WORST CASE SCENARIO = 73% DOWN FROM HERE

As the stock market gyrates higher and lower in a fairly narrow range, the spokesmodels and talking heads on CNBC breathlessly regurgitate the standard bullish mantra designed to keep the muppets in the market. They are employees of a massive corporation whose bottom line and stock price depend upon advertising revenues reaped from Wall Street and K Street. They aren’t journalists. They are propagandists disguised as journalists. Their job is to keep you confused, misinformed, and ignorant of the true facts.

Based on the never ending happy talk and buy now gibberish spouted by the pundit lackeys, you would think we are experiencing a bull market of epic proportions and anyone who hasn’t been in the market has missed out on tremendous gains. There’s one little problem with that bit of propaganda. It’s completely false. The Fed turned off the QE spigot at the end of October 2014 and the market has gone nowhere ever since.

QE1 began in September 2008, taking the Fed balance sheet from $900 billion to $2.3 trillion by June 2010. This helped halt the stock market crash and drove the S&P 500 up by 50% from its March 2009 lows. QE2 was implemented in November 2010 and increased the Fed balance sheet to $2.9 trillion by the end of 2011. This resulted in an unacceptable 10% increase in the S&P 500, so the Fed cranked up their printing presses to hyper-speed and launched the mother of all quantitative easings, with QE3 pushing their balance sheet to $4.5 trillion by October 2014, when they ceased their “Save a Wall Street Banker” campaign.

As Main Street dies, Wall Street has been paved in gold. The S&P 500 soared to all-time highs, with 40% gains from the September 2012 QE3 launch until its cessation in October 2014. Like a heroine addict, Wall Street has experienced withdrawal symptoms ever since, and begs for more monetary easing injections. Yellen and her gang of central bank drug dealers keep the patient from dying by continuing doses of ZIRP and psychologically comforting dialogue designed to cheer up Wall Street bankers.

QE3 ended 17 months ago and shockingly the S&P 500 is exactly where it was 17 months ago. How many bull markets go flat for 17 months? As John Hussman accurately points out, we are experiencing a topping formation in the third and biggest bubble of the last 16 years. It’s a long way down from here.

With the S&P 500 Index at the same level it set in early-November 2014, and the broad NYSE Composite Index unchanged since October 2013, the stock market continues to trace out a massive arc that is likely to be recognized, in hindsight, as the top formation of the third financial bubble in 16 years.

The chart below shows monthly bars for the S&P 500 since 1995. It’s difficult to imagine that the current situation will end well, but it’s quite easy to lose a full-cycle perspective when so much focus is placed on day-to-day fluctuations. The repeated speculative episodes since 2000 have taken historically-reliable valuation measures to extremes seen previously only at the 1929 peak and to a lesser extent, the 1937 peak (which was also followed by a market loss of 50%). Throughout history, at each valuation extreme – certainly in 2000, 2007 and today – investors have openly embraced rich valuations in the belief that they represent some new, modern and acceptable “norm”, failing to recognize the virtually one-to-one correspondence between elevated valuations and depressed subsequent investment outcomes.

So we’ve had the stock market going nowhere for 17 months, with valuations at obscene levels based on all historical precedents, corporate profits falling for three straight quarters, real wages of working people stagnant at 1988 levels, and home prices soaring to unreachable heights due to hot money from China, Wall Street hedge funds, and the ever resilient and late flipper class. Consumer spending, which accounts for 67% of our economy, is dead in the water as Obamacare, soaring rents, rising food costs and 0% interest on savings accounts drain the life out of middle class households. The average person (not Wall Street bankers, government apparatchiks, or other parasites of the establishment) is experiencing and has been experiencing a recession for years.

Low interest rates and double talk from clueless academic Federal Reserve lackeys cannot and will not prop up the stock market forever. Corporate buybacks, financed with cheap debt, by insanely greedy CEOs is the last leg in this wobbly stool. This will come to a screeching halt as profits collapse and the market goes south.

Stocks always fall during a recession and we have entered a recession, whether it is broadcast by the corporate controlled media or not. The last 17 months have offered the public an opportunity to exit near the top. Anyone who hasn’t taken advantage of this opportunity will be regretful in the not too distant future. With valuations twice historical norms, there is no place to go but down. Hussman understands history better than the brainless twits on CNBC.

