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"Though the life of a man be short of a hundred years, he gives himself
enough anxiety as if he were to live a thousand." -- Ancient Chinese
proverb
The crisis we keep hearing so much about, which formally began in 2007 and
intensified in 2008, was at root a crisis in confidence. True, the credit crisis
had its origins in the tight money policy of the Federal Reserve beginning
in 2004 and continuing into 2007. So there was definitely a money/credit aspect
to the crisis. But more than any single factor - and this has been especially
true in the past few months - the crisis has been more about shattered confidence
than a dearth of liquidity.
Institutional and retail investors alike are still suffering the spillover
effects from a lack of confidence in the financial system. It's not that they
utterly lack capital; they're simply too afraid to spend it until they see
evidence that the bailout and economic stimulus initiatives are working. Investors
are still in the proverbial bunker and they're not about to come out until
they're sure the thermal radiation from last year's atomic blast has cleared.
The main problem for investment markets today isn't liquidity...it's psychology.
That's why I believe the best clues for what's coming up in the stock market
is likely to be seen in the psychology indicators more than anything else.
In the January issue of its Perspective newsletter, Dr. James Paulsen, Chief
Investment Strategist of Wells Capital Management, observes:
"The single, most effective economic policy introduced by officials in this
crisis was a two-week 'fear-mongering campaign' implemented by the U.S. leadership
during the selling of the TARP program to Congress and the nation in early
September. The fear generated by this campaign has been remarkable and it has
created a 'healthy player' problem. Most of the current economic collapse is
due to healthy consumers which have a job but nonetheless have chosen to postpone
spending plans until they 'see where this is going.' It is due to relatively
healthy companies which are still making money but have decided to temporarily
freeze hiring until 'things clear up.'"
The key statement made by Dr. Paulsen in his analysis is this: "Normal cyclical
policy tightening can perhaps why the economy is recessing, but only widespread
paralyzing 'fear' explains why the economy is collapsing."
This is an excellent point and worth pondering. It's not a lack of money that
is now bothering market participants...it's a lack of confidence born of excessive
(and unfounded) fear. It stands to reason then that once these investors (and
I'm speaking mainly of institutional investors/hedge funds) put their fears
aside, the stock market will have a huge weight lifted from off its shoulders
can then take off without being dragged down by the "fear factor."
Indeed, it has been fear and fear alone that has kept a lid on the cyclical
bull market from picking up steam. Cycle-related influences can't be blamed
on the market's stubborn refusal to take off. The Kress 6-year cycle bottom
has passed and so as the nearest intermediate term weekly cycle, so any further "dragging" action
by the market from here can only be chalked up to excessive investor fear.
At some point, however, that fear will almost certainly be shed as investors
grow weary of receiving 0% return on their "safe haven" investments. A worthwhile
interim market bottom typically averages three months and the stock market
has been bottoming now for at least that long if not longer.
The action in the market's leading indicators also continues to look encouraging.
After a high volume breakout above its dominant interim 90-day moving average
last month, IBM continues to resist the general market malaise and is closer
to its October high than its November low, in contrast to the major averages.
As I mentioned to you, I've rarely seen IBM look this good without the broad
market eventually following it higher.

Getting back to Dr. Paulsen and his analysis of the U.S. financial market
outlook, I echo his sentiments that the stock market has most likely bottomed
and should recover in 2009, at least on an interim basis. "Fear is already
too elevated," he concludes. "Most of the nervous Nellie investors have already
sold, values have already been restored, competitive interest rates are already
too low, too much unspent buying power now sits on the sidelines and policy
officials will likely finally succeed in their rescue efforts. Even if it does
take some time before recovery materializes, it will be worth the wait. The
upside for risk asset prices (stocks, credit bonds, and commodities) should
be considerable once confidence begins to improve!"
So here we stand, still waiting for those last remaining vestiges of fear
to erode from the hearts of investors. The monetary factor has already been
addressed by financial regulators. It remains up to the collective mass of
market participants to decide when they've had enough of waiting in fear and
trepidation on the sidelines while a bargain-priced stock market beckons them
to return. History says those fears will fade...let's hope that it's very soon
and that our wait won't be any further extended by the "fear factor."
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