Fri 8-17-18 BigPic: Old Age Isn’t What Ends a Bull Stock Market - Bloomberg
Old Age Isn’t What Ends a Bull Stock
Market
The length of the run really doesn’t matter very much.
By
August 17, 2018, 1:25 PM EDT
Enter the query “How long is the longest bull market” in a
Google search and you get 41.4 million results.
Investors
will not find much of use in most of these results. It is the wrong question to
ask. Perhaps a better inquiry would look something like this: “Why does it
matter how long a bull market is?”
Do not underestimate the importance of this question; the
alternative is believing that a bull market has some sort of a magical sell-by
date, a preordained time when it will run out of whatever it is that made it go
in the first place. Furthermore, the idea that investors should sell equities
because a bull market is getting long in the tooth has been a recipe
for missing out on lots of gains.
Better understanding the nature of bull and bear markets is the key to avoiding this error.
The reasoning behind this matters a great deal; you should really spend some
time thinking about better ways to define bull or bear markets.
The
recent spasm of news coverage on the length of the current bull market has
prompted us to revisit this issue. There are five areas worth considering about
the length of bull (or bear) markets.
No. 1. Definitions are random and
useless: I don’t know how else to say this, but the idea that a 20
percent decline indicates a bear market is a meaningless fabrication. Yes,
we use a base 10 decimal system primarily because we have 10 fingers and 10
toes. I have never seen a satisfactory answer explaining who invented these
defining figures or the thinking behind them. 1
Why
anyone would ever allow any specific number to play a role in their investing
strategy seems both poorly thought through and foolish.
No. 2. What really constitutes a
bull or bear?: I have
given this question lots of consideration over the years. I prefer
to define a bull market as:
An extended period of time, typically lasting 10-20 years, driven
by broad economic shifts that create an
environment conducive to increasing corporate revenue and earnings. Its
most dominant feature is the increasing willingness of investors to pay more and more for a dollar of
earnings.
Once you begin to think about bull markets that way, broad swaths
of history make more sense. The postwar era, the 1980s and 1990s biotech,
computing and semiconductor boom, and most recently the maturation of
internet, software and
mobile companies — all fit this definition of a bull market.
No. 3. Secular versus cyclical: If we
actually are thinking about longer societal shifts and the impact they have on
investor psychology, then we must acknowledge the regular short-term pullbacks
that occur. I prefer to think of bull and bear markets in terms of both
longer-term secular moves(eight to 20 years) and the
shorter cyclical rallies and sell-offs within.
Knowing one from the other isn’t always easy, though cyclical markets tend to
track the business cycle.
Once we understand the role of short cyclical moves within the
context of longer-term secular markets, it becomes easier to put the
regular declines in context.
No. 4. Ordinary versus post-crisis
recoveries: We have discussed this a number of times before, but it is worth bringing up in
the context of aging bull markets: Recoveries from financial crises are
very different from ordinary recoveries from recessions.
The economics are very different. A postcrisis recovery is marked
by slow and erratic gross domestic product growth, weak wage gains and
disappointing retail sales. All of these have been prominent features of the
recovery during most of the decade since the Great Recession ended. Another
feature is psychological: Investors remain skittish for years after, a
characteristic that’s almost like post-traumatic stress disorder. This to me
goes a long way toward explaining why this has been what I like to call “The Most Hated Rally in Wall Street History.”
One can only imagine how social media would have looked from the
moment of the 1929 crash through the 1932 Depression-era stock marketlows and on
to 1966 peak, 34 years later, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average finally
came close to the 1,000 mark. If today’s market represents a similarly slow
recovery from the depths of the more recent financial crisis, then it is
conceivable that this bull market might have more room to run.
No. 5. Scare tactics:
Finally, one cannot help but notice that during the past five years, every
reference to the bull market as “long in the tooth” or “aging” or “tired”
usually comes with a recommendation for selling equities and buying
whatever that person happens to be selling.
Scaring
people into selling shares and buying other assets is great for commissions,
but it does little to help investors wisely deploy their capital.
One day,
this bull market will come to its natural end. We can never know in advance
just what it will be that brings this about. But one thing we can be sure of —
it won’t be because of old age.
1.
We all are familiar with a correction being a 10 percent decline, a
dip beinga 5 percent drop, and a crash being30 percent or more. Nobody can
explain why.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the
editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
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