IF YOU THINK THAT WAS A CRASH….

Last week’s volatility to the downside was entirely predictable, as the first leg down during this ongoing market crash reached the correction stage of 11%. The technical bounce was a given, as the 30 year old HFT MBAs on Wall Street have been trained like rats to BTFD. In their lemming like minds, it has worked for the last six years of this Federal Reserve created “bull market”, so why wouldn’t it work now. Last week was their first lesson in why it doesn’t work during bear markets, and we’ve entered a bear market. John Hussman seems amused at the shallowness of the arguments by Wall Street shills and CNBC cheerleaders about the future of the stock market in his weekly letter. After this modest pullback from all-time highs, the S&P 500 is still overvalued by 92%:

Following the market decline of recent weeks, the most reliable valuation measures we identify now project average annual nominal returns for the S&P 500 of about 0.5% in the next 10 years. On a broad range of historically reliable valuation measures (see Ockham’s Razor and the Market Cycle) the May peak in the S&P 500 reached valuations averaging about 114% above run-of-the-mill historical norms – more than double the valuation levels that have historically been associated with the 10% average expected market returns that investors have enjoyed over the long-term. At present, those measures have retreated to about 92% above historical norms.

Keep in mind that low interest rates don’t raise the estimated 10-year expected return on stocks from the current 0.5% level. Low interest rates only make the low expected return on stocks somewhat more “acceptable” because the alternatives are similarly dismal. The Federal Reserve’s policies of zero interest rates and quantitative easing have done nothing but to encourage yield-seeking speculation, bringing valuations to extreme levels, and leaving prospective future investment returns equally depressed.

Those who assert that high equity valuations are “justified” by low interest rates are actually (and probably unknowingly) saying that 0.5% expected returns on equities over the coming decade are a-okay with them. But it’s critically important to understand that while low interest may help to explain why current market valuations have been driven to obscene levels, low rates do not change the relationship – the correspondence – between elevated valuation levels and dismal subsequent long-term market returns.

It is time to assume crash positions because we have not experienced anything approaching a crash thus far. We’ve hit nothing but an air pocket.  As Dr. Hussman points out so succinctly, market crashes do not happen at the peak. There is usually an initial 10% to 14% decline as the smart money exits stage left, then the lemming dip buyers pile in and drive the market back up, but fail in bringing it above the initial high. It’s only then that sentiment deteriorates, support levels are broken, and all hell breaks loose. That time is coming.

The market decline of recent weeks was not a crash. It was merely an air-pocket. It was probably just a start. Such air pockets are typical when overvalued, overbought, overbullish conditions are joined by deterioration in market internals, as we’ve observed in recent months. They are the downside of the “unpleasant skew” that typically results from that combination – a series of small but persistent marginal new highs, followed by an abrupt vertical decline that erases weeks or months of gains within a handful of sessions (see Air Pockets, Free-Falls, and Crashes).

Actual market crashes involve a much larger and concerted shift toward investor risk-aversion, which doesn’t really happen right off of a market peak. Historically, market crashes don’t even start until the market has first retreated by 10-14%, and then recovers about half of that loss, offering investors hope that things have stabilized (look for example at the 1929 and 1987 instances). The extensive vertical losses that characterize a crash follow only after the market breaks that apparent “support,” leading to a relentless free-fall that inflicts several times the loss that we’ve seen in recent weeks.

It’s hysterical watching the paid Wall Street hucksters paraded on CNBC and the other corporate media propaganda outlets trying to calm the muppets so they can continue to fleece them. The highly paid talking heads, bubble headed bimbo spokesmodels, and captured shill “experts” like Cramer, blather about the 10% decline as if it has been an extreme over-reaction to a meaningless possible .25% increase in an obscure Fed lever and the complete collapse of the China bubble economy. They knowingly ignore the extreme valuations of our stock market to levels only seen in 1929 and 2000. Their goal is to keep the muppets in the market so their advertising revenue stream from Wall Street continues unabated.

