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As the bear market ends and a new cyclical bull market begins with the bottoming
of the 6-year cycle, we continue see the lagging effects of this year's seismic
volatility on almost a daily basis. For although the stock market price low
has almost certainly been made and the 6-year cycle is starting to assert itself
on the upside, more and more investors have capitulated to the emotional exhaustion
the previous months have subjected them to.
The investor pessimism isn't surprising as bad news continues to dominate
the news ticker. The November unemployment rate inched up to 6.7 percent. October's
job loss was revised up to 320,000 jobs from 240,000, and September job loss
was revised to 403,000 from 284,000. It was also announced that percent of
all homes are now in foreclosure, while home sales and home prices continue
to fall.
As if that wasn't enough to send shivers down everyone's spine, here are some
more recent headlines that testify of the widespread dread everyone is feeling
right now:
"Universities forced to tighten belts"
"Super-rich tighten purse strings on luxury goods"
"New York governor urges state spending cut"
"KKR delays New York float as private equity faces grim times"
"Car sales sink to lowest for three decades"
"Sports industry starts to feel the crunch"
"White truffle prices tumble as high rollers avoid auction"
"Famed portrait fails to sell at auction"
"It's like 1930s, says Merrill chief"
...and the granddaddy of all headlines that tells me the worst has been seen:
"'I made a mistake' admits Greenspan"
Let's face it; these are headlines that you just don't see every day. You
won't even see most of these headlines after a major market correction like
the ones we had in the ten years prior to this year. These are sentiments that
only come around maybe once every 30-40 years and are truly historic in nature.
Could the psychology get any more negative than this?

Here's another contrarian indicator that you'll rarely see. According to an
article in the Dec. 1 Newsweek magazine, there is a growing market in
certain cities around the U.S. for local currency. That's right, some areas
have taken it upon themselves to deal with the cash shortage by printing their
own currency, which it turns out, is legal provided certain rules are complied
with. According to Newsweek, dozens of local currency systems flourished
during the Great Depression but they're making a comeback after the credit
crunch has done damage to local merchants. This to me is another major indicator
that the bottom is in.
To give you an idea the extent of the capitulation, a couple of weeks ago
the market witnessed the second highest TRIN closing value in years. (The TRIN
is also known as the ARMS Index and is a measure of buying and selling pressure
by comparing advancing and declining volume with advancing and declining share
prices). The highest reading on a closing basis of 14.26 occurred on Feb. 27,
2007 on the "Greenspan Panic" when the stock market took a huge 1-day hit on
the former Fed Chairman's bearish credit market comments. Of course that day
proved to be the worst of the panic and the stock market bottomed shortly thereafter
and resumed its advance.
This time around the TRIN reading of 10.18 was extremely high by historical
standards and even by this year's standards of frequent panic selling and hyper
volatility. Is it possible that the Dec. 1 decline in the major indices represented
the last stage in the capitulation process? I'm inclined to believe that this
was indeed a sign of ultimate capitulation.
Most of this year's volatility was a function of the crossing currents between
the peaking 12-year cycle and the bottoming 6-year cycle. Now that the 12-year
cycle has done its damage, the newly formed 6-year up cycle is gaining in strength
and becoming dominant. The 6-year Kress cycle is a powerful one and can't be
underestimated. The previous 6-year cycle bottom ended the bear market in October
2002 and the bear market of 2008 has also been killed by the 6-year cycle bottom.
The Fed's furious response in providing liquidity to a cash-starved market
is finally meeting with some success and in coming weeks and months should
be apparent to the majority of market participants. As Ian Scott, an analyst
with Nomura, has said, "It is hard to image a more committed policy response
than the one we have had, and there are now some tentative signs that it is
having an impact." He stated further, "While it is always theoretically possible
to invent an economic scenario to justify current prices, the scenario that
would now be required necessitates policy failure on a scale not seen since
the 1930s."
I concur with these sentiments and I don't believe we'll witness a failure
of the bailout effort in 2009. The headlines and various other investor sentiment
measures strongly suggest there is "blood in the streets"...and we all know
what that means. Stock prices have been driven to insanely oversold levels
and it's not uncommon for a rally of up to 50% or more in the months following
a bear market, especially the magnitude of which we had this year.
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