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From the May 2004 Elliott Wave Theorist
See if you can answer these four questions:
1) In 1950, a good computer cost $1 million. In 1990, it cost $5000. Today
it costs $1000. Question: What will a good computer cost 50 years from
today?
2) Democracy as a form of government has been spreading for centuries. In
the 1940s, Japan changed from an empire to a democracy. In the 1980s, the
Russian Soviet system collapsed, and now the country holds multi-party elections.
In the 1990s, China adopted free-market reforms. In March of this year, Iraq,
a former dictatorship, celebrated a new democratic constitution. Question:
Fifty years from today, will a larger or smaller percentage of the world's
population live under democracy?
3) In the decade from 1983 to 1993, there were ten months of recession in
the U.S.; in the subsequent decade from 1993 to 2003, there were 8 months
of recession. In the first period, expansion was underway 92 percent of the
time; in the second period, it was 93 percent. Question: What percentage
of the time will expansion take place during the decade from 2003 to 2013?
4) In 1970, Reserve Funds kicked off the hugely successful money market
fund industry. In 1973, the CBOE introduced options on stocks. In 1977, Michael
Milken invented junk bond financing, which became a major category of investment.
In 1982, stock index futures and options on futures began to trade. In 1983,
options on stock indexes became available. Keogh plans, IRAs and 401k's have
brought tax breaks to the investing public. The mutual fund industry, a small
segment of the financial world in the late 1970s, has attracted the public's
invested wealth to the point that there are more mutual funds than there
are NYSE stocks. Futures contracts on individual stocks have just begun trading. Question:
Over the next 50 years, will the number and sophistication of financial services
increase or decrease?
Observe that I asked you a microeconomic question, a political question,
a macroeconomic question and a financial question.
Trend Extrapolation
If you are like most people, you extrapolated your answers from the trends
of previous data. You expect cheaper computers, more democracy, an economic
expansion rate in the 90-95 percent range, and an increase in financial sophistication.
It appears sensible to answer such questions by extrapolation because people
default to physics when predicting social trends. They think, "Momentum will
remain constant unless acted on by an outside force." This mode of thought
is deeply embedded in our minds because it has tremendous evolutionary advantages.
When Og threw a rock at Ugg back in the cave days, Ugg ducked. He ducked
because his mind had inherited and/or learned the consequences of the Law of
Conservation of Momentum. The rock would not veer off course because there
was nothing between the two men to act upon it, and rocks do not have minds
of their own. Earlier animals that incorporated responses to the laws of physics
lived; those that didn't died, and their genes were weeded out of the gene
pool. The Law of Conservation of Momentum makes possible our modern technological
world. People rely on it every day. Despite its use in so many areas, however,
it is inapplicable to predicting social change. For most people in most circumstances,
the proper answer to each of the above questions is, "I don't know." (Socionomics
can give you an edge in social prediction, but that's another story.)
The most certain aspect of social history is dramatic change. To get a feel
for how useless - even counterproductive - extrapolation can be in social forecasting,
consider these questions:
1) It is 1886. Project the American railroad industry.
2) It is 1970. Project the future of China.
3) It is 1963. Project the cost of medical care in the U.S.
4) It is 1969. Project the U.S. space program.
5) It is 100 A.D. Project the future of Roman civilization.
In 1886, you would have envisioned a future landscape combed with rail lines
connecting every city, town and neighborhood. Small trains would roll around
to your home to pick you up, and a network of rail lines would help deliver
you to your destination efficiently and cheaply. Super-fast trains would make
cross-country runs. You could eat, read or sleep along the way.
Is that what happened? Would anyone have predicted, indeed did anyone
predict, that trains in 2004 would often be going slower than they did
in 1886, that they would routinely jump the tracks, that they would be inefficient,
that they would have little food and few sleeper cars, that the equipment would
be old and worn out?