The reason why the word “crash” has been bandied about to describe the recent selloff, I think, is partly because investors have lost all perspective of the losses that have historically been associated with that word, but mostly because it gives market cheerleaders the needed “cover” to encourage investors to continue speculating near record market valuations. After all, everyone “knows” that investors shouldn’t sell after a crash, thus the endless flurry of articles advising “selling in a crash is a textbook mistake,” “selling off stocks during a crash is a terrible idea”, “whatever you do, don’t sell”, “market crash: don’t rush to press the panic button,” “the worst investing move during a market crash,” … you get the idea.

Hand-in-hand with the exaggeration of the recent decline as a “crash” and “panic” is the exaggeration of investor sentiment as being wildly bearish. The actual shift has been from outright bulls to the “correction” camp, but that’s a rather meaningless shift since anyone but the most ardent bull would characterize current conditions as being at least a market correction. Historically, durable intermediate and cyclical lows are characterized by a significant increase in the number of outright bears. That’s not yet apparent here. Indeed, Investors Intelligence still reports the percentage of bearish investment advisors at just 26.8%.

The reason people lose so much money during market crashes is because of their cognitive dissonance and normalcy bias. They don’t want to think about the possibility of losing 50% of their money, even though history, facts, and common sense all point towards a dramatic crash. They will be convinced to stay in the market by the dramatic rallies that occur during bear market crashes. Six of the largest one day gains in history occurred during the 2008/2009 crash. Did that result in people not losing 55% of their money over a few month period? Selling now would not be a panic move, it would be a rational move.

It’s generally true that one doesn’t want to sell stocks into a crash (as I’ve often observed, once an extremely overvalued market begins to deteriorate internally, the best time to panic is before everyone else does). Still, the recent decline doesn’t nearly qualify as a crash. For the record, those familiar with market history also know that even “don’t sell stocks into a crash ” isn’t universally true. Recall, as an extreme example, that from September 3 to November 13, 1929, the Dow Industrials plunged by -47.9%. The market briefly recovered about half of that loss by early 1930. Even so, it turned out that investors would ultimately wish they had sold at the low of the 1929 crash. By July 8, 1932, the Dow had dropped an additional -79.3% from the November 1929 trough. In any event, the recent market retreat, at its lowest closing point, took the S&P 500 only -12.2% from its high, and at present, the index is down just -9.7% from its highest closing level in history. To call the recent market retreat a “crash” is an offense to informed discussion of the financial markets.

The biggest fallacy bought into by the ignorant masses and the intellectual academic elites is that the Federal Reserve’s purposeful blowing of this enormous bubble has increased the wealth of the nation. It has done nothing of the sort. It has increased the debt of the nation, while starving the productive wealth creating segments of the nation. They have created paper wealth by encouraging reckless gambling by Wall Street and the corporations using shareholder funds to buy back their stock at all-time highs. As we saw in 2000 and 2007, paper wealth can vaporize overnight.

Keep in mind that when paper wealth is “lost,” nobody gets it. Quantitative easing has not made the nation “wealthier”, nor will the massive paper loss we expect over the completion of the market cycle make the nation “poorer.” As I detailed in June (see When Paper Wealth Vanishes):

“As in equal or lesser speculative bubbles across history, there’s a common delusion that elevated stock prices represent wealth to their holders. That is a fallacy, and we can hardly believe that given the collapses that followed the 2000 and 2007 extremes, investors (and even Fed policymakers) would again fall for that fallacy so readily. The actual wealth is in the cash flows that are ultimately delivered into the hands of shareholders over time. Individuals can realize their paper wealth by selling now to some other investor and receiving cash in return, but only a small proportion of investors can actually convert current paper wealth into cash by selling to other investors without disrupting the bubble. The new buyer then receives whatever cash flows the stock delivers into the hands of existing holders, and can eventually sell the claim to the remaining stream of future cash flows to yet another investor. Ultimately, a share of stock is nothing but a claim on the long-term stream of cash flows that will be delivered into the hands of its holders over time. The current price and the future cash flows are linked together by a rate of return: the higher the price you pay today for a given stream of future cash flows, the lower the rate of return you can expect achieve by holding that investment over the long-term.”

The Federal Reserve has been successful in redistributing the wealth of the nation to the .1% who control the levers of our economic, financial, and political systems, from the working middle class who do the heavy lifting in this country. Redistributing wealth through speculation, rigging markets, printing money and throwing savers and senior citizens under the bus is not creating wealth. The biggest debt bubble in world history will lead to the greatest financial collapse in world history. Act rationally and get your money out of the stock market now.

