On Tuesday afternoon, I was out Christmas shopping and I heard Jeff Macke (spelling?) make a comment to the effect he sold a lot of stock as a result of the first bit of Fed news. Gartman on Wednesday stated the he thinks the rest of the year will be down and that he has lost […]
On Tuesday afternoon, I was out Christmas shopping and I heard Jeff Macke (spelling?) make a comment to the effect he sold a lot of stock as a result of the first bit of Fed news.
Gartman on Wednesday stated the he thinks the rest of the year will be down and that he has lost all faith in Bernanke and thinks he should go.
I’ve been clear for many months that I thought that this market cycle was close to ending and that in fact a bear market has started.
My thought of course should have no bearing on you and your portfolio. The context here’s if you think a bear market or big decline is coming…
I’ve outlined the general tact I’ve taken, and why, in past posts. As a matter or normal cyclicality, volatility increases at the end. For anyone interested in trying to avoid some portion of down a lot it makes sense to reduce volatility a little if the chance of it being late cycle is high.
In looking at the chart there are of course different conclusions that can be drawn. I believe the green line will turn out to be the most important but whether that’s true or not I don’t believe anything changed this week with the Fed news. Bear markets turn slowly, as I’ve been saying, they do not start with one news item like the Fed did X. The Fed could make things worse however.
Financials have been in trouble for months now and as I have been saying I anticipate more to come. A stock market is very unlikely to do well without its largest sector. This entire event from the first yield curve inversion through to the present day has been very textbook. Here I’m speaking about the effect of the crisis as opposed to the details that created the crisis.
The news of the week is simply a part of the equation that either the Fed is behind the curve or there’s no real action to solve this other than time. We know that if nothing else time will solve it, we don’t know how much time (at least I don’t) it will take.
The path I chose (and wrote about) was simple and relied on this time not being different. Inverted yield curve equals trouble for financials and probably for the rest of the market. Anticipating trouble meant trying to avoid the full impact of a normal decline.
Looking ahead there is no way to know (we may look back and point to a certain date) whether in fact a bear market has started or whether any action taken to cushion the blow will work if it is a bear but bear markets do come along each now and then and the way they begin is pretty similar to what is going on now. I may be adding 1+1 and getting eleven or I may be right but I can build a good case personally that says some defense here makes sense. So far this path has worked very well and we’ll see about the future.











Entries (RSS)