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Sunday, October 11, 2009
Dear Speculators,
The following article was originally published at The
Agile Trader (www.theagiletrader.com)
on Monday, October 12, 2009. If you would like a free one-month trial
to our twice-daily service, please click HERE and
then click the red "subscribe" link at left.
Since at least 1962 the SPX has tended to move in a cyclical pattern of roughly
4 years in duration, with important cyclical lows arriving very close to once
per cycle. This first chart shows the SPX, looking back to 1962, on a log scale,
with vertical dashed lines showing up every 1,008 trading days, which is very
close to once every 4 years.

The cyclical lows, corresponding to the blue dashed lines, were pronounced
and obvious for about the first 20 years on this chart, until 1982. The lows
were still significant but somewhat less obvious and a bit distorted at times
in '86, '90, and '94. Then, in 1998 and 2002 those cyclical lows were again
very pronounced and obvious. Finally, in 2006 the low arrived about 3 months
early, in July rather than October, but the market did take off and rally for
about a year, forming a double top in July-October '07. But, since that '07
top the market has collapsed, into the March '09 low, and then rebounded sharply,
retracing almost half of the '07-'09 decline.
So, where do we stand now in terms of the 4-yr cycle?
In my view, the massive money-pumping operations that have been in place more
or less since 9/11, and most impressively since the collapses of Bear and Lehman,
have probably distorted the waves of the 4-yr cycle, if not permanently, then
at least by throwing a giant "hiccough" into the equation.
Following the 4-yr cycle low in July '06 we would normally have expected the
SPX to rally for an average of about 26 months (just a bit over 2 years) before
flattening, topping out, and then forming another cyclical low about 4 years
after the prior low (in this case around July-October 2010). But the top came
a full year early, in mid-'07. And in the context of the roughly 50% decline
on the SPX from October '07 into March '09, my working assumption is that a
new, seasonally off-kilter 4-yr cycle bottom (in March rather in than in the
July-October period) was formed around the March '09 SPX low.
Our next chart shows the median (blue line) and average performance (purple
line) of the SPX following its 4-yr cycle lows, using our look-back period
to 1962. The median and average performance lines are accompanied by the 1-standard
deviation (1SD) envelope (-1SD and +1SD, grey lines).

There are several interesting features on this chart:
- The steepest part of the average and median cyclical rally (A) lasts about
150 trading days, averaging about a 25% advance over approximately 7 months.
- The 2nd phase (B), tends to be a stair-step affair, advancing to about
the +44% area (adding a 19% gain relative to the cyclical low) over the ensuing
1 ½ years (until the yellow highlight on the chart). At that point,
the 1SD envelope has narrowed considerably, indicating that there tends to
be a relatively small variation from the average performance, with about
68% of all cases falling within 10% of that average. So, a "normal" cyclical
rally involves a gain of between 34% and 54% in a period of just over 2 years.
- Subsequent to the end of phase B, average performance flattens out, with
the 1SD envelope now beginning to widen. The variation in performance following
this 26-month mark now begins to increase during phase C. The probabilities
now increase that there will be a cyclical bear market.
- Following phase C, in phase D, there is a brief period when the 1SD envelope
expands sharply. During this phase (D), the odds of a very sharp market decline
(a climactic bear move) are the highest).
OK, having studied the average and median performances, with their 1SD (normal)
envelopes, let's zoom in to look at just the first 2 years and include the
current SPX performance off its March 9 low.

The March-October '09 rally of +58% is outside the 1SD envelope by about 18
percentage points, and is, in fact, outside what would be the 2SD envelope,
meaning that, statistically speaking, it should happen less than 1 in 20 times
(in this case, in less than 1 in 20 4-yr cycle lows, or less than once every
80 years. -- Gee, that sounds about right when conceived in the context of
the Great Depression, which is often thought of as having been inaugurated
with the Crash of '29, 80 years ago this month).
Now, to get a more specific sense of the flavor of these cyclical bull markets,
let's take a look at a chart that examines the first 2 years of each cycle,
as the market has rallied off its cyclical lows.

This chart is a bit noisy, but we can see some more interesting features.
Only one rally off a cyclical low in the past 47 years has even come close
to the magnitude of the current one: that was in 1974, following Nixon's resignation.
That rally lasted about 193 trading days (just over 9 months) and took the
index up about 53% from its low. (That's 5 percentage points less than the
gains made during the current rally.)
Assuming that our working model for the market's 4-year cycle is correct,
and that a new cyclical bull was launched in March '09, the first phase (phase
A) of that rally is likely to either be complete or very close to it. And we
would appear to be ripe to be entering phase B of the rally, a choppier, shallower
uptrend that may last 16-18 more months, or until roughly the spring of 2011.
But let us add this caveat: the SPX's March - October rally has carried the
index up as far off the March low as the market rises on average over the first
3 years of a 4-year cycle. So, it is possible that the upside targets for the
entire cyclical bull market have been achieved. More likely, the extremity
of the cyclical bear market (from October '07 to March '09) has set the market
up for this 7-month rally of unprecedented size, and there is still some more
upside to be found over the next 16-24 months. But, we should keep our eyes
open to the possibility that the size and steep slope of the current rally
may have created a condition of market exhaustion.
When determining whether a market is exhausted or not it's important to gauge
sentiment. One new-ish sentiment gauge that I've just recently run across is
the National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) Survey (brought
to my attention via Jason Goepfert's work at Sentimentrader.com). The NAAIM
asks active investment managers whether they are bullish or bearish on the
market. They can answer by saying they are anywhere from 200% short the market
(leveraged) to 200% long the market, and their scores are averaged. In the
history of this survey, the average answer has ranged from a high of 96 in
January '07 down to a low of -3 in October '08. When this indicator is at a
high level, bullishness is pervasive (and may be overdone). When this indicator
is at a low level, bullishness is scarce, and the market may be near a low.

