China 2007 vs. NASDAQ 2000
The phenomenal performance of this year’s red-hot
Chinese stock markets has led them to become the most-eagerly-watched financial
markets on the planet. While even
just a couple years ago few outside of China
cared about its indigenous markets, today countless speculators around the
globe carefully monitor stock-trading action in China.
And with traders increasingly looking to China with a
mix of awe and trepidation, the financial media has been reflecting our growing
interest by doing more reporting about what is happening within this awakening
giant. Reading news articles
detailing the stock-trading action underway in China is incredibly fascinating.
Across the nation, the Chinese populace has become
captivated by the soaring local markets.
New stock-trading accounts are being opened in record numbers. A hardcore day-trading culture has
emerged in the major cities, with people leaving their real jobs to become day
traders. Outside of brokerage
offices where tickers display real-time price action, huge throngs mill about
to see how their stocks are doing.
For Americans, this should all sound eerily familiar. The general public only falls in love
with the stock markets that it usually ignores when a full-blown mania is underway. Promises of a New Era, nearly instant wealth
creation, and multiplying capital without any work can only take popular root
and flourish after extraordinarily fast stock-market gains. Like in the NASDAQ in
1999 and early 2000.
The average investor has always been and always will be a
momentum chaser, not a contrarian.
The sharp NASDAQ gains in the US in 1999 sparked a popular mania
when the traditionally risk-averse public decided to
jump in and chase the dazzling gains being made in tech stocks. But the big problem is once the public fully
buys in, there is no one left to buy.
With all capital deployed, any selling quickly pops the mania-spawned
bubble.
The more I read about what is happening in China’s
stock markets today, the more it reminds me of all the classic historical stock
manias as well as the recent NASDAQ mania in the States. Collectively the anecdotal reports I’ve
seen paint a mania picture that could very well be describing how US investors
reacted seven years ago. With such
an overwhelming sense of societal déjà vu evident, I’ve
been wondering how the actual underlying price action compares.
How does the Chinese stock mania look in pure technical
terms when directly compared to the NASDAQ mania? Are today’s Chinese stock markets
on a similar trajectory as the NASDAQ before it crashed in 2000? Is today’s Chinese stock bubble
more extreme or less extreme than the ill-fated NASDAQ bubble? I really wanted to know the answers to these questions myself so I built the
spreadsheets and charts behind this essay.
As you no doubt fondly remember from the exciting
turn-of-the-millennium US stock markets, the NASDAQ Composite Index was the
metric of choice for monitoring stocks’ progress. Although professional investors
continued to follow the S&P 500, the mainstream public investors eagerly
watched the NASDAQ Comp like hawks.
You couldn’t turn on CNBC for even one minute back then without
hearing updates about this index’s moment-by-moment progress.
China too
has several narrower indexes comprised of elite blue-chip stocks that
aren’t unlike the Dow 30 or S&P 500 in the US. But from a popular perspective, the
Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index has become the metric of choice for
mainstream Chinese investors to monitor progress. The Shanghai Comp, or SSEC, is as lovingly
followed in China
today as the NASDAQ was here in early 2000.
And since both the SSEC and NASDAQ are broad stock indexes
that encompass all the trading activity on entire major exchanges, they are remarkably
comparable in composition and character.
Each reflects the hopes and dreams of their respective trading populaces
as everyday investors were caught up in the unparalleled excitement of
full-blown popular manias.
To use the NASDAQ mania as a technical reference lens
through which to view today’s SSEC mania, the respective peaks have to be
synchronized. While the NASDAQ peak
day of March 10th, 2000 is set in stone, the peak of the SSEC is not known with
certainty yet. But this flagship
Chinese index just achieved its latest all-time high on May 29th, so this is
its latest peak. Thus the following
charts map May 29th, 2007 in SSEC terms over March 10th, 2000 in NASDAQ terms
and run the data series backward and forward from there.
