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When the books have been written on 2009, the prevailing story will undoubtedly
be one of lost opportunity. Countless numbers of investors caught up in the
tangled web of pessimistic headlines failed to pull the trigger on what is
turning out to be one of the best market recovery years of our lifetime.
Where else but in the perverse world of the financial marketplace can we witness
such a sad spectacle? Most people in conducting their everyday business exercise
common sense and prescience, acting according to their financial self interest
and looking ahead at the potential pitfalls and benefits of the transaction
before making it. But when it comes to the financial market, rationality goes
out the door, which in turn paves the way for countless mistakes and missed
opportunities.
With the S&P 500 Index (SPX) having already rallied almost 50 percent
from the March low, it's sad indeed to consider that most investors have missed
most, if not all, this great recovery rally. The foundation for this missed
opportunity was laid last year during the credit storm. Investors were understandably
jittery entering 2009 when the market had just experienced one of the worst
declines since the Great Depression. The final decline into March of this year
increased their fears even more. But something happened at the March bottom
that should have shown them that the worst was over. To begin, there were all
kinds of divergences showing up in the various market internal indicators.
The number of stocks making new 52-week lows wasn't nearly as great as it was
at the previous major bottom in November 2008. This indicator alone was a screaming
signal to the alert investor that a bearish investment posture wasn't warranted.

Secondly, the important and oft-overlooked role of the NASDAQ 100 Index in
not confirming the lower low in the S&P 500 broad market index. While the
SPX did make a lower low in March, the NDX did not. This again was another
screaming positive divergence that was simply too big to ignore. Yet all the
while this was happening, headlines were swirling with doom and gloom. The
financial press was engaged in making dire predictions of calamity in the most
alarmist tone it could conjure. Not surprisingly, most investors ignored the
clearly positive signs in the market itself and instead chose to listen to
the fear mongers in the media. In doing so they missed out on the first leg
up of the recovery rally.

Since the mainstream news media can only echo the dominant themes of the past
6-12 months, there was zero chance it could have prepared investors to look
ahead at the tremendous opportunities for profit in 2009. The media doesn't
understand cycles, so there is no way it could have discussed the positive
implications of the 6-year and 10-year cycles in 2009. Even the most basic
analysis of the yearly cycles could have saved investors from missing out on
the first half of the 2009 recovery rally. For instance, by going back and
looking at all the previous instances where the 10-year cycle peaked while
the 6-year cycle was rising, you can see that those years always resulted in
a winning performance for the stock market. By taking the 6-year cycle alone
and incrementally back tracking the previous six years from 2009 we can see
that the years 2003, 1997, 1991, 1985 and 1979 were all positive years for
the market.
Another place where the media misguided investors was in the commodities market.
With the positive divergence in the XAU Gold Silver Index visible last fall,
the signs were clear and obvious that insiders were accumulating base and precious
metals mining stocks for the anticipated global economic recovery in 2009.
Once again, investors chose to ignore the message of the tape (which doesn't
lie) and instead turned to the fear-drenched fulminations of the media.

There
are signs beginning to appear, however, that the media are slowly, grudgingly
considering the possibility that maybe, just maybe, last year's financial storm
is over and better days lie ahead. One example of this can be found on the
latest cover of Future magazine. It shows the faint outline of a bull emerging
from a thick fog with the headline, "It Might Be, It Could Be, Is It?"
This is the epitome of the prevailing attitude to the recovery. After nearly
a 50 percent recovery already (massive by historical standards), only now is
the question asked if this is the start of a cyclical bull market. (The media
have always used as its definition of a bear market a greater than 20 percent
drop in the SPX, so wouldn't a greater than 20 percent rally constitute a bull
market by that same definition?) But the begrudging turning away from its super
pessimistic outlook is obviously going to take some time. In the upper portion
of that same magazine you'll see another headline which reads, "Riding the
bear." Clearly the media aren't ready to throw in the towel on their stubborn
pessimism despite signs of recovery appearing everywhere.
As for those investors who don't want to miss out on the rest of this year's
recovery, it would do well to remember an old adage: newspaper is best used
for wrapping fish. It's not for making important financial decisions.
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