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Common sense and prudence say stocks must experience a significant correction
soon. Unfortunately, waiting for a correction to participate in the current
stock rally has proved highly frustrating for many market participants. While
it may not be what investors sitting on large cash positions want to hear,
market history says a significant correction in stocks may not occur until
2010. Understanding and respecting that each individual needs to make their
own decisions relative to market entry points, an open-minded review of the
historical cases presented below may allow some to be more receptive to the
possibility of bullish and correction-less outcomes for several more months.
How things unfold in the coming months remains to be seen, but thus far the
current rally has followed the new bull market script very closely.

In the context of an established and on-going bull market, it is common for
traders and value investors to look for a pullback toward the 200-day moving
average (red line in chart above) as a logical entry point for new purchases.
What may be frustrating them in the current environment is that new bull markets,
especially after significant bear markets, may not correct back toward the
200-day for an extended period of time. As shown in Table 1, in four similar
instances, a significant pullback did not occur on average until 270 calendar
days after the original cross of the 200-day moving average.

Table 2 uses the S&P 500's July 10, 2009 cross of the 200-day to estimate
hypothetically when a pullback might begin, assuming the market behaves in
a similar manner relative to history. A typical path in 2009-2010 may not produce
a significant pullback toward the 200-day until the spring of 2010.

More detail on this study and similar studies can be found in the September/October
2009 - Asset
Class Outlook, which is available for download. Page 20 of the Asset Class
Outlook covers "Monitoring The Health Of The Bull - Red Flags", which acknowledges
the risks associated with blind investments in the current environment. Many
problems remain.
Sometimes being able to see concepts illustrated on a chart can help us in
our decision-making process. The following charts show how long new bull markets
stayed above their 200-day moving average before beginning a significant correction
back toward the 200-day (shown in red).




Possible Psychology Behind The Charts
It is important to recognize that the historical charts above represent shifts
in the mass psychology of investors. If we can step outside ourselves in the
current environment and examine our own thoughts, we may find that they are
very similar to those of the majority of market participants. Slowly as stocks
have continued to move higher in 2009, more and more market participants have
accepted the possibility of a new and sustainable bull market, even if it only
represents a shorter-term or cyclical bull market. However, many of the market
participants who have now accepted the new bull remain largely on the sidelines
in cash - waiting for a correction to enter. What most likely happened in the
historical cases above, and is happening again in 2009, is that corrections
are short-lived since many are looking for any glimmer of a correction to enter
the market. When the corrections do not last, many buy fearing they are being
left behind. The fear of being left behind will increase greatly for professional
money managers should the rally remain intact through year-end.
Cyclical Bulls Can Last A While
Since numerous structural and fundamental problems remain, it is likely that
the current bull market does not represent the early stages of a secular, or
long-term, bull market. However, as outlined in the passage from the September
16, 2009 Los Angeles Times, waiting out a cyclical bull may be more frustrating
than many believe:
Buyers are finding plenty to like: Rising stocks have outnumbered losers
by more than 2 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange in seven of the last
eight sessions. That encourages bulls like Ned Davis Research, a well-known
market research firm in Venice, Fla. that correctly called the rally earlier
this year and has maintained the view that stocks are going higher. "So
much money has been sitting on the sidelines and now is looking for a place
to go" as confidence in a recovery rises, said Tim Hayes, the firm's chief
investment strategist. Ned Davis believes this is a "cyclical" bull market
within a longer-term, or "secular," bear market. But given the firm's forecast
for the S&P 500 to peak sometime in 2010 in the range of 1,200 to 1,300,
it makes no sense to sit out the cyclical rebound, Hayes said.
When decisions are driven partly by the fear of being left behind, they may
not appear to be prudent or based on common sense. Corrections tend not to
occur in the early stages of a new bull market because there is so much cash
looking for an opportunity to enter. Until cash positions move closer to bull
market norms, which is not the case today, stocks may continue to surprise
on the upside.
Above are excerpts taken from the September/October 2009 - Asset
Class Outlook, which is available for download. The comments above
and those in the outlook are intended for CCM clients, and thus investments
or strategies described may be inappropriate for some investors based on
their own individual situation and risk tolerance.
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