In 1970, the Communist party was entrenched in China. Over 35 million people
had been slaughtered, culminating in the Cultural Revolution in which Chinese
youths helped exterminate people just because they were smart, successful or
capitalist. Would anyone have imagined that China, in just over a single generation,
would be out-producing the United States, which was then the world's premier
industrial giant?
In 1963, medical care was cheap and accessible. Doctors made house calls for
$20. Hospitals were so accommodating that new mothers typically stayed for
a week or more before being sent home, and it was affordable. Would anyone
have guessed that forty years later, pills would sell for $2 apiece, a surgical
procedure and a week in the hospital could cost one-third of the average annual
wage, and people would have to take out expensive insurance policies just in
case they got sick?
In the space of just 30 years, rockets had gone from the experimental stage
to such sophistication that one of them brought men to the moon and back. In
1969, many people projected the U.S. space program over the next 30 years to
include colonies on the moon and trips to Mars. After all, it was only sensible,
wasn't it? By the laws of physics, it was. But in the 35 years since 1969,
the space program has relentlessly regressed.
In 100 A.D., would you have predicted that the most powerful culture in the
world would be reduced to rubble in a bit over three centuries? If Rome had
had a stock market, it would have gone essentially to zero.
Futurists nearly always extrapolate past trends, and they are nearly always
wrong. You cannot use extrapolation under the physics paradigm to predict social
trends, including macroeconomic, political and financial trends. The most
certain aspect of social history is dramatic change. More interesting,
social change is a self-induced change. Rocks cannot change trajectory
on their own, but societies can and do change direction, all the time.
Action and Reaction
In
the world of physics, action is followed by reaction. Most financial analysts,
economists, historians, sociologists and futurists believe that society works
the same way. They typically say, "Because so-and-so has happened, such-and-such
will follow." The news headlines in Figure 1, for example, reflect what economists
tell reporters: Good economic news makes the stock market go up; bad
economic news makes it go down. But is it true?
Figure 2 shows the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the quarter-by-quarter
performance of the U.S. economy. Much of the time, the trends are allied, but
if physics reigned in this realm, they would always be allied. They aren't.
The fourth quarter of 1987 saw the strongest GDP
quarter in a 15-year span (from 1984 through 1999). That was also the biggest
down quarter in stock prices for the entire period. Action in the economy did
not produce reaction in stocks. The four-year period from March 1976 to March
1980 had not a single down quarter of GDP and included the biggest single positive
quarter for 20 years on either side. Yet the DJIA lost 25 percent of its value
during that period. Had you known the economic figures in advance and believed
that financial laws are the same as physical laws, you would have bought stocks
in both cases. You would have lost a lot of money.
Figure 3 shows the S&P against quarterly earnings in 1973-1974. Did action
in earnings produce reaction in the stock market? Not unless you consider rising
earnings bad news. While earning rose persistently in 1973-1974, the stock
market had its biggest decline in over 40 years.
Suppose
you knew for certain that inflation would triple the money supply over
the next 20 years. What would you predict for the price of gold? Most analysts
and investors are certain that inflation makes gold go up in price. They view
financial pricing as simple action and reaction, as in physics. They reason
that a rising money supply reduces the value of each purchasing unit, so the
price of gold, which is an alternative to money, will reflect that change,
increment for increment.
Figure 4 shows a time when the money supply tripled yet gold lost over
half its value. In other words, gold not only failed to reflect the amount
of inflation that occurred but also failed even to go in the same direction.
It failed the prediction from physics by a whopping factor of six, thereby
unequivocally invalidating it. (I was generous in ending the study now rather
than in 2001, at which time gold had lost over two-thirds of its value.)
It does no good to say - as we sometimes hear from those attempting to rescue
the physics paradigm in finance - that gold will follow the money supply "eventually." In
physics, billiard balls on an endless plane do not eventually return
to a straight path after wandering all over the place, including in the reverse
direction from the way they are hit. (What physics-minded investor, moreover,
can be sure that gold should follow the money supply rather than vice versa?
