No, the Bull Market is Not 8 Years Old - The Big Picture
No, the Bull Market is Not 8 Years Old
To committed readers of the financial press,
it was almost impossible to miss the proclamations that a milestone had been
passed: The bull market, as of yesterday, was eight years old. For a sampling of
examples see this, this, this,this, this or this.
This formulation is wrong, since it
misconstrues the definition of a bull market. Rather than saying that the bull
market is celebrating its eighth birthday, what we really are observing is the
eighth anniversary of the bear-market lows.
The age of a bull market has important
ramifications. Understanding if we are in the second, third, fourth or eighth
year of a market cycle is a pretty big deal. The age of a bull isn’t about
picayune definitions; nor is it a rationalization for a pricey stock market.
Rather, this is an attempt to provide some precision, accuracy and clarity as a
counterpoint to lazy market commentary.
With that insufferable preamble out of the
way, let’s move on to a different, but intriguing question: How long was the
1982-2000 bull market?
Warning: This is a trick question.
The obvious answer is 18 years — at least
that’s the answer I would give. But as you heard throughout your high school
math classes, the answer isn’t all that matters — it’s how you got to it. “Show
your work” was exhorted on every calculus exam you took. It applies here as
well.
Continues at: This Bull Market Isn’t as Old as Some Seem to Think
My position on market cycles is as follows: Secular bull markets --
versus cyclical rallies and sell-offs -- begin when indexes surpass earlier
highs. Thus, in 1982, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average eclipsed 1,000 on a
permanent basis, is when we mark the beginning of that epic 18-year bull
market.
Why is this important? Understanding how old a bull market is may
very likely affect your expectations of future returns, your risk appetite, even
your investment allocations. Misunderstanding when a bull market began is
potentially a very expensive error to make.
Charlie Munger exhorts constantly to “Invert, always invert.” Let’s follow
his advice and see what happens if we agree with the suggestion that the bull
market is eight years old.
If you do that, though, you must make similar assumptions about
other bull markets of the past century. Consider what this does to the
historical examples.
It means that the 1982-2000 bull market actually lasted 26 years,
starting with the 1974 bear-market bottom. If you speak to people who were
working on Wall Street in the 1970s, none of them will tell you that period felt like bull market -- because it wasn't. But
that’s the date you need to use to be consistent with those who say this bull
market is eight years old.
Now, almost everyone knows that earlier bull market didn't last
that long.
Let’s look at another historical example: the secular bull market
that tracked the postwar period from 1946 to 1966. How long was that bull
market? Obviously, the answer is 20 years. But if you apply the same reasoning
that leads someone to say today's bull market is eight years old, then that
rally would have lasted 34 years, perversely beginning in 1932. Again, I
don't think anyone who lived through the Great Depression would say that it
coincided with a bull market.
So let's be consistent. As I wrote in February 2013, a breakout to new
highs would mark the end of the bear market, and the beginning of a new bull
market. That seems to have occurred and that is the more appropriate start date
for this bull market. In other words, this bull market looks like it's four
years old.
Definitions matter. There is a big difference between cyclical bull
markets, bear market rallies and corrections within a secular bull market.
Understanding this can make all the difference in the world.
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There are, of course, countervailing theories. Do we date the postwar bull market from 1946, when the war-time mobilization ended, or from 1954, when the earlier highs were eclipsed? People have made the case for each.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the
editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
To contact the author of this story:
Barry Ritholtz at britholtz3@bloomberg.net
Barry Ritholtz at britholtz3@bloomberg.net
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