But here's the really interesting part of this survey. They measure the standard
deviation of the series of answers. When the answers are bunched in a relatively
narrow range, the standard deviation is tight, and confidence is high. When
the answers are spread out and there is little unanimity among respondents,
standard deviation is wide and confidence is low.
We measure the level of confidence (red line in the bottom pane) by subtracting
the standard deviation from 100. When the Confidence indicator is high, confidence
is high. And when the Confidence indicator is low, confidence is low.
So, what's the situation right now? We have Bullish Sentiment (green line
in middle pane) just beginning to descend from a very high level. And we have
Confidence at an extremely low level (a very wide divergence of opinions).
The only other time in the past 3 years that we've seen a configuration like
this one was on May 8, 2008 (yellow highlight in the middle of the chart),
when the SPX was forming a very important local top.
Granted, we only have a little bit more than 3 years' data on this series,
but it fits hand-in-glove with our studies of both the CBOE Equity Put/Call
Ratio moving averages (5-dma and 21-dma), which we examine frequently in our
daily work. On this chart we can see that when these contrarian indicators
are at low levels (as they are now) the market tends to top out, and when they're
at high levels the market tends to bottom. The yellow highlights on this chart
show up on the same dates as they appear on the chart above.

We've also included blue highlights on this chart to show where troughs in
the Equity PC 21-dma have correlated to short-to-mid-term tops on the SPX.
As we head into the teeth of earnings season for the stock market, it's clear
that we stand at an important crossroads. In terms of the duration of the rally
off the March lows, we have hit the 7-month mark, or 150 trading days. Statistically
this is a point at which rallies from important cyclical lows tend to flatten
their slopes and head into choppier periods. Moreover, sentiment, as measured
on our CBOE Equity Put/Call Ratio moving averages, on the NAAIM Survey, and
on the VIX (which we examine daily in the Morning Call, and is now testing
its cyclical low near 23) has become quite complacent (bearish).
On an anecdotal basis, I was listening to Bloomberg Radio in my car today
and heard a couple of pundits talking about how sentiment going into earnings
season is excessively negative. None of these disembodied talking heads mentioned
a methodology of measuring their claims. But with the consensus for forward
52-wk EPS up just 13% off its lows for the year...

and with the SPX up 58% off its lows...
...with a Price/Earnings Ratio of 26.6 on trailing operating earnings (above
the 95th percentile of all historic readings), with a P/E Ratio of 15.4 on
forward earnings (above the average of 14.8 over the past 7 years), and with
a P/E Ratio on trailing reported earnings of a whopping 120...

...and with an the consensus of analysts' estimates for the forward operating
EPS growth rate of almost 73% following the worst earnings debacle since the
Great Depression...

...it strikes me as far-fetched to describe market sentiment as negative.
Is it possible that the economy will snap back in response to a mother lode
of stimulus and recently (electronically) printed cash sitting on the sidelines,
as though nothing of significance ever really happened during the Faux Armageddon
of '08? It's possible. But, with the employment picture continuing to worsen
(the Employment/Population Ratio continues plummeting despite what jiggered
stats like monthly jobless claims and the unemployment rate may say), with
median income still declining (and consumer spending comprises about 70% of
the domestic economy), with the consumer's balance sheet only minimally if
at all repaired, with money-supply growth at about 0% over the past quarter
(we'll look at that chart again next week), and with banks continuing to decelerate
or contract their lending operations (a subject we'll discuss at more length
in the weeks ahead), I remain hard pressed to discern from whence the economy's
and the market's V-shaped recovery is supposed to derive.
It's possible that a surge of electronically manufactured liquidity may make
its usual seasonal/holiday pilgrimage into the stock market as we head toward
year-end. We'll certainly be alert for that possibility. But from everything
I can see about market sentiment and expectations, there's already an awful
lot of optimism that's been expressed since March, and the market remains overdue
to rebuild a higher wall of worry than the one that it is now trying to climb.
Note: The subject of the dollar-adjusted SPX price, its implications for inflation,
and where we stand with regard to the inflation/deflation polarity will have
to be postponed until a future edition of this missive. We ran out of room
for this week.
If you would like a free one-month trial to our twice-daily service, please
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Best regards and good trading!
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Adam Oliensis,
Editor The Agile Trader
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