The most read article on Bloomberg News yesterday:
Merrill’s
David Rosenberg drew on inspiration from market-rules theorist Robert Farrell and asset-bubble historian Charles Kindleberger to predict the economy’s demise this year.
Rosenberg, the chief North American economist at Merrill Lynch & Co. in
‘Key Metric’ It all came down to the premise that the downturn in housing was going to have a lagged and severe impact on everything from economic growth to interest-rate spreads and stocks. Personal savings,
That’s where Rosenberg differed from the majority in his profession, who he said were using terms like “contained” to describe the impact of the subprime mortgage crisis, or “resilient” when talking about consumer spending, which had risen for a record 17 years. “You have to have your models, but you have to question the results,”
Farrell’s Rules
Farrell developed his “10 Market Rules” during a 25-year stint as chief strategist at Merrill until 1992. He won Institutional Investor magazine’s award for overall stock market direction in 16 of 17 years, according to a Dec. 19, 1992, New York Times article. Rules one through four, which include the belief that markets always return to long-run averages and excesses in one direction are invariably followed by excesses in the opposite direction, are applicable to this decade’s housing cycle, Rosenberg said. Farrell’s rules “were a compass in terms of guiding me through the past three years,” said Rosenberg, who joined Merrill in 2000 and holds master’s and bachelor’s degrees in economics from the
Kindleberger’s Manias
Kindleberger, the late economic historian who taught for 33 years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is famed for his 1978 book “Manias, Panics and Crashes.” The work traced four centuries of boom-and-bust cycles, bringing to light a 17th century frenzy over Dutch tulips that sent investors offering land, houses, farm animals and gold in return for choice bulbs. The severity of today’s housing bust, and the resulting collapse in credit, indicate that the
Treasuries Rally
Still, none of the group predicted the panic buying that drove yields to 2.04 percent this month, the lowest level since daily records began in 1962. Three-month T-bill rates turned negative this month as some investors in effect paid the government to keep their money.
For his part,
10 Market Rules to Remember - Bob Farrell
1. Markets tend to return to the mean over time.
2. Excesses in one direction will lead to an opposite excess in the other direction
3. There are no new eras - excesses are never permanent.
4. Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you think, but they do not correct by going sideways.
5. The public buys the most at the top and the least at the bottom.
6. Fear and greed are stronger than long-term resolve.
7. Markets are strongest when they are broad and weakest when they narrow to a handful of blue chip names.
8. Bear markets have three stages - sharp down - reflexive rebound - a drawn-out fundamental downtrend.
9. When all the experts and forecasts agree - something else is going to happen.
10 Bull markets are more fun than bear markets
- Bob Farrell was MER's Market Strategist for 40 years achieving almost legendary status. He is now retired but continues to opine on the markets.
My Personal Extrapolation: Rule 8, Bear markets have three stages - sharp down - reflexive rebound - a drawn-out fundamental downtrend, to me, was the most important rule throughout '08 where investors were continually tempted to buy the bear-market-equity-rallies. I believe '09 might best be characterized by Rule 4: Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you think, but they do not correct by going sideways.
The S&P 500 is up 19% from the November 20th lows and looks poised to rally into early '09. As employment, corporate earnings, and global GDP continue to deteriorate throughout most of next year, I would expect the major indices to give back everything they have recently gained, breaking through the previously set lows. One must not forget that corporations, individuals, countries, and municipalities still have significant debt burdens, accumulated throughout this entire credit expansion. This debt must be addressed before a full-on recovery will ensue. Excess capacity will be addressed through bankruptcy and further consolidation.
The cash currently on the sidelines will be invested in Distressed, HY & IG Credit during the first few months of '09 as these markets have done a better job pricing-in this recession.
Equity markets will follow the credit markets as so often is the case. All of this will take time.
The silver-lining might just be that the beginning stages of a recovery will occur at some point in late late '09? Might '09 be earmarked as a recovery year? Time will tell.