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It's gotten mighty lonely in the bear camp and the bulls have certainly had
their way with the bears since the March 2009 lows. It has been a rally for
the ages and the subsequent pending drop will also have this distinction. In
looking through a long-term chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, I found
an encouraging fractal pattern for the current bear market rally. Markets
don't repeat precisely, but they do rhyme.
The number of people calling for a new bull market, saying the recovery is
upon us and saying that the stock market "sees" a future recovery and is discounting
it is funny to me. Funny in a sad way, because I know what comes next and how
upset many retail investors are going to be in a few short months. I have taken
my licks and learned a lot about trading bear market rallies over the past
few months, to be sure. Mr. Market never fails to humble.
But to say that this bear market is over is ridiculous in my opinion. Granted,
when trading short term it really doesn't matter whether we are in a bull or
bear market, it matters if you get the short-term trend right and trade it
effectively. But there is a longer-term investment horizon that is of great
concern to me as well, which is why I made the decision to buy physical Gold
and sit this one out with a large portion of my savings.
Until the Dow
to Gold ratio is back to 2 or less, general stocks are a TERRIBLE longer
term investment. Though this ratio has come a long way since its peak in
the 40s around the turn of the century, it has a long ways to go with the
current ratio sitting around 10. In other words, if one ignores the intermediate-term
swings, those who hold physical Gold will be able to buy 5-20 times the number
of stocks (using the Dow as a proxy) in a few short years relative to today,
using the rational assumption that the Dow to Gold ratio will bottom between
0.5 and 2.
I choose Gold over fiat currencies because it is stable and predictable, unlike
the actions of governments and the apparatchiks who run them. Those who think
Gold is no longer money will change their minds over the next decade, when
Gold is used to re-liquefy the system and restore the confidence lost due to
over-subscribed and over-issued hollow paper promises. It's Gold versus paper
and Gold will win during this business cycle (paper won the 1980-2000 cycle
and Gold will win in the 2000-(?)2015(?) cycle).
Anyhoo, back to the fractal pattern in the Dow. We need only turn to the last
cyclical bear market from the early 2000s to get a similar appearance of a
bear market rally. Here it is in context, using a 12 year weekly log scale
chart:

As a close-up, here's the daily chart of the action in the Dow during the
2001-2002 time up to the day of the high for this bear market rally:

And here's a current 1 year daily chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average:

And, of course, the obligatory chart of what came next back in 2002 on a daily
chart:

I, for one, don't intend to lose the forest through the trees here. Just as
bear market rallies are fast and furious, so are the subsequent declines. You
don't start new bull markets with trailing 12 month PE ratios over 120 during
the middle of a housing market crash and banking system collapse (and no, neither
one of these trends is close to being over). Even general stock puts and shorts
initiated at the June highs with an eye towards the long term will look good
6 months from now.
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