Enjoy It While It Lasts
Thursday, November 18th, 2004
By Michael Lombardi, MBA for Profit Confidential
Big-cap stocks are rising again… and you should enjoy the trend while it continues, since I don’t expect the trend in big- cap stock prices to result in a new bull market. Strong markets often represent good times to sell, and my dear friend, that’s something you should consider.
We’re obviously dealing with two types of market interpretations. I unfortunately fall in the smaller of the two groups. What am I talking about?
The majority of investors believe the bear market in stocks, which began in 1999, ended in 2002. The smaller camp, the much smaller camp, of which I am a part, believes the 1999-to- 2000 bear market was simply the first leg in a long-term bear market. And it’s still not over.
Here are some points I’d like you to keep in mind:
– Bear markets are usually at least half as long in duration as the bull markets that precede them. It’s now generally believed that a bull market started in stocks in 1974 and ended in 1999. I wouldn’t be surprised to see that 25-year bull market followed by at least a 12-year bear market, at the minimum. Remember, the bear market that started in the mid-1960s ended in 1974, about 10 years later.
– Long-term bull markets usually start when stocks are a bargain (fear) and end when stocks are severely overpriced (greed). The bull market started in 1974, when stocks were trading at well below 10 times earnings and at about a 5% dividend yield, and ended in 1999, when stocks were trading at over 25 times earnings and at a dividend yield below 2%. Today, stocks are still trading at over 20 times earnings. Stocks never became a bargain!
– The Fed’s low-interest rate policy has kept everyone artificially happy. In my personal life, I’ve never before seen such manipulation as I see today by the Fed in the market. I believe the Fed is obsessed with the stock market. Why? Because the stock market sets the moods for consumers. If the stock market continues to rise, consumers feel good about their retirement savings and they continue to spend into the economy. Naturally, if consumers become concerned about their retirement, they contract their general spending patterns. It’s human nature.
– The remainder of the world is catching on to the devaluation plan of the U.S. for its currency, as well as the general worthlessness of the U.S. dollar. (This explains the run-up in gold prices.) Regrettably, we need foreigners, namely Asian countries, to buy our bonds to keep us afloat. I believe there will be a point when our currency is no longer attractive to foreigners. Does that mean the Fed will have to spike interest rates at some point to stop a collapse in our currency? Maybe.
Simply, I believe you should enjoy the run-up in big-cap stocks now while it lasts. Consider selling into the strong market too, because, over the long term, I don’t see this situation ending prettily.
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Tags: bear market, bull market, gold, U.S. dollar
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Michael bought his first stock when he was 17 years old. He quickly saw $2,000 of savings from summer jobs turn into $1,000. Determined not to lose money again on a stock, Michael started researching the market intensely, reading every book he could find on the topic and taking every course he could afford. It didn’t take long for Michael to start making money with stocks, and that led Michael to launch a newsletter on the stock market. Today, Michael only employs the top market analysts and editors. Some of our recommendations have posted gains in excess of 500%! Michael has authored and published over one thousand articles on investment and money management. Along the way to building Lombardi Publishing Corporation, now with over one million customers in 141 countries, Michael became an active investor in real estate, art, precious metals and various businesses. Readers of the daily Profit Confidential e-letter are offered the benefit of the expertise Michael has gained in these sectors. Michael believes in successful stock picking as an important wealth accumulation tool. Married with two children, Michael received his Chartered Financial Planner designation from the Financial Planners Standards Council of Canada and his MBA from the Graduate Business School, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, Scotland.Follow Michael and the latest from Profit Confidential on TwitterTweet
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