Is he certain which element in the picture should be presumed to be the action
and which the reaction? Maybe a higher gold price increases the value of central
banks' gold reserves, letting them support more lending. Cause and effect arguments
are highly manipulable when using the physics paradigm.)
We do know one thing: Investors who feared inflation in January 1980 were right,
yet they lost dollar value for two decades, lost even more buying power because
the dollar itself was losing value against goods and services, and lost even
more wealth in the form of missed opportunities in other markets. Gold's bear
market produced more than a 90 percent loss in terms of gold's
average purchasing power of goods, services, homes and corporate shares despite
persistent inflation! How is such an outcome possible? Easy: Financial markets
are not a matter of action and reaction. The physics model of financial
markets is wrong.
Cause and Effect
In the 1990s, a university professor sold many books that made a case for
buying "stocks for the long run." In a recent issue of USA Today, he
told a reporter, "Clearly, the risk of terror is the major reason why the markets
have come down. We can't quantify these risks; it's not like flipping a coin
and knowing your odds are 50-50 that an attack won't occur."1
In other words, he accepts the physics paradigm of external cause and effect
with respect to the stock market but says he cannot predict the cause part
of the equation and therefore cannot predict stock prices. The first question
is, well, if one cannot predict causes, then how can one write a book
predicting effects, i.e., arguing that stocks will go up? Or down or
sideways? A second question is far more important. We have already seen that
economic performance, earnings and inflation do not necessarily coincide with
movements in apparently related financial markets. In fact, the two sets of
data can utterly oppose each other. Is there any evidence that dramatic news
events that make headlines, such as terrorist attacks, political events, wars,
crises or any such events are causal to stock market movement?
Suppose the devil were to offer you historic news a day in advance. He doesn't
even ask for your soul in exchange. He explains, "What's more, you can hold
a position for as little as a single trading day after the event or as long
as you like." It sounds foolproof, so you accept. His first offer: "The president
will be assassinated tomorrow." You can't believe it. You and only you know
it's going to happen. The devil transports you back to November 22, 1963. You
short the market. Do you make money?
Figure 5 shows the DJIA around the time when President John Kennedy was shot.
First of all, can you tell by looking at the graph exactly when that event
occurred? Maybe before that big drop on the left? Maybe at some other peak,
causing a selloff?

The first arrow in Figure 6 shows the timing of the assassination. The market
initially fell, but by the close of the next trading day, it was above where
it was at the moment of the event, as you can see by the second arrow. You
can't cover your short sales until the following day's up opening because the
devil said that you could hold as briefly as one trading day after the event, but
not less. You lose money.

You aren't really angry because after all, the devil delivered on his promise.
Your only error was to believe that a presidential assassination would dictate
the course of stock prices. So you vow not to bet on things that aren't directly
related to finance. The devil pops up again, and you explain what you want. "I've
got just the thing," he says, and announces, "The biggest electrical blackout
in the history of North America will occur tomorrow." Wow. Billions of dollars
of lost production. People stranded in subways and elevators. The last time
a blackout occurred, there was a riot in New York and hundreds of millions
of dollars worth of damage done. How more directly related to finance could
you get? "Sold!" you cry. The devil transports you back to August 2003.
Figure 7 shows the DJIA around the time of the blackout. Does the history
of stock prices make it evident when that event occurred? After all, if markets
are action and reaction, then this economic loss should show up unmistakably,
shouldn't it? There are two big drops on the graph. Maybe it's one of them.

The arrow in Figure 8 shows the timing of that event. Not only did the market
fail to collapse, it gapped up the next morning! You sit all day with
your short sales and cover the following day with another loss.

