Market Direction: BULLISH alert
issued 2/15/2018
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Remember Irrational Exuberance...
The
timing was exquisitely ironic: equity markets peaked — and a week later began
crashing — just as pundits left this year’s World Economic Forum meeting in
Davos, where they concluded that the global economy was on a steady upswing. In
the weeks since, experts have divided into two camps.
Some,
including new Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell, believe that
economic fundamentals are strong, and that what stock
markets experienced in early February was only a temporary hiccup. In this
view, there is nothing keeping major central banks from carrying out “beautiful” (that is, gradual
and painless) monetary-policy “normalization.”
Then
there are those who believe that fundamentals are, in fact, weak, that the current
upswing will prove unsustainable, and that investors should regard stock-market
gyrations as a necessary wakeup call. If
so, the challenge for monetary and fiscal authorities is not to “normalize”
policies but to develop new tools to fight the slowdown that will come, sooner
or later.
Both
schools of thought share a focus on fundamentals, unlike a third — and, in my
opinion, highly plausible — view: that the asset-price volatility we have been
seeing has little or nothing to do with changes in fundamentals.
Jerome Powell: Economic Outlook Has Improved Since
December
Fundamentalists
claim that faster year-on-year growth in U.S. average hourly earnings was the immediate
trigger for the crash. But the claim that such a slight change — from 2.7% in
December to 2.9% in January (which observers view as an aberration, caused by
seasonal factors) — could trigger a stock-market correction is in itself a
strike against the fundamentalist view.
Moreover,
whereas the wage growth in question was supposed to be a harbinger of
inflation, 10-year break-even inflation moved down, not up,
during the recent episode. And, as Anatole Kaletsky has stressed, 10-year
Treasury yields did not break the 3% ceiling, while exchange rates hardly
moved, all of which suggests that rumors of inflation have been greatly
exaggerated.
The
human brain is wired to structure knowledge around narratives in which we can
tell if and how A (and B and C) causes X. We tend to be uncomfortable with the
notion that an economy’s fundamentals do not determine its asset prices, so we
look for causal links between the two. But needing or wanting those links does
not make them valid or true.
The
idea that asset-price movements can be unrelated to fundamentals is not strange
to students of economic theory.
After
all, there are two reasons to hold an equity claim: because it will pay a
dividend or because its price is expected to go up. Price movements (the
expected capital gain) can drive buying and selling decisions even in the
absence of changes to expected dividends (the fundamentals).
In
other words, it is perfectly rational to pursue a “keep buying because the
price will keep rising” strategy — until it is not.
But
when will that be? When will the bubble burst? Economic theory is silent on the
matter. Or, at best, theorists can wave their hands about an exogenous (read:
unexplained) shock to expectations. Bubbles can persist for decades (think of
real-estate prices in fashionable cities) or just minutes (as in
hard-to-justify intraday fluctuations).
The
only sure thing, John Maynard Keynes is supposed to have claimed, is that the
market can remain misaligned much longer than you or I can remain solvent.
The
widespread use of machine-driven trading is likely making all of this worse.
The algorithms used vary, and are becoming much more complex. But, to the
extent that they contain a stop-loss element — and they often do — they will
cause bouts of selling into declining markets, and that in turn will amplify volatility.
It
is not just nerdy professors who are skeptical on the importance of fundamentals.
The Financial Times reports the rise of a new breed of oil trader who is “not
necessarily reacting to news about supply and demand or utterances from
Riyadh.” Instead, he or she trades “based on moves in currencies, interest
rates, or the price of oil itself.” Ready for an oil price bubble, anyone?
There
might already be a huge one in the U.S. stock market.
On
Jan. 23, just a few days before equities crashed, Robert Shiller reminded us that the U.S. had the
world’s priciest stock market, with the highest cyclically adjusted
price-earnings (CAPE) ratio of 26 stock markets for which there are comparable
measures. Shiller pointed to the common practice of share repurchases as one
possible explanation, but then concluded that, “it is impossible to pin down
the full cause of the high price of the U.S. stock market.”
So
if the price of a financial asset is not guided — at least for some periods —
by fundamentals, where does that leave central banks? I believe it leaves them
between a rock and a hard place.
On
one hand, central banks cannot be so relaxed that they will permit asset prices
to go anywhere as a result of self-fulfilling expectations. Sometimes, they
must step in to change expectations, as Mario Draghi, the European Central
Bank’s president, did in July 2012, when he announced that the ECB would do “whatever it takes” to defend
the euro (and the prices of eurozone government bonds).
On
the other hand, central banks are not in the business of controlling asset
prices. When they venture in that direction, they get into trouble, as
experience with fixed-but-adjustable exchange rates makes abundantly clear. A
little volatility is a good thing, both to discourage speculative capital flows
and to put the fear of God into investors looking for the next
Greenspan-Bernanke put.
Where
should the line be drawn? When does a little “good” volatility turn into
excessive “bad” volatility? These are difficult questions, and the answers can
only be time- and context-specific.
A
final disclaimer: believing that fundamentals do not always pin down asset
prices is not the same as believing they are irrelevant, much less that current
U.S. fundamentals are in good shape.
An
additional fiscal stimulus at a time of near-full employment and large public
debt is exactly what the doctor did not order. Precisely because of all the
offsetting factors, the Congress Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the recent tax cuts will add just 0.08
percentage points to the average annual growth rate over the next
decade, and the long-run output effects could be smaller or even negative.
Yet
the U.S. business community remains gung-ho on the reform. So it is possible
that conservative American business executives will invest more not because the
tax cut will improve the fundamentals of the U.S. economy and increase demand
for their products, but just because they believe it will.
Now,
that, too, would be an exquisite irony.
Andrés
Velasco, a former presidential candidate and finance minister of Chile, is the
author of numerous books and papers on international economics and development.
He has served on the faculty at Harvard, Columbia, and New York universities.
This
article was published with permission of Project
Syndicate — Rational Irrational Exuberance?
The all-time highs since our initial
recommendation to go LONG
this market. Here is how the markets have performed:
Stock Market
Direction Recommendation (2/15/2018)
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Dow
|
up 599.98 points a 2.38% gain
|
2/27/18
|
Nasdaq
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up 181.66 points a 2.50% gain
|
2/27/18
|
S&P 500
|
up 57.95 points a 2.12% gain
|
2/27/18
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Related Link: http://www.stockmarket-direction.com/

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