Matching these peaks this way, a chart of the SSEC from 2005
until today corresponds with the NASDAQ from mid-September 1997 to mid-April
2000. This provides a
trading-day-by-trading-day comparison of how the SSEC mania is matching up to the
NASDAQ mania. Just
as suspected based on trading news out of China, the SSEC’s progress
over the last 18 months matches the NASDAQ mania’s final 18 months
remarkably well.
With not even the most rabid perma-bulls from back in 2000
still denying that the NASDAQ entered a textbook popular mania, the NASDAQ is a
great standard for such an event. And
in a strategic sense, the SSEC’s performance over the last couple years
or so matches up uncannily well with this mania template. While these two data series aren’t
perfectly interchangeable, they could sure fool a casual observer.
Back in 2005 the SSEC was a pretty normal market, which is
why it was largely ignored in China
and completely ignored in the rest of the world. The NASDAQ also traced a similar
unimpressive track at this stage before its own mania ascent. The only major difference here, which
may ultimately prove very important, is the SSEC was trending down in this
stage while the NASDAQ was trending up.
Note the divergence in their respective 200dmas above.
Why is this interesting? In stock-market history, popular manias
usually don’t ignite rapidly.
The NASDAQ mania capped a monster 17-year secular bull that
launched way back in 1982. China’s
bull, on the other hand, actually began in mid-2005. Before that its stock markets had been
trending lower on balance since mid-2001.
To see a market go from a secular bear low to a mania in just two years is extraordinary.
Is a true full-blown popular mania possible with just two years
of foundation? Can enough
mainstream investors arrive in just two years so the populace has already fully
bought in? Apparently yes, as the
rest of this essay discusses. But
the fact that the Chinese stock bull remains so young is the biggest wildcard
in my mind arguing against the
Chinese-stock-market-crash-imminent case.
Two years is such a compressed time for a mania cycle to develop over,
so perhaps this mania isn’t mature yet.
But after this initial time-compression anomaly, the NASDAQ
and SSEC comparison becomes much more mirror-like. In 2006 the SSEC bull started
accelerating, just like the NASDAQ did at its corresponding pre-peak
phase. Then within just a couple
months of each other, euphoria arrived in both markets. There is a clear point in both the SSEC
and NASDAQ charts when their slopes turn sharply higher. These mark the beginning of the
near-vertical mania ascents.
And as this chart reveals, the mania-ascent slopes in these
two markets are nearly identical!
This is not an optical graph-construction trick either. I made a zeroed-axis version of this
chart and the same interplay you see above occurred. The last five months before the peaks in
each market are uncannily similar. This terminal vertical phase happens because
the public finally joins in and starts throwing all available capital at the
bull, driving it sharply higher.
Near the ultimate peaks (if indeed May 29th proves to be the
ultimate SSEC peak), the last few months are nearly identical. Well up in their mania ascents both
markets had nervous wobbles as smart money started to worry about the mania and
layer out capital to preserve gains.
But soon the insatiable lust of the public to buy stocks overwhelmed any
contrarian selling and the all-but-identical terminal vertical runs to the
peaks commenced.
And after these peaks, sharp initial breaks occurred. In China’s case, after its latest
May 29th top it plunged a gut-wrenching 15% in just four trading days! To make such a brutal decline easier to
understand for us Americans, imagine if the Dow 30 lost 2100 points in the next four days! That would certainly get our attention,
just as it has in China. Yet even after these initial breaks,
mania psychology remains strong and investors put up a brave face and continue buying.
The NASDAQ had a similar initial break and false recovery. In the first three trading days after
its peak, it plunged over 9%. Yet
only seven trading days after this low, it had climbed back to within 1.7% of
its peak. The SSEC’s 15%
plunge over four days was considerably worse. Yet over the next eleven trading days,
ending this past Tuesday, it recovered back to within 1.5% of its peak. These patterns across time, nations, and
cultures are uncannily similar and ought to disturb anyone invested in Chinese
stocks.