Wall Street analysts talk endlessly on financial television about low interest rates “justifying” current valuations, without completing the story that even if this were true,  these rich valuations still imply predictably dismal future returns on stocks, particularly on a 10-12 year horizon.

Every bear market in history, including those that completed recent cycles, has taken valuations to the point where expected long-term returns approached or exceeded 10% annually. This is also true for bear markets prior to the 1960’s when interest rates regularly hovered at levels similar to the present.

On a combined set of historically-reliable measures, we presently estimate that valuations are more than twice their historical norms; twice the level that has routinely been pierced to the downside in even the most run-of-the-mill market cycle completions across a century of history, regardless of the level of interest rates.

Warren Buffett’s favorite valuation method for the market (Market Cap/GDP), which he has disregarded now that he has sold out to the crony capitalist establishment, is at extreme levels only seen at historic market tops (1929, 2000, 2007). Based upon basic mathematical equations and history, according to Hussman, the S&P 500 will be no higher in 2028 than it is today. I wonder how many financial advisors have put that in their neat little investment models? How many Boomers and Gen Xers can handle a 0% return over the next 12 years?

With the S&P 500 still within a few percent of its record 2015 high, investors have a critical opportunity here to understand the difference between a run-of-the-mill outcome and a worst-case scenario. The present ratio of MarketCap/GDP is about 1.2, which we fully expect to be followed by nominal total returns in the S&P 500 of about 2% annually over the coming 12 years. Given the current dividend yield on the S&P 500 actually exceeds 2%, the historically run-of-the-mill expectation from current valuations is that the S&P 500 Index itself will be below current levels 12 years from today, in 2028.

The arrogant ego maniacal pricks, who inhabit the upper echelons of the Wall Street towers of babel, confidently disregard facts, history, and basic risk management concepts as they are about to inflict the third market collapse in sixteen years upon the unsuspecting public. Hussman‘s projections in 2000 were right and his projections today will be proven right.

I realize that a projection like this seems preposterous. Unfortunately, this just reflects objective evidence that has remained reliable over a century of market cycles. Recall that our real-time projection for 10-year S&P 500 total returns in 2000 was correctly negative even on the basis of optimistic assumptions. The basic arithmetic was the same.

Now for the kicker. Throughout history the stock market has experienced secular bull and bear markets where valuations go from extremely overvalued to extremely undervalued. The secular bear market from 1966 until 1982 was followed by a secular bull market from 1982 until 2000. In 2008/2009 we were headed towards a secular low, but the Fed intervened in order to save their Wall Street owners from bankruptcy. The system was not purged of its excesses. The chaff was not separated from the wheat. Therefore, the secular lows have not happened yet.

Using basic mathematical relationships which have held for over 100 years of stock market performance, Hussman concludes a run of the mill reversion to the mean will result in a 50% stock market loss. In order to reach a secular low in valuations, we would experience a 73% loss from here. That seems inconceivable to a population of normalcy bias blinded, iGadget distracted, math challenged CNBC believers. Will you let cognitive dissonance rule your decision making or will you use reason to understand the peril directly ahead?

Notice that expected market returns of about 6% have historically been associated with a MarketCap/GDP ratio of 0.8. The historical norm associated with 10% equity returns has been about 0.6. The secular lows of 1949 and 1982 hit ratios about 0.33. So a rather minimal completion of the current cycle would take the market down by about -33% from here (=0.8/1.2-1), a run-of-the-mill cycle completion would be about -50%, and a truly worst-case scenario would take the market down by about -73% to a secular valuation low in the current market cycle. One can’t rule anything out given reckless monetary policy, fragile European banks, excessive covenant-lite lending and so forth, but I don’t expect more than a run-of-the-mill cycle completion here.

I’m afraid the lesson of history is that people never learn from the lessons of history. It’s always different this time. People will ignore the facts until it is too late. Every historically accurate statistical valuation method proves we are in the mother of all bubbles, created by Federal Reserve sociopaths. Every reliable economic indicator is flashing red for recession. There is absolutely no doubt this market is going to crash. It’s just a matter of when and by how much. If you think you can get out in time, be my guest and buy some more Amazon, Google, and Facebook on margin. Or you can heed the lessons of history as laid out by John Hussman. Your choice.

