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Curse Of The Trading Range 3
Propelled by the recent massive spikes in the metals as well
as the persistently strong energy prices, the 2006 markets have been very much
dominated by commodities.
Contrarian investors and speculators have naturally gravitated towards
these hot commodities markets to ride the early second stage of this global
raw-materials boom.
While we are being blessed with huge profits in elite
commodities stocks, the progress of the general stock markets never ventures
too far from the contrarian mind.
Back in the early 2000s before this great commodities bull launched,
many of the same speculators trading commodities stocks today were short the general stock
markets. I am part of this crowd
too and think it is always important to keep an eye on stocks.
And from a contrarian perspective, May has been one of the
most interesting general-stock episodes of the past several years. After powering higher relentlessly since
October, by May 10th the mighty Dow 30 had come within striking distance of
achieving a new all-time nominal high.
In January 2000 the Dow had closed at 11723, so it is not surprising the
bulls were really excited a couple weeks ago to see an 11643 close.
But before old record levels could be exceeded, the Dow 30
started falling rather rapidly, down 4.7% in just 9 trading days. With the Dow’s market
capitalization near $3.8t, such a fast decline is not a trivial event since it
erases around $180b of equity. While such sharp pullbacks are not particularly rare, I can quickly
count about 8 more of them on the Dow chart in the last several years, they do
tend to spawn widespread reflection.
The US
stock markets have been generally either powering or grinding higher since
March 2003, when the war rally launched the day Washington
started bombing Baghdad. What was initially a sharp relief surge
has blossomed into a full-blown cyclical bull market since. While very profitable for those who have
been long, the recent sharp decline is causing growing concerns about what is
likely to come next.
Since investors are far more likely to consider
controversial market theses after a fast decline shakes their confidence,
I’d like to revisit the contrarian view of the US stock markets. Even though the Dow 30 is up a very
impressive 55% since March 2003, like most contrarian students of market
history I believe we are actually languishing in a secular bear market today.
Hogwash you say? Perhaps,
but please read on.
Stock markets move in great cycles throughout history. Sometimes stocks are universally loved
as in early 2000 while at other times they are universally loathed as in
1982. These cycles are
extraordinarily important for long-term stock investors to understand. They are most readily evident when
viewing the stock markets in valuation terms, how much investors are paying for
stocks relative to those stocks’ underlying earnings power.
When investors are discouraged about stocks as they were in
the early 1980s, stocks fall to very low levels relative to the earnings they
can spin off. The general stock
markets typically have a price-to-earnings ratio near 7.0x at these major
secular bottoms. Conversely when
investors grow euphoric about stocks as in the late 1990s, they can rapidly bid
up market P/Es above 28x earnings.
This slowly oscillating psychology dynamic creates the great cycles dominating
market history.
Never much for fancy academic titles, I call these long
valuation waves simply Long Valuation Waves. An entire valuation wave generally runs
for a third of a century or so. So
about every 33 to 34 years, stocks can move from undervalued to overvalued and
back again or vice versa. Each one
of these waves can be split in half too, yielding 17-year great bull markets as
we saw from 1982 to 2000 and their subsequent 17-year great bears.
Now if you are a stock investor and you haven’t yet
studied Long Valuation Waves, you are putting yourself at an almost
insurmountable disadvantage relative to someone who has. If this concept isn’t familiar to
you, I strongly urge you to read an overview essay on this crucial topic I
wrote last August called “Long Valuation Waves 2”. Out of all my voluminous research work, I believe this is
easily the single most important topic for investors to understand and
internalize.
Like great ocean waves, valuation waves run
sequentially. After a valuation
trough, like 1982, the main valuation wave starts sweeping into shore over the
next 17 years or so and ultimately drives stock prices to very high levels
relative to their earnings, the valuation crest like we saw in early 2000. But after this valuation crest passes,
the valuation wave continues on and valuations relentlessly fall for 17 years
or so down its backface until the next valuation trough. It is these receding valuation waves
that create secular bear markets.
If we are indeed in a receding valuation wave, then stock
investors are facing another decade or so of declining valuations and
flat-to-declining stock prices. A decade! Since the average person’s useful
investing life is probably only about 40 years from initial investments to
retirement and investment drawdown, the consequences of a long-term flat-to-declining
stock market are staggering.
