Recent Weakness in Equities, Commodities Is a Buying Opportunity 5 comments
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A few weeks ago we read an article on SeekingAlpha titled “The Most Hated Rally in History” or at least words to the effect. That headline sums up everything about the rally in equities since its lows of March. Few genuinely want to believe that perhaps we are in the midst of a bull rally that will extend well into next year. We say “genuine” because any bulls that may have existed just two weeks ago have all but disappeared. Anyone now coming out with bullish commentary on blog sites attracts the wrath of the “masses”.
In addition to this there still seems to be no shortage of so called experts making comparisons to the 1930s claiming that this is the start of the next big leg down taking the S&P to below the lows of March.
We could understand this behaviour if equity markets had already fallen by 15-20% over the last month. But the average equity (as per the Value Line Index) has only fallen by 9% since mid October. Furthermore there has been no breach of any support level of significance in equity, commodity, fixed income, and real estate markets and equally no breach of resistance by the USD Index.
Perhaps the nightmare of late last year and Feb/March this year is still to vivid in everyone’s memories and is still reflected in the prices of major market indices. Of course, time will tell.
Below are indices representing the major asset classes that we think are reasonably good proxies for the performance of each asset class. We have tried to pencil in what we think are obvious support and resistance levels. Yes we note the recent weakness but also note that markets do not move in straight lines nor are they characterized by low levels of volatility all the time. We believe that what we are currently witnessing is merely a correction of a short term overbought condition, absolutely nothing more than that.
The recent weakness in equities and commodities is a buying opportunity. Why do we get that feeling that this market is going to move much higher?
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There must be 10,000 articles written in the last 10 months on this site alone stating with absolute certainty that the DOW, S&P, and China are all in---what else?---bubble territory!
And after the current corrective wave you can expect another 10,000---keying on what word, one obviously learned well in the last few years: bubble!
Well surely, one of these days they're going to be right.
After years of predicting doom, Panzer, Roubini, Grantham, Faber, Prechter, and even old Granville stuck his head up a couple of times to yell fire, in 2008 they were finally proven, well, "right." What else?
And when the DOW was around 6500 they called for 2500, 3000, or 3500; and now that it's up 3000 points every tiny pull back is another bursting bubble, another crash on its way.
Hell, if they were to be right, who could trust their predictions but the ever-ultra, perma-cynic?
I advise young folks who are new to investing not to listen to predictions of doom or bloom, but to find worthwhile companies, with strong balance sheets, essential products, proven management, with strong future earnings potential, that will have a better than average chance of surviving the doom and taking advantage of the bloom.
That is how you get ahead investing in stocks---not concerning yourself with predictions of either doom or gloom.
Then the last month the market seemed to catch a cold, stopping going up and started to move sideways, volatility increased, volume increased on down days, serious swings from one day to the next, bad news on Monday is then good news on Tuesday, main street investor no where to be found, happy sitting on cash.
With all the talk about how strong this market is, many ask, is it really, for every + found there is an equal and or more onerous -, then you have the untenable spending, pending increases in taxes, costly legislation as well as everything else and there are serious concerns that this will bring down the economy in a W, it appears the markets will leave that fight for another day and make money while the sun shines, but that doesn't change reality and thats the concern
I agree with you, but in reality predicting what's going to happen in the market or market timing in general is very difficult.
If in 98' and 99' you were predicting a stock market crash due to over priced tech stocks but it never came... would you be wrong?
Predicting the market isn't just about predicting companies, it's about predicting expectations and people's view of this company.
You might have been sure during the tech bubble that Joe Public starting Pets.com with a 400 PE ratio was destined to fail, but as long as people believed in the power of the internet to transform Pets.com... you'd be shouting to deaf ears.
I'd also agree with the author, this is certainly a most hated rally.