Markets in the Grip of the Bear

Prieur du Plessis  Nov 20, 2008 8:45 am

Markets in the Grip of the Bear
 
Entire 5-year bull market could be wiped out.
 

 


Yesterday was another ugly day for stocks, with bourses around the globe falling victim to strong selling pressure. Fueling the sell-off were concerns that the economic recession could not only be deeper and longer than previously feared, but could also fall into a corrosive deflationary phase.

The MSCI World Index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell by 4.6% and 2.2% respectively, tallying declines of 51.2% and 63.4% since the peaks of these indices in October 2007. Only the Chinese Shanghai Composite Index (+6.0%) and the Russian Trading System Index (+0.7%) bucked yesterday’s declines.

As far as the US markets are concerned, the Dow Jones Industrial Index (-5.1%) plunged below the roundophobia 8000 level, resulting in all the major indices now trading below the recent lows of October 10th and 27th. This brings the lows of 2003 (Dow 7,524; S&P 500 801) and 2002 (Dow 7,286; S&P 500 777) into sight. A breach of these levels -- frightfully close to the current levels of the Dow (7,997) and S&P 500 (807) -- will wipe out the entire 5-year bull market from 2002 to 2007.

Interestingly, only 2.4% of the 500 S&P 500 stocks now trade above their 200-day moving averages. This line is often used as a crude indicator of the primary trend of a market or individual stocks. The graph undeniably shows an extremely oversold situation, but bear markets have been known to stay oversold much longer than usual.


Click to enlarge


One can argue long and hard about valuation levels and earnings forecasts, but the extent to which stocks become undervalued in the grip of this bear is squarely due to the severity of the economic meltdown.
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Comments (12) See All Comments »
11-20-2008, 3:03 pm
I failed to mention this, with regard to doom and gloom:
in every event, there is a silver lining. Today, we see oil below $50 a barrel. Shocking, isn't it, considering that 6 months ago all we heard about was "peak oil" and
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11-20-2008, 4:24 pm
There isn't much of a silver lining to this for investors:

http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/advchart/frames/controls.asp?symb=SP500&sid=0&o_symb=&state=8&time=100&freq=1&compidx=aaaaa%3A0&comp=NO_SYMBOL_
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11-21-2008, 7:03 am
As Macke says on Fast Money, we have to trade the market we have, not the one we want.

Self-fulfilling prophecies aside - and I, too, believe in them - the market is and always has been the final arbiter (sorry about all the cliches.) At
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11-22-2008, 11:27 am
No link.

Regardless, charts are not truth. They are instantaneous indicators of current mood.
Current mood is SOMETIMES an indicator of future activity, as long as extremes are not in effect. When the market bubbled, irrational e
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11-22-2008, 12:00 pm
That's the first I've seen Prechter listed as "most accurate". I don't know what guidelines you use to gauge that concept, but to many it's possible he is "most accurate". I seem to remember Prechter
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