Investors with only a decade or so left before retirement will not have
a chance to recover from another decade-long grind.
While the Long Valuation Waves are indisputably real, the
important question today is determining where we are currently likely at in
these great third-of-a-century cycles.
Our two charts this week, updated from earlier iterations of this
line of research, make a crystal-clear case of where we are right now in
valuation wave terms. The first
compares the last two now legendary great bulls while the second compares the
market action since 2000 with the last brutal great bear.
The latest great bull run from 1982 to 2000 is legendary and
remains well known by the vast majority of today’s stock investors since
they lived through it. But only a
few old timers and students of the markets remember the nearly equally mighty
great bull that preceded it, from 1949 to 1966. In this chart both axes are zeroed so
the true magnitude of each great bull is readily apparent and not
distorted. These great bulls were
twins in many regards.
Over the course of each great bull, Dow 30 P/E ratios and
dividend yields are noted at key technical points. In P/E ratio terms, 14x earnings is the
average historical fair value for stock markets. The reciprocal of 14x earnings is a 7.1%
earnings yield. 7% is a fair level
for both sides of a capital transaction.
It is reasonable for savers to earn 7% to lend the capital they
haven’t consumed and borrowers to pay 7% to borrow the capital they
haven’t earned.
14x earnings is the long-term average clearing price for
capital transactions in the stock markets.
One half these fair-value levels, or 7x earnings, is the general level
witnessed during Long Valuation Wave troughs when stocks are dirt cheap and
likely to rise tremendously in the coming 17 years. Twice fair-value levels, or 28x earnings
and higher, is the general level witnessed during Long Valuation Wave crests
when stocks are likely to languish in the coming 17 years.
The single most critical factor for long-term investment
success in the stock markets is not which stocks you pick, but where the
markets happen to be in their latest Long Valuation Wave when you commit your
capital. If you buy at a valuation
trough you won’t have to do anything because the valuation wave washing
in will lift virtually all stocks.
But if you instead buy at a valuation crest, the same buy-and-hold
strategy will lead to no nominal gains and considerable inflation-adjusted losses. Valuation timing is everything for investment.
So where are we today in Long Valuation Wave terms? I think the best way to discern this is
to view our last two great stock bulls superimposed. As you can see above, stocks were cheap
in both 1949 and 1982, the last two major valuation wave troughs. In both cases valuations were down near
7x earnings and dividend yields were high, over 6%. Over the next 17 years in each case,
stocks climbed relentlessly on balance driving P/E ratios much higher and
dividend yields much lower.
By 1966 the Dow 30 was trading at 24.1x earnings and only
yielding 2.9% in dividends, the highest valuations it had seen since the late
summer of 1929. At the time
investors were euphoric though, believing they were traveling in a brave New
Era where valuation no longer mattered.
The market darling stocks at the time were the “Nifty 50”,
they were giant American companies with consistent earnings growth and high P/E
ratios. This should sound familiar
because the market darling stocks in the late 1990s had very similar
attributes.
But all great bulls must come to an end, and without warning
in early 1966 the Long Valuation Wave crest was reached and the long 17-year
journey began down the other side of this wave to its trough. While the Dow fell initially investors
were not worried, just as they weren’t in the early 2000s, because they
figured that “This Time It Is Different”. These are the five most dangerous words
an investor can ever utter and they have cost investors trillions of dollars of
capital in just the past half century alone.
While our next chart gets into the resulting great bear starting
after the 1966 valuation wave crest, first carefully ponder the uncanny
similarities between the last two great bulls. By early 2000 the Dow 30 was trading at
44.7x earnings and yielding just 1.0% in dividends, its highest valuations by
far in history. Even back in 1929
on the eve of the Great Crash the general-stock-market valuation was
“only” running 32.6x.
Our latest valuation crest drove the markets to the highest valuation
extremes they had seen in at least a century, and probably ever.
While the 1960s great bull was up roughly 10x, from around
100 to 1000 over 17 years, the 1990s great bull handily exceeded these
gains. It was up about 15x in
nominal terms from 1982 to 2000, a stupendous
bull run by any standards. As you
ponder these statistical similarities, carefully examine the chart above as
well. In pure price-pattern terms
the last two great bulls had a great deal in common in their ascents. In both cases investors increasingly
poured capital into stocks driving their valuations well above fair value to
overvalued levels.