The central lesson to be learned from market history – and particularly from yield-seeking bubbles – is not that valuations are irrelevant, nor that central bank intervention is capable of sustaining bubbles permanently. Rather, the lessons are: 1) market internals, and the investor risk-preferences they convey, are the hinge between overvalued markets that remain elevated and those that collapse, and 2) unlike prior market cycles, even extreme “overvalued, overbought, overbullish” conditions were insufficient to derail speculation in the face of reckless monetary policy since 2009 – one had to wait until market internals deteriorated explicitly before adopting a hard-negative market outlook.

If one learns those hard-won lessons about the importance of investor risk-preferences and market internals over portions of the market cycle, one need not fall prey to the delusion that easy money can support stocks once risk-aversion sets in (recall 2000-2002 and 2007-2009), and one need not make the mistake of discarding the essential lessons that valuations have taught in complete market cycles across a century of history.

 

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38 Comments
Robert Gore
Robert Gore
March 30, 2016 8:16 pm

SLL is, and has been, on the same page and this will be posted there. I definitely would not rule out that 73 percent, and it may be worse. This will, after all, be the unraveling of the most gargantuan debt bubble of all time. Hussman is a refreshing voice of sanity. Robert Prechter has been issuing similar warnings. It is of no consequence that those warning are early. If you haven’t seen this one coming for years, you’re economically and financially clueless.

Jim
Jim
March 30, 2016 8:18 pm

With all the articles today about the dumbing down of America, it seems the scam could go on for some time as the sheeple are too stupid to realize whats going on. Kunstler had it right last week when he said there are only 2 classes left in America: The swindlers and the swindled.

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
March 30, 2016 8:20 pm

The longer the sheeple reign, the worse it will be.

Suzanna
Suzanna
March 30, 2016 8:22 pm

Admin,

I may understand some of this…I have been reading about it long enough.

“The market” outcomes are just too skewed to make sense. Borrowing

$$$$ (to buy one’s own stock) at zero interest is an exotic gamble. At

some point the principal comes due. The underlying premise is they will

“get out” before the market collapses. And some will get out, just in time.

Insider traders/manipulators will escape. These criminal freaks apparently

feel zero remorse for what their greed will do to all others. Pensions and savings

are lost, businesses fail, unemployment increases, towns, cities and states fail.

That will be the legacy of the vile bankers and the politicians that enable them.

Or is it vice-versa? Then the coup d’ grace, robbing the banks of our money

to make good on their gambling debts. That is now “the law.” And that isn’t

even the worst of it. Mayhem and chaos will follow. Basterds~!!

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
March 30, 2016 8:55 pm

SDS is at its 52 week low. This is not investment advice 🙂

ottomatik
ottomatik
March 30, 2016 11:37 pm

It almost appears to be planned, I wonder what will happen on the other side, see you there.

card802
card802
March 31, 2016 7:48 am

Great article admin.

I have a young man (32 years old) working for me, that I hope will buy my business from me in the next few years.

He was pretty liberal, his wife still is, but after working in the office the last four years and seeing first hand the hardships a small business owner faces daily and the obamacare nightmare for next year (insurance companies are already warning of 30%+ increases) he is coming around as more of a capitalist and not a statist.

Anyway, I try to talk to him about QE, ZIRP, the fed, the way government and the fed are now one and the goal is to save wall street bankers and fuck the rest of us.

He’s not really interested, says that people his age have too much debt and no savings to really care, they believe that while this is indeed happening it doesn’t really affect them at all as they have no money to loose anyway.

Stock market can blow up, banks can declare a holiday, pension funds will dissolve, shrug.

Sigh…..
From liberty to abundance;
From abundance to complacency;
From complacency to apathy;
From apathy to dependence;
From dependence back into bondage…………….and the circle is complete, again.

Peaknic
Peaknic
March 31, 2016 12:37 pm

My problem is that I listened to this same advise when it was given 3 years ago, sold most of my 401k and IRA stock investments, and sat in cash waiting for the crash. I’m still waiting.

Rise Up
Rise Up
March 31, 2016 1:47 pm

I’m seeing Vimeo videos in the middle of comments. Has the TBP been hacked? They weren’t there when I first read this thread.

Jim
Jim
March 31, 2016 2:49 pm

Peaknic–I agree. I remember Glenn Beck back in say 2009 saying all these bad things ere going to happen like –in 90 days, but they never happened. And I look at him as just self promoting hack. I do believe we are in uncharted waters, but I am now starting to think that any “disaster” scenario will come from some external country like China or North Korea, rather than from within the U.S. i.e. Yellen and her stooges. I actually believe they can keep up this pretend economy for a long time.