Emphatically, the wealth of a nation is not measured by the price that the most reckless speculator will pay for the last few shares that change hands at the most exuberant moment of a bull market, multiplied by the entire number of shares outstanding. No, the wealth of a nation is its accumulated stock of productive real investment, human capital, and resources. Everything else cancels out because every security owned by some holder is also the liability of some issuer (see Stock Flow Accounting and the Coming $10 Trillion Paper Loss).

Put simply, many investors, and even some policy makers at the Federal Reserve, are under the delusion that paper market capitalization represents real wealth to the economy as a whole. The truth is that the wealth is in the productive assets of the economy and the long-term stream of cash flows they generate. Price fluctuations can certainly affect the distribution of wealth. Those who repeatedly buy stocks from others at depressed prices, and sell them to others at elevated prices, will accumulate the purchasing power of others. Those who repeatedly do the opposite will surrender their purchasing power to others. But the aggregate wealth of the economy as a whole is unaffected by those price fluctuations.

Read Hussman’s Weekly Letter

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
17 Comments
Backtable
Backtable
September 7, 2015 9:11 am

“The biggest fallacy bought into by the ignorant masses and the intellectual academic elites is that the Federal Reserve’s purposeful blowing of this enormous bubble has increased the wealth of the nation. It has done nothing of the sort. It has increased the debt of the nation, while starving the productive wealth creating segments of the nation. They have created paper wealth by encouraging reckless gambling by Wall Street and the corporations using shareholder funds to buy back their stock at all-time highs. As we saw in 2000 and 2007, paper wealth can vaporize overnight.”

Exactly. The run-up in the markets has done nothing for activity normally associated with real growth, such as capital expenditures (CAPEX) and job creation. It has, in fact done, precisely the opposite; held CAPEX flat, which adjusted for inflation means negative, and has had no benefit or the “trickle down” effect of creating jobs, and it has arrived at this state having indebted the country to stratospheric levels. In essence, the FED and government have colluded in the elite’s financial rape of the taxpayers, which will go down in history as the greatest theft ever committed against humanity.

There’s a saying, “First it’s currency wars, then commodity wars, then trade wars, then World War.” We appear to be at least half way down the path.

Fa Cough
Fa Cough
September 7, 2015 9:29 am

Funny how every year a bunch of retards claim the “end of time” or “financial collapse” is coming, Yet US economy is doing good, US Stocks have broken record highs (Check out FB stock) Not even China or Greece can bring that stock down. People need to stop the noise and enjoy life and stop trying to spook the people actually enjoying life.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
September 7, 2015 9:37 am

Amen. DC Sunset?

Backtable
Backtable
September 7, 2015 9:41 am

@Fa Cough

Normalcy bias, much?

Chicago999444
Chicago999444
September 7, 2015 10:02 am

FA Couph, just like when people like me predicted a housing and credit crash in 2005, we had to listen to people like you….. and then we had to pay taxes to bail them out of losses from all their bad loans and rapidly unraveling derivatives positions (major financial houses) or out of their hopelessly underwater bad house loans whose payment had tripled when their loan recast and the house was worth 50% of what they’d contracted to pay for it (the sheeple).

We now have more bad credit in the system than we had then, and a grossly overextended equities and bond markup runup created solely by interest rate repression, and our bond market is at the mercy of an economy that is a far more bloated Ponzi than even ours is. Who KNEW that China would start unloading all the U.S. Treasury debt it owns in amounts of $100B at a crack when their own towering house of cards started imploding?

TE
TE
September 7, 2015 10:58 am

Some observations, albeit “anecdotal,” but fact-based nonetheless.

1. 24 year old nephew just put $50k down on a $250k condo. He works for his dad, in government contracting, so odds are good he may keep an income for a while. Buying with a girlfriend and keeping outs. He paid at least $100k more than I would ever consider – and I wouldn’t consider it at $150k either.

2. Sis-in-law just sold a lake house for cash to a rich guy that is turning it into his dream vacation home. About 45 minutes out of the main industrial areas. Paid at least twice what it should be worth.

