Tuesday, September 16, 2008

One/half Retracement of 2002-2007 Bull Market

In my last posting entitled "A Topsy-Turvy Economy", I indicated that I was awaiting the following conditions before I put more money to work: 1) a one/half retracement of the entire Bull Market that began in 2002 and ended in 2007, which would be roughly 1170 in the S&P 500 Index; and 2) a level of 60% or more bears in an Investors Intelligence weekly sentiment reading. One of these conditions occurred this morning when the S&P 500 Index broke through the July 15 low of around 1200 and penetrated 1170 on the downside.

Unfortunately, the latest I.I. percentage bears is under 42 and the highest level thus far in this bear market is 50. A weekly reading is forthcoming tomorrow, but I doubt it will be 60 or higher.

Like the proverbial single phone call allowed one under arrest, if I had only one call to make regarding market timing at major turns, it would be to I.I. Why? The reason is that bear market bottoms occur when there is a maximum of fear. Fundamentals don't really matter because stock markets are a discounting mechanism and bottom well before the fundamentals improve. In fact, usually at bottoms, the fundamentals look dire.

In an early posting in 2007 I discussed that the long term trend line of the S&P 500 Index should be kept in mind because it represents the worst case downside scenario for the market if one assumes that the world isn't coming to an end. That trendline was almost met at the bottom of the last bear market. I refer to it as "Wall Street's Dirty Little Secret" because The Street thrives during bull markets not bear markets, so that trendline is rarely mentioned.

The trend line at this juncture is slighly below 1000, and the Index just broke through 1200. Let's assume that I had been stranded on a deserted island without any news input for the last year. I was then told that home prices had declined 15 to 20%nationwide, Bear Stearns and Lehman were no more, Merrill Lynch was no longer independent. Freddie and Fannie debt had to be bailed out, and AIG was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. Then I was asked, "Where do you think the S&P 500 Index is trading?" I would answer "Near the trendline!" I would be flabbergasted that the Index was 20% higher than that.

In short, the market has held up extremely well. Unfortunately, the two primary sources of the unusually high profit margins last year, namely the financial and oil industries, do not have bright profit outlooks near term. The earnings of the Index, which peaked in the high 80's, could drop to the 60's at the trough. That would justify an S&P level closer to the trendline.

While the rate of decline in home prices is dropping, absolute prices are still in decline. The deleveraging of our nation's private balance sheet continues. Alan Greenspan recently mentioned that this was "a once in a century situation". In my opinion, this warrants a fear rating that accompanied the major bottoms of 1974 and 1982, when the percentage bears were 67 and 61 respectively.

One event that would warrant putting more money to work would be an old fashioned selling climax, with a sharp drop (perhaps 10% or more) on extremely heavy volume and a rally that brings the market back to unchanged or higher, all during the same trading day. That would present a buying opportunity perhaps before the fear indicator had reached extreme levels.

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