interim
market cycles. They’re
also more compatible with a trading range-type market…if you use
the right moving average system.
These and other strategies and tactics are discussed in
“Stock Trading with Moving Averages.”
Order your copy today and receive as an added bonus my two
latest Special Reports on moving average trading and how to use
stock market cycles for optimal timing.
Click here for more info:
http://www.clifdroke.com/books/book14.mgi
Clif Droke is the editor of the three
times weekly Momentum Strategies Report newsletter, published since
1997, which covers U.S. equity markets and various stock sectors,
natural resources, money supply and bank credit trends, the dollar
and the U.S. economy. The
forecasts are made using a unique proprietary blend of analytical
methods involving cycles, internal momentum and moving average
systems, as well as investor sentiment.
He is also the author of numerous books, including “How to
Read Chart Patterns for Greater Profit.”
© 2004-2010 Biiwii.com
Views
presented in guest articles are those of the authors and do not
represent those of Biiwii.com.
Biiwii.com
does not recommend that any trading or investment positions be taken
based on views expressed on this site. If you speculate or invest it
is suggested that you consult a financial advisor qualified in your
area of interest. For more detailed information and full terms of
service, see "About & Terms" here. |