3. Everybody and their brother, especially those that have little to no clue how finance works and no interest, nor knowledge, of history, are declaring “if I had money I’d be soaking it into the market right now!”

Meanwhile, another TWO factories (one was a corrugated box manufacturer) have gone dark in my 90 mile trek to my hometown in the past six months.

More and more homes are going dark without sales signs – again.

More and more people – mainly connected to government/insurance/unions are making really short-sighted financial decisions based on the lies being touted by our media/government.

Yep, all is EXACTLY the same as it was before Y2K ended, before dotcom burst and before 2008.

Based on that alone the plays are realigning for another epic meltdown.

@Fa Cough, must have a government paid/connected job, or income. For the rest of us, especially those of us still stupid and tenacious enough to keep trying to build something and employ others, the economy is in the toilet and barely ever rose above it for the past 10 years. Our customers have been offshored, along with their customers and all the productivity and jobs.

Pushing pills to non-working landwhales and mentally/chemically damaged children is NOT a sustainable economy.

Sad for me to know that the people like you, and you all are the majority, are going to be the ones eating bullets and killing their children when the truth can no longer be denied. In the meantime, your Overlords thank you for helping them set us all up for our upcoming crash back to the third world.

Can’t even get mad at the idiots anymore. All I can do is to pity them for the horror and pain they will soon face.

Nancy
Nancy
September 7, 2015 2:25 pm

ADMINISTRATOR-You’re a RIOT!!!! Exhibit A of why this country is in DEEP DOO DOO!!!! Beam me up Lord, I am sooooooooooooooo DONE!

Guy
Guy
September 7, 2015 2:32 pm

Fa cough, thank you! I need someone to buy my stock as I exit this train wreck of a market and add to my shorts. It is odd though, seeing as how I keep hearing how great this economy is, why has the Fed kept rates at emergency levels of 0% for 7 years now?

Like the rest of you, I have a lot of loved ones with limited understanding of finance. An analogy for stocks that I’ve found most people can understand is equating them to a house that can be rented out. I will point out a modest house on their street, worth maybe $200,000, and ask them if they would buy it for $4million if they could only get $1500/month in rent from it. Then I ask if it were selling for $50,000 if they’d buy it. Finally I equate this example to the stock market, how it is important to buy only if it’s fairly priced, and I’ve found most people understand it then. This example probably wouldn’t work in southern California…

Bohemian Rove
Bohemian Rove
September 7, 2015 2:49 pm

been saying this for years. DJIA could lose 1000 pts a week for several weeks and that would only take us down to the point of markets ACTUAL value. which is around 10,000-11,000 at most. the rest is fake money illusion and fraudulent PPT pump ups

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 7, 2015 4:13 pm

j

Blarde
Blarde
September 7, 2015 11:59 pm

Federal Reserve, WHO, UN, blah,blah… Putting all in one context – Globalist.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
September 8, 2015 10:40 am

I don’t know the future.

I do have a market opinion, however, as does everyone who pays even the remotest attention to this stuff, including those who buy-and-hold forever, deluding themselves into thinking they don’t have a market opinion.

Can stocks resume the uptrend and go to new ATH’s? Of course. It’s one of three possibilities (up, down and sideways.) There’s never, ever a time when one future is impossible. There are times, however, when “up” becomes somewhat improbable.

We’ve had a 6 year, vertical, uninterrupted rally. Of course the bulls (Fa cough) are emboldened. I can go back to March of 2009 and guess what? People like Fa cough were SILENT. Instead it was Doom Porn that was being played even on CNBC.

That was a capitulation low.

In its aftermath, “everyone” could see that the low was in. “Everyone” could see that the Fed was omnipotent and could levitate markets with impunity.

Hindsight is wonderful. Midwits who surround us are FULL of it, and it just amplifies their Dunning-Kruger effect.

My problem today is an aphorism: “What is obvious is almost always wrong.” Today we have lots of folks who can see a triangle formation in the blue chips. Triangles usually resolve to the downside. Will this “obvious” conclusion turn out to be wrong?