"Third time's the charm," says the devil. You reply, "Forget it. I don't understand
why the market isn't reacting to these causes. Maybe these events you're giving
me just aren't strong enough." The devil leans into your ear and whispers, "Two
bombs will be detonated in London, leveling landmark buildings and killing
3000 people. Another bomb planted at Parliament will misfire, merely blowing
the side off the building. The terrorist perpetrators will vow to continue
their attacks until England is wiped out." He promises that you can sell short
on the London Stock Exchange ten minutes before it happens and even offers
to remove the one-day holding restriction. "Cover whenever you like," he says.
You agree. The devil then transports you to a parallel universe where London
is New York and Parliament is the Pentagon. It's September 11, 2001.
Figure 9 shows the DJIA around that time. Study it carefully. Can you find
an anomaly on the graph? Is there an obvious time when the shocking
events of "9/11" show up? If markets reacted to "exogenous shocks," as billiard
balls do, there would be something obviously different on the graph
at that time, wouldn't there? But there isn't.

Figure 10 shows the timing of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. You may recall that
authorities closed the stock market for four trading days plus a weekend. Question:
Was it a certainty that the market would re-open on the downside? No! Some
popular radio talk-show hosts and administration officials advocated buying
stocks on the opening just to "show 'em." You sit with your massive short position,
and you are nervous. But you are also lucky. The market opens down, continuing
a decline that had already been in force for 17 weeks. You cheer. You're making
money now! Well, you do for six days, anyway. Then the market leaps higher,
and somewhere between one week and six months later you finally cover your
shorts at a loss, disgusted and confused. If you are an everyday thoughtful
person, you decide that events are irrelevant to markets and begin the long
process of educating yourself on why markets move as they do. If you are a
conventional economist, you don't bother.

In case you still think that terrorism is a factor somewhere in the
falling markets of 2000-2002, please read "Challenging the Conventional Assumption
About the Presumed Sociological Effect of Terrorist News," which is reprinted
in Pioneering Studies in Socionomics. It shows unequivocally that the
terrorist events and related fears of that time encompassed a period when the
market mostly went up and consumer sentiment improved. The graph that
accompanies that study is reproduced here as Figure 11.

Now think about this: In real life, you don't get to know about dramatic
events in advance. Investors who sold stocks upon hearing of the various
events cited above did so because they believed that events cause changes
in stock values. They all sold the low. I chose bad news for these
exercises because it tends to be more dramatic, but the same irrelevance
attaches to good news.
Since knowing dramatic events in advance would produce no value for investing, guessing events
is an utter waste of time. There are no "inefficiencies" related to external
causality that one may exploit.
If news is irrelevant to markets, how can the media explain almost every day's
market action by the news? Answer: There is a lot of news every day.
Commentators don't write their cause-and-effect stories before the session
starts but after it ends. It's no trick to fit news to the market after it's
closed. I am writing this paragraph the day after stocks had a big down day.
The news at 8:30 a.m. yesterday was good, a "stronger-than-expected
1.8 percent jump in March retail sales." How, then, did this morning's newspaper,
relying on cause and effect, explain yesterday's big drop? (Remember, it's
easy to play games with cause and effect under the physics paradigm.) Here
is the headline: "Rising-Rates Scenario Sends Stocks Reeling."2 This
and other articles present the following ex-post-facto consensus reasoning:
Investors appear to have decided that the good news that the economy is "starting
to accelerate" might mean higher interest rates, which would be bearish if it
happened. This contrived conclusion is doubly bizarre given the century-long
history of interest-rate data, which (as the next section will show) belies
such a belief. How, moreover, does one explain the fact that the stock market
opened higher yesterday, in concert with the standard view of such news
being "good"? There was no more big news that day. Had there been some "bad" news
immediately after the opening, such inventive reasoning would not have been
required. The "reason" for the rout would have been obvious, just as it was
on the previous down day of this size, on which terrorists conveniently bombed
trains in Spain. (Let me guess. You think that this example of news causality
makes sense, don't you? Sorry. Did I mention that the U.S. stock market - fully
apprised of the news - rallied until noon that day before selling off?)
