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I believe we are smack dab in the middle of the biggest stock bear market
any of us will witness in our lifetime. This colors my views on investing tremendously
and creates an inherent bias. If you don't subscribe to the same view, my rants
probably seem a little over the top. But when the P:E ratio is well over 100
during the worst housing market crash and bank and Wall Street wipeout since
the last great generational bear market (i.e. the 1929-1932 bear) occurs, it's
time to take notice.
Another great credit contraction is occurring in front of our eyes and such
events take more than 1-2 years to sort themselves out. Another
5 banks failed this week, the largest weekly number for the FDIC to sort
out since this cyclical bear market began. There will be more - many, many
more.
Technical analysis is a tool many use to time investments or speculations
and it is easy to get overly wrapped up in the squiggles on a chart and the
indicators and what they mean. I love looking at historical chart patterns
to get a sense of what's possible and what's reasonable. Since I think this
is a "big, bad" cyclical bear market, I am looking for it to last at least
2.5 years (we are 1.7 years into the current bear).
I also am NOT looking for the markets to make a sustained thrust beyond the
200 day moving average, as this hasn't occurred in prior big, bad bear markets.
A "peek-a-boo" above the 200 day moving average can occur for a month or so,
but that's about it if prior credit crunch/debt deflation bear markets are
a guide. So, I am placing my money on the top in the stock market being in
already and patiently (or not so patiently perhaps) waiting for another steep
drop right here, right now. Not a correction and then new highs, but a full
on resumption of the bear market.
How about a few more data points to cement the bear case beyond what I have
pointed out in recent posts:
* There was a record issuance of new stock shares in May, 2009 ($64 billion,
which blew away the previous all-time high of $38 billion)
* There was heavy insider selling in May and early June, 2009 (sales to purchases
ratio approaching 30:1 at times!)
Here's a chart of the 20 day moving average of the New York Stock Exchange's
(NYSE or $NYA) volume for advancing shares divided by the volume for declining
shares (i.e. roughly, the bullish/buying volume versus the bearish/declining
volume with the 20 day moving average used to smooth out the data points) over
the past 2.5 years:

And here's a look at Japan's wicked 1990-1993 bear market about a year-and-a-half
into it:

Doesn't look all that different from where we are right now, does it (following
is a daily 18 month line chart of the New York Stock Exchange/$NYA)?

As someone who's bearish, I am obviously not going to show an historical chart
example that resolves to the upside (I told you - I'm biased!), but here's
what happened next in Japan's cyclical bear market for the ages (which was
precipitated by a real estate crash and stock bubble bursting at the same time):

Stay in the market and/or go long if you want to, but risk is heavily tilted
to the downside and a July mini-panic to wipe out the gains since the March
low seems pretty damn likely to me. Significant new lows happen this fall,
but printing a nominal new low in most of the major stock market averages before
a brief late summer rally wouldn't be unusual.
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