I think it would be *hilarious* if Mr. Market threw EVERYONE a curve here. IF he did so, he would begin a one or two day plunge here soon, breaking to new lows. The bears would pile into the market on the belief that “this is the Big One,” and look! This is the Season For Crashes!!!!

Yay!

Oh, but once stocks are down another 5% or so, they stop dropping and a vertical rally begins, carrying markets higher (but not to new highs) all the way to late October.

Hah HAH! The bears get crushed. The bulls are emboldened even more! Pawn the house, dear, it’s time to load up on stocks as the bears cover their shorts while soaking their shirts with tears and shorts with….

Well. You get the idea.

…..and by Spring stocks are down 50%, and by summer, 70%.

Mr. Market would be rolling on the proverbial floor, laughing at everyone’s tears.

I think the larger trend has turned down. In order for it to turn back up, the blue chips would have to rise phenomenal amounts in a short time. While this is possible if the market volume is low enough, it seems improbable enough that my market opinion is bearish.

That said, I sit almost entirely in the safest cash alternatives I can find. On the one hand, I’ve been getting killed by inflation for years. On the other, today my cash can buy 50% more gasoline than it could have just a year or two ago. The biggest “inflation” I missed was in stocks. If they follow the path I think is ahead, all that “inflation” that hurt me recently will simply evaporate.

I like to think of “holding cash” today a lot like buying gold in 1998 when it was $300-400/oz. Someone who did that then (I did not) did NOT catch the bottom and WAS hurt as gold fell to its final low near $250 in both 1999 and 2001. The man who bought in 1998, however, if he was patient, was VINDICATED.

I may think stocks are headed lower, and I may be playing the short side with what amounts to pocket change. I am unwilling, however, to do anything much, other than drop anchor in what I hope is a protected bay, and hope to ride out the storm I see on the horizon. I don’t want to get rich, I just want to keep as much as I can of what I simply have now.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
September 8, 2015 10:46 am

I mis-wrote: Triangles usually resolve in the same direction as prices entered them, which in this case would be to the downside. They are generally fourth waves in Elliott Wave analysis. The problem is that something that at one moment “looks” like a triangle can, in the next moment, be invalidated by price movement. An SPX above 1975 makes the triangle formation not a triangle.

Will we get there? Or is this just another of Mr. Market’s endless head-fakes as he sets as many people up for the fall as he can? Mr. Market is an artist, an expert, at making it so bulls and bears alike lose money over the full course of a market cycle.

This anthropomorphism is part of why I expect stocks to fall back to unimaginably low levels. It would be Mr. Market’s ultimate comeuppance for arrogant bulls, whose numbers now flood the world.

Backtable
Backtable
September 8, 2015 1:43 pm

From Charles Hugh Smith’ article, WHY THE MARKET COULD SOAR FROM HERE

http://www.oftwominds.com/blogsept15/market-soars9-15.html

“The problem for technical bears is every technical system has been programmed into every trading program. Once you know that observers are keying on specific levels, the game boils down to blowing through those levels.

This has nothing to do with fundamentals or what should happen in a recessionary global economy. It has everything to do with managing news flow, expectations and the order book of insiders.

The Fed certainly has the power to drive a sword into the heart of equities by talking up tightening very aggressively. Maybe the Fed will slay the stock market at its meeting next week.

But what’s the game plan to save everyone that’s blown out of the water as a result of all that tough talk?

We aren’t privy to the closed-door discussions, the informal talks and the game plan for proxies, dark pools of capital, etc., so we’ll just have to see what happens. But it is a lot easier to reverse a 10% decline than a 40% decline. What would you do in the Fed’s shoes? Let the market have its way, or crash it with tightening?

More to the point: does the Fed really have a choice, given that the game is now for all the marbles?”

Martin Armstrong has made a somewhat similar observation, implying that as world markets cascade downward, money will flow into the US stock market on the premise the Fed will do everything in its power to be The Last Man Standing.