[End of Part I; Part II Will Appear In An Upcoming Issue]
1 Shell, Adam. (March 23, 2004.) "Fear of terrorism
jolts stock market," USA Today.
2 Walker, Tom. (April 14, 2004.) "Rising
rates scenario sends stocks reeling," The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
p.D5.
Financial Markets
The stock market, bond market and precious metals are all on track with expectations,
so there is no need for detailed commentary from EWT. The DJIA peaked one day
from EWT's ideal date of February 20. It should fall substantially through
the third quarter of 2004 before the first rally of consequence begins. Precious
metals and mining issues have ended their countertrend rallies and have resumed
their long term bear markets. The economy should begin to weaken again in coming
months as the stock market falls. The June issue of EWFF goes out in a week.
It's Not Too Late To Do Something Really Stupid!
If you missed out on the Dot-com Debacle, the Silver Slaughter, the Stock
Market Massacre, the Junk Bond Swoon, the Collectibles Calamity, the Real Estate
Trap and so many other confirmed or looming disasters, do not despair. There
is a great one waiting for you, right now! Here's the ticket: Buy the Google
IPO. Yes, folks. Don't buy stocks of unknown but brilliant start-up companies
that have a chance of making you rich. Buy the stock of a company that has
already gotten as big as it can get, buy the stock of a company that could
be put out of business in two years by an innovative competitor, and be sure
to buy the shares at the top of a year-and-a-half stock market rally to historically
overvalued territory, and be sure to buy those shares at top dollar, bidding
against a maniacal, know-nothing public in a Dutch auction!
Hey, I love Google, too, but only for Internet searches. Let somebody else
buy the stock.
Third Party Resurgence
Remember that great movie, Trading Places? The producer of that movie
is running for president. You may recall Aaron Russo from 1994, when he formed
the Constitution Party in an effort to get America to return to the values
of the Constitution. That party has since been taken over by non-libertarians,
so Russo has decided to seek the presidential nomination on the Libertarian
ticket. The left outlaws guns; the right favors prohibition. The left takes
more of your money; the right restricts your right to marry whom you want.
Both sides restrict your access to medicine, jobs, property, imported goods,
tobacco, and a thousand other things. Both sides - against the advice of Founding
Fathers Washington, Adams and Jefferson - want to send your kids to foreign
lands to fight other people's wars. Aaron is different. He wants to defend America
will all our might and put only real criminals - murderers, thieves,
frauds and rapists - in jail. Other than that, his motto is simple: "All
our freedoms, all the time." The last time Libertarians peaked in national
support was 1980, the year of the low in the DJIA valued in terms of gold.
In other words, bear markets help third parties. The electricity of that time
is returning. Endorsements for Russo are pouring in, his website traffic has
recently topped Ralph Nader's, and straw polls suggest that he will be chosen
the Libertarian Party candidate. I will be delivering an introductory speech
for him at the LP convention in Atlanta on the final weekend in May. To learn
more, visit www.russoforpresident.com.
THE ELLIOTT WAVE THEORIST is published by Elliott Wave International,
Inc. Mailing address: P.O. Box 1618, Gainesville, Georgia 30503, U.S.A. Phone:
770-536-0309. All contents copyright ?2004 Elliott Wave International, Inc.
Reproduction, retransmission or redistribution in any form is illegal and strictly
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The Elliott Wave Principle is a detailed description of how markets behave.
The description reveals that mass investor psychology swings from pessimism
to optimism and back in a natural sequence, creating specific patterns in price
movement. Each pattern has implications regarding the position of the market
within its overall progression, past, present and future. The purpose of this
publication and its associated services is to outline the progress of markets
in terms of the Elliott Wave Principle and to educate interested parties in
the successful application of the Elliott Wave Principle. While a reasonable
course of conduct regarding investments may be formulated from such application,
at no time will specific security recommendations or customized actionable
advice be given, and at no time may a reader or caller be justified in inferring
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part of any effort to assess future probabilities.
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