Equities are volatile but don't forget the positives
Comment of the Day

June 24 2010

Commentary by David Fuller

Equities are volatile but don't forget the positives

This is an interesting column (may require registration so also in PDF) by Chris Watling of Longview Economics for the Financial Times. Here is the opening
Equity markets are driven by investor psychology and, occasionally, shocks over one- to three-month time horizons. In late April, measures of investor exuberance indicated that a wave of risk aversion was likely and imminent. By late May, sentiment, risk appetite and other similar indicators had swung to the opposite extreme, signalling a high likelihood of a rally in risk. Immediately before the sell-off, investors priced risk exuberantly. At the end of it, risk was priced fearfully. To quote Warren Buffett: "We should be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when they are fearful."

In the long term, however, investor psychology is of little help. The long-term direction of equity markets is driven by the outlook for the economic cycle. Bear markets anticipate and price in economic contractions. Bull markets anticipate and price in economic recoveries and growth phases. Within those bull markets, however, three distinct phases tend to occur. Initially, as equity markets begin to sense that the bad news is priced in and that a recovery is on the horizon, then phase one in a cyclical bull market begins. This phase typically accounts for 40 per cent of the entire cyclical bull market, with a historical median duration of 11 months. It is the rally we witnessed in 2009, 2003, 1991 to the end of 1993 and, indeed, after every US recession since 1970. Phase two of a cyclical bull market begins as markets start to anticipate the beginning of a monetary tightening cycle. Historically, this has been signalled by the start of a sustained rise in one- and two-year bond yields. In this cycle, phase two has been ushered in by a slowing and then an ending to quantitative easing, the current outer limit of monetary policy.

Phase two lasts, on average, 11.4 months and results in an average fall in global equities of 7 per cent. That downward trend, however, is not to be confused with a renewed bear market, because it is simply a consolidation of the rapid gains from phase one. It is also accompanied by notable volatility; 5 to 15 per cent swings up and down over the course of those 11 months. Once phase two draws to a close, then phase three, the remainder of the cyclical bull market begins, if investors are convinced that the global economy is able to absorb anticipated rate rises and if the cycle is thought to have traction. Phase three can last as long as five to six years (as in the 1990s) or merely one to two years (as in the second half of the 1970s). How long it lasts is dictated by the longevity of the economic cycle.

David Fuller's view This column is an interesting follow on from yesterday's posting of Robin Griffiths' latest report. Griffiths is more bearish but both expect a summer rally, followed by a deeper correction. However, if this becomes a consensus view more people will be tempted to sell now rather than later, which could change the script.

Watch Wall Street, because of its leash effect, and the S&P 500 Index in particular. Currently, it is in retreat following Monday's downside key day reversal. Sentiment would deteriorate further on a break beneath the recent lows near 1040. A close above Monday's high is required to offset this risk.

I expect further volatility over the next few weeks but would not be surprised to see stock markets higher before yearend. Consequently I regard any further near-term weakness as a buying opportunity.

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