Why is this comparison so important? If we can establish, beyond any
reasonable doubt, that 1982 to 2000 was a period when the Long Valuation Wave
was coming in and ultimately crested, then we are now in the subsequent period
where this same Long Valuation Wave is going back out and dragging valuations
back down into a trough. In the
vernacular this part of the valuation wave cycles is known as a secular bear,
the most dangerous time possible for long-term buy-and-hold investors.
And if the 1982 to 2000 great bull matches up so well in
valuation and price terms with the 1949 to 1966 great bull, isn’t it at
least prudent to consider that perhaps this 2000 to 2017 period through which
we now sojourn will match up with the brutal 1966 to 1982 great bear? As a contrarian and student of market
history I obviously think the answer is yes, but even if you disagree on a
logical basis the following chart ought to terrify you.
Great bear markets can unfold in two ways, either via a
wicked fast decline as from 1929 to 1932 or a long excruciating sideways
trading range. The latter, which I
call the Curse of the Trading
Range, is far more deadly
because it eliminates long-term investors’ chances to win any gains for
the better part of two decades,
nearly half their investing lifespans.
If you have 40 years to invest and lose 17, you may as well just give
up.
This chart overlays the market action since the recent 2000
valuation wave crest with the great bear that unfolded from 1966 to 1982. While the main chart does not have
zeroed axes, the inset chart on the lower right does so you can view this
troubling comparison without any axial distortion. Love it or loathe it, the price action
we have seen since 2000 is textbook Curse-of-the-Trading-Range stuff. Buy-and-hold stock investors really need
to carefully consider the obviously bearish implications here.
The red line shows the Dow 30 during its last great
bear. I’ve found that a lot
of people I’ve discussed this with, if they haven’t studied market
history, believe that prices just fall in secular bear markets. This is not necessarily true. In reality the last great bear was an
immensely volatile trading range that lasted for 17 years or so with zero net gain from the 1966 top. There were unbelievably brutal declines
on the order of 45% and exhilarating rallies near 75%!
Such hyper-volatile conditions are not a problem for
speculators, who can buy the sentiment bottoms and sell the sentiment tops, but
for investors who like orderly stock-price growth they can be psychologically
devastating. Investors who bought
in 1966 when conditions looked awesome had no capital gains yet in 1982, 17 years
later!
And in reality, once adjusted for inflation, they had a
considerable real loss. My studies on this 1966 to 1982
period in capital-gains terms adjusted for inflation show investors lost an
unbelievable two-thirds of their
purchasing power by buying and holding stocks, a 64% real loss excluding any
dividends they received. Talk about
a kick in the teeth!
This history is frightening enough alone, but the current
progress of the US stock markets since 2000 has been mirroring that of the
first 6 years or so of the last great bear to a remarkable degree. Just as in the last great bear, we have
seen brutal downlegs like the one that ended in late 2002 and awesome rallies,
or cyclical bull markets, like the one we’ve seen since early 2003. As this chart shows, even on the
zeroed-axis inset version, the magnitude of recent Dow 30 moves is exactly on target with those of the
early 1970s.
This secular sideways grind, the Curse of the Trading Range, happens because stock valuations
were far too high to be sustained at the last valuation crest so they need to
drop back to fair levels. The long
way to do this is to have stocks slowly move sideways over many years until
earnings can catch up with high stock prices. But Valuation Wave Reversions are
problematic because they don’t conveniently stop at 14x fair value. They overshoot on the downside and
ultimately end near 7x earnings at the next valuation wave trough.
The Dow 30 interim top P/E ratios since 2000 that are shown
above in yellow drive home this point.
At its 2000 peak the Dow traded at an absolutely unsustainable 44.7x
earnings! By May 2001 it was again
near 11350 on the index, but its valuation had dropped dramatically to 27.6x
earnings. By March 2004 after the
initial war rally upleg it was back near 26.1x earnings, but by March 2005 at
even higher index levels valuations had again dropped considerably to 21.4x.
And as of early May, the Dow 30’s P/E has dropped to
18.7x, not too far above fair value, even though it was once again challenging
all-time nominal highs. The markets
are definitely valuation mean reverting!