Personally, at this point the return of one’s money is more important than the return on one’s money, and as such, being in the market has all the appeal of getting in the neck by a flaming, curare-tipped arrow with a utility bill attached to it.

matslinger
matslinger
September 10, 2015 10:17 am

Read the “Silent weapons for quiet wars ” document…
Black Monday was an orchestrated shock test resulting
from a currency devaluation the Chinese were (ordered)
to do… ordered by who? by the owners of the Bank of China,
of course…the Rothschilds…. it was steam being let off
in the first step of an orchestrated incremental crash ..
the final crash Meyer Amschel Rothchild prescribed in 1773
is coming… the 7 year biblical period will be adhered to ,
giving more unearned credibility to the fraudulent good book.

There are no countries there are no peoples, there is no West !
Arthur Jenson, “Network” 1976.

Rothschild 25 point plan for global domination – 1773
exactly 200 freemason years before the 1973 petro dollar.

The demonetization of silver came 100 freemason years
before the petro dollar,
silver was confiscated in 1965, 92 years after the
crime of 1873…. 9+2 = 11 freemason death number.

Rothschild’s 25 Point Plan For World Domination – Nationalist Truth / New World Order Satanic Truth: Videos

January 7, 2012 by admin

Rothschild’s 25 Point Plan For World Domination
“In 1770, Mayer Amschel Rothschild married Gutta Schnapper. In that same year, he retained Jewish-born, Adam Weishaupt, an apostate Jesuit-trained professor of canon law, to revise and modernize Illuminism, the worship of Satan, with the objective of world domination and the imposition of the Luciferian ideology “upon what would remain of the human race” after a final orchestrated social-cataclysm. In 1773, Mayer summoned twelve wealthy men to Frankfort and asked them to pool their resources, then presented the 25-point plan that would enable them to gain control of the wealth, natural resources and manpower of the entire world.

Those 25 points are:

1. Use violence and terrorism rather than academic discussions.

2. Preach “Liberalism” to usurp political power.

3. Initiate class warfare.

4. Politicians must be cunning and deceptive – any moral code leaves a politician vulnerable.

5. Dismantle “existing forces of order and regulation.” Reconstruct all existing institutions.”

6. Remain invisible until the very moment when it has gained such strength that no cunning or force can undermine it.

7. Use Mob Psychology to control the masses. “Without absolute despotism one cannot rule efficiently.”

8. Advocate the use of alcoholic liquors, drugs, moral corruption and all forms of vice, used systematically by “agenteurs” to corrupt the youth.

9. Seize properties by any means to secure submission and sovereignty.

10. Foment wars and control the peace conferences so that neither of the combatants gains territory placing them further in debt and therefore into our power.

11. Choose candidates for public office who will be “servile and obedient to our commands, so they may be readily used as pawns in our game.”

12. Use the Press for propaganda to control all outlets of public information, while remaining in the shadows, clear of blame.

13. Make the masses believe they had been the prey of criminals. Then restore order to appear as the saviors.

14. Create financial panics. Use hunger to control to subjugate the masses.

15. Infiltrate Freemasonry to take advantage of the Grand Orient Lodges to cloak the true nature of their work in philanthropy. Spread their atheistic-materialistic ideology amongst the “Goyim” (gentiles).

16. When the hour strikes for our sovereign lord of the entire World to be crowned, their influence will banish everything that might stand in his way.

17. Use systematic deception, high-sounding phrases and popular slogans. “The opposite of what has been promised can always be done afterwards… That is of no consequence.”

18. A Reign of Terror is the most economical way to bring about speedy subjection.

19. Masquerade as political, financial and economic advisers to carry out our mandates with Diplomacy and without fear of exposing “the secret power behind national and international affairs.”

20. Ultimate world government is the goal. It will be necessary to establish huge monopolies, so even the largest fortunes of the Goyim will depend on us to such an extent that they will go to the bottom together with the credit of their governments on the day after the great political smash.”

21. Use economic warfare. Rob the “Goyim” of their landed properties and industries with a combination of high taxes and unfair competition.

22. “Make the ‘Goyim’ destroy each other so there will only be the proletariat left in the world, with a few millionaires devoted to our cause, and sufficient police and soldiers to protect our interest.”

23. Call it The New Order. Appoint a Dictator.

24. Fool, bemuse and corrupt the younger members of society by teaching them theories and principles we know to be false.

25 Twist national and international laws into a contradiction which first masks the law and afterwards hides it altogether. Substitute arbitration for law.”