This first chart intrigued me as it clearly shows Chinese
stock markets doing nearly exactly what the NASDAQ did before its own bubble
burst. But I wanted a more direct constant-percentage comparison to better
understand these respective bubbles.
To create this, I once again matched the index peaks. Then I went back 18 months before the
peaks and individually indexed both the SSEC and NASDAQ at 100. So if either went to 150 on its
individual indexing, for example, it would be up 50%.
This constant-percentage comparison running from
peak-minus-18 months to peak-plus-3 months is rendered below. The percentage gains for each index show
how far each index climbed from a certain point, say 6 months out, to its
ultimate peak. Incredibly this
perspective reveals that the SSEC’s mania ascent is not only comparable
to the NASDAQ’s, but it is considerably more extreme!
From 18 months out to 7 months out from their respective
peaks, the SSEC and NASDAQ exhibit very similar accelerating bulls. Over this period of time both indexes
rose about 60%. Now
gains of this magnitude over less than a year are massive, but they are nothing
compared to the mania-ascent stages that followed.
While the NASDAQ started its unsustainable vertical mania ascent
about 5 months out from its peak, the SSEC started earlier. Chinese stocks pulled away from the
NASDAQ’s example 7 months before their latest peak. This early start helped drive the SSEC
even higher than the NASDAQ.
Indexed from 18 months out, the SSEC peaked at 386 (a 286% 18-month
gain) while the NASDAQ peaked at 318 (218%).
So in constant-percentage terms, the stock action witnessed
in China
over the last six months or so looks just like a somewhat-amplified version of
the last six months before the NASDAQ peak of 2000. And as is apparent above, even the
slopes of the respective mania ascents are rising at the same angle. With the NASDAQ terminal ascent proving
unsustainable, odds are the mirror-image SSEC one won’t fare much better.
Once again the problem with markets once the public aggressively
buys in and pushes them vertical is all buyers are soon fully invested. When effectively no more capital remains
outside a market that is willing to buy and bid up prices, even relatively
modest selling sparks a price decline since there are no offsetting buy
orders. This
initial selling spooks the public which bought in way too high and they
start selling in fear, and soon the post-bubble bust is off to the races.
Before we get into this, carefully examine the staggering performance
numbers noted above from various times to the respective peaks. In their last month before their peaks,
the SSEC rose 15% and the NASDAQ 14%.
The farther back in time you travel, the greater this disparity grows. The final 3-month gains ran 51% in China and 41%
in the States. At 6 months this
widens to 106% and 77% respectively.
And in the 12 months leading up to the peaks, the SSEC soared 172%
higher while the NASDAQ “only” managed a 109% gain.
Now contemplating these raw gain numbers is very important,
as it offers a key insight into why all bubbles must mathematically burst.
To have major broad stock markets more than double in a year, and expect
this rate of gain to be sustained, is absurd. Yet near mania peaks the mainstream
public, who never study the markets, think such gains are normal and wrongly
assume they have entered a New Era.
These totally irrational 100%-gain-as-normal expectations
remind me of a mathematical parable I first heard as a kid. A wise man did a great favor for a king
so the king asked what the wise man wanted as a reward. The wise man said all he wanted was some
wheat and a chessboard. On day one,
the king was to put one grain of wheat
on the first square of the chessboard.
Then on day two, two grains on the second square. On day three four grains on the third, on
day four eight grains on the fourth, and so on. The king, having great
wealth, eagerly agreed to this curious yet seemingly modest request.
But of course when you double something over and over again,
soon the absolute amount of it grows far beyond comprehension. Way, way before the king got 64 days
into his promise to pay the wise man, he was totally broke. Exponential growth is always ultimately unsustainable, whether
it occurs in parables, in the natural world, or in the financial markets. No big asset class can sustain doublings
for very long. When mainstream
investors start to think 100%+ annual gains are normal, rational, and expected,
it is time to sell out.