While I am happy to see the stock markets a lot less overvalued than
they were in 2000, extreme caution is still in order here. When a valuation wave is receding, it
never stops at fair value. The Dow
is not just going to 14x and then a new bull erupts. It is almost certainly going far lower to
7x earnings.
A perfect example of the reason stock investors today should
not be anywhere close to being smug and complacent happened during the last
great bear. In early 1973, roughly
just 6 months ahead in comparable trading-range-time terms of our latest peak
last month, the Dow 30 was trading at just 18.7x earnings and yielding 2.7% in
dividends. But even though these
valuations were getting reasonable, over the next two years into the end of
1974 the Dow 30 plunged.
The unbelievably vicious cyclical bear market that ignited
in 1973 and 1974 was one of the most psychologically devastating episodes in
market history. The Dow went from
roughly 1050 to 575 in two years, about a 45% loss. For the majority of buy-and-hold
investors, this was the key psychological turning point that shattered their
resolve. Late 1974 is when
investors started to hate stocks. If you are a long-term investor in
general US stocks, imagine how you would feel two years from now if the Dow 30
is back under 7000.
Well, ominously if the US stock markets continue following
the last great bear’s script today, we are now at the highest risk yet of
seeing a multi-year cyclical bear ending in a sub-7000 Dow. Visually above, note the amazing similarities
between the awesome cyclical bull from 1970 to the end of 1972 and the equally
magnificent last several years in the US markets. If the modern date scale was shifted six
months to the right, this comparison would be even more uncanny.
Also note that just before the brutal mid-1970s cyclical
bear started prowling, the Dow was trading at 18.7x earnings and yielding 2.7%
in dividends in late 1972. These
numbers are remarkably similar to what we saw this month, 16.5x and 2.5%. Obviously anything can happen in the
markets and today’s stock markets don’t have to follow the dark
mid-1970s course, but investors ought to still take this potential risk very
seriously.
Here we are, more than 6 years after the last Long Valuation
Wave crest in 2000, and the evidence continues growing that we are in another long-trading-range
great-bear scenario. If I was a
long-term buy-and-hold general-stock investor, this increasingly ominous
trading range would make we want to cry.
Thankfully there is a far better alternative than suffering another
decade of real losses in a brutal sideways grind.
During these great stock bears in market history,
commodities tend to thrive.
Commodities also run on third-of-a-century-or-so cycles
but they are offset 180 degrees. When
stocks are in a secular bull commodities are usually in a secular bear and vice
versa. Even during the last long
trading range of the 1970s stocks of primary commodities producers soared.
Stocks of giant producers often had 10x+ gains during this period and
stocks of more speculative smaller commodities producers witnessed plenty of
100x+ gains!
At Zeal we think it is pointless to try and fight a receding
Long Valuation Wave so we have focused our research efforts since 2000 on
profitably investing and speculating in the unfolding Great Commodities Bull. While the Dow 30 may still be pathetically
languishing near 11000 a decade from now, great commodities stocks are almost
certainly going to be at least an order of magnitude higher than they are
today.
Long-term stock investors can park capital in the stocks of elite
commodities producers, earn huge gains while weathering the general-stock
secular bear, and have great sums of capital ready to buy general-stock
bargains when the next valuation wave trough arrives. If you’d like to learn more about
specific commodities stocks opportunities that are likely to thrive as this
commodities bull continues to power higher, please subscribe to our
acclaimed monthly newsletter
today.
The bottom line is the evidence continues to mount that we
are now sojourning through another long trading range in the general stock
markets. While speculators can
capitalize on this and trade the massive cyclical swings inherent in such a
sideways valuation reversion, buy-and-hold investors will likely get
slaughtered. If you think that
buying and holding the biggest and best American companies is always a sure
thing, think again. Beware the
Curse of the Trading Range!
Thankfully while stock markets are suffering though great
bears the commodities are usually surging in their own great bulls. Thus a prudent buy-and-hold investor has
a far higher probability of success over the next decade if he deploys his
capital in elite major commodities-producer stocks rather than long-range-bound
general stocks.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
May 26, 2006
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information.
Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com. Due to my staggering and perpetually
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