With exponential Chinese stock-market gains mirroring and
even outdoing the NASDAQ’s mania example, and the Chinese public going
bonkers over the stock-trading game, this is reason enough to expect a crash is
drawing nigh. But the SSEC action
of the past few weeks really is the icing on the cake for this argument.
Note above the sharp initial breaks off the peaks in both the SSEC and NASDAQ, as well as the very similar quick
recoveries back up to almost the peak levels over a matter of weeks as if
nothing had happened. Well, from this very place in its own mania,
the NASDAQ started selling off sharply.
Within just 2 months from its peak, it was already down 31% and the bust
was well underway. Will the SSEC
follow a similar bust course?
As a mere mortal who cannot see the
future I certainly don’t know the answer, but it will sure be interesting
to find out. Provocatively, the
reason the SSEC initially started plunging in late May was Beijing announced it was tripling a key tax on stock trading to 0.3%. This announcement started the selling
off the peak. Beijing did this to dampen the mania, of
course. Back in 1997 when Beijing raised this same
tax from 0.3% to 0.5%, the Chinese stocks fell 30% over the next four months.
If such a decline happens today, the Chinese stock markets
will indeed follow the NASDAQ into its early bust cycle. The symmetry between all of this is
really quite amazing. Countries may
change, markets may change, and people may change, but the greed inherent in
all of our human hearts is universal.
And the consequences of this greed for an entire nation of investors
collectively manifesting itself in stocks is a popular mania that will run
sharply higher, blow up, and then deflate even faster than it originally grew.
When these NASDAQ technical similarities are combined with
the mania anecdotes coming out of China, the argument that the
Chinese stock markets are near the end of their mania feels pretty strong. Based on this and all I’ve read on
the Chinese markets this year, I suspect the odds overwhelmingly favor an
imminent sharp decline in these markets.
If you are directly invested in the Chinese stock markets
one way or another, this is going to be a big
problem for you when it comes to pass.
In the initial major selloff after a mania top, usually about a third of
the stock-market’s value is lopped off in a matter of months. The selling is fast and furious and
offers to sell stock outnumber bids to buy it by a massive margin. This crash phase is no fun at all to
suffer through.
But even if you are not directly invested in the Chinese
stock markets, the implications of a Chinese stock selloff could be
profound. Remember when the US stock markets swooned rather dramatically in
late February in response to a selloff of stocks in China? If a relatively minor head-fake in China led to such dramatic consequences for the
worldwide markets, what would a full-on China crash and bust do?
As this concern is very important for all investors to
consider, I analyzed it in the current June issue of our acclaimed Zeal Intelligence monthly
newsletter. In it I discussed the
likely implications of a Chinese selloff for the US stock markets in general as well
as various classes of commodities stocks.
Some should fare well while most others will likely suffer. A mania top in a major world market is
not a trivial event to navigate.
A serious Chinese selloff is really going to complicate
investing and speculating worldwide and you need to be ready for the fallout. Subscribe today! New subscribers to the e-mailed PDF
edition of our newsletter will get a complimentary copy of this June issue with
this Chinese spillover analysis. Your
paid subscription will start with next month’s upcoming issue.
The bottom line is the crazy technicals of China’s flagship stock index match all the
crazy anecdotes on popular stock trading that we are hearing out of China. The SSEC’s technical path not only
looks remarkably like the NASDAQ’s before its own mania abruptly ended,
but the Chinese situation is even more extreme than the classic American bubble
in some ways. These are ominous
tidings.
All stock manias must come to an end as exponential price
growth is inherently unsustainable.
Eventually the public has bought all the stock it can buy so there are
no untapped pools of capital left to bid on stocks. At this point the whole house of cards
starts to implode. The SSEC’s
behavior in the last month mirrors the NASDAQ’s around its own March 2000
top remarkably well. Caveat emptor.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
June 22, 2007
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