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
March 31, 2016 2:52 pm

I think it already started, in the second half of 2014 with the commodity collapse. The stock market, as usual, is the last to get the joke.

RT Rider
RT Rider
March 31, 2016 3:00 pm

I appreciate John Hussman’s analysis of the market, and have been reading him for a few years or more. What I have learned since 2008, though, is that absurdity rules the markets. By that I mean that anything which might have caused the market to fall now causes it to rally. What we think causes is it to fall, is usually not readily apparent, given the opacity of the derivatives markets and carry trades, which in many ways drives the stock market.

For example, a stock might be part of a complex trade involving several or more securities depending on the proprietary trading models used by the trader. If one part goes south, this might force an unwind of the whole trade, and depending on the stock’s liquidity, drive it much lower than would be expected. This can be seen with etf’s when faced with redemptions. The etf will fall far more than the underlying stocks that comprise it, as it is forced to sell those stocks to pay out.

I have no idea what will force a reversion of the markets to fairer value. Lots of people think they might but it’s all guessing. What I do suspect is that the banking cartel will pull out all the stops to ensure it won’t happen, or if it does it’s promptly reversed. What’s the point in having the power to create money at will if you’re not prepared to use it?

However, as I think Kyle Bass once remarked about the Zimbabwe stock market rocketing up as the currency collapsed, “What’s the point if you can’t buy a dozen eggs with the investment gains”.

William
William
March 31, 2016 3:30 pm

The logic and math make sense. Unfortunately, a scholarly article should not be peppered with pejorative comments such as “sociopaths, arrogant egomaniaclal pricks”, etc. It detracts from the more valid material that the article contains. Many of the people who are attacked are individuals of integrity and knowledge. Of course they can be wrong, and of course some of them are corrupted. But not all of them are.This is gutter talk and has no place in rationale discourse.

TPC
TPC
March 31, 2016 4:07 pm

Everybody give William a hearty TBP-style welcome!

[imgcomment image[/img]

SRV
SRV
March 31, 2016 4:15 pm

William was offended ’cause “bad words” were used to describe rape & pillage of entire societies… grow a pair billo.

Good piece, and I had forgotten how long this faux rally shit show has gone on.

Hilarious how they keep the sheep in a coma with day after day of DOW “wins,” then come up with some excuse to crash the market (for 3 or 4 days) and take it all back… well, guess we can be thankful they agree there is a limit to how far they can levitate before the chattel catch on… lol!

Flat for 18 mths… hilarious… but then… booming economy… lol

Greg in NC
Greg in NC
March 31, 2016 4:32 pm

Great read. I am not sure if any readers visit the St.Louis Federal Reserve’s web site called FRED(Federal Reserve Economic Data). https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/ You can search just about any economic data via chart. I frequent the site. Try that link and/or search these(I hope my hyperlinks function) By the Way, If you hold down left shift while you click the link it will open a new window and you will not have to navigate back to TBP…

This will give you a list and you will see almost all are discontinued(hiding something?)…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/search?st=commercial+banks+credit+market+instruments

The top of the list should be this and appears to be debt saturation…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/RREPT

Is something wrong in the treasury complex? Look at the 2008 reverse repo level compared to now…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/RREPT

Where did all these reserve balances come from?…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/WRBWFRBL

Does this look like a healthy functioning economy?…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M2V

When I saw this to be discontinued in March 2006 I knew where we were heading. This is when I closed my IRA/401K/Pension. Hiding something? How can we calculate inflation if we don’t have M3…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M3

I could go on for hours but I have to get back to my chores.

Greg in NC
Greg in NC
March 31, 2016 4:35 pm

Oops debt saturation should be this…
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CBUSCCBTCMAHDFS

Stucky
Stucky
March 31, 2016 5:31 pm

William

How about you suck my Awesomely Audacious Austrian Schwantz. mmm-kay?

Aheinousanus
Aheinousanus
March 31, 2016 6:11 pm

Who is the one asshole that is down voting all the comments?

and for William so he is not offended “Whom is the unsavory individual, who is down voting all the comments?”

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
March 31, 2016 7:04 pm

William,
In the last sentence of your post, you say “rationale discourse.” It should be rational discourse. Try to edit before your post.

Jack Lovett
Jack Lovett
March 31, 2016 7:56 pm

Will any of this matter post “red dawn” in the cesspool. We best learn to speak mandarin & Russian
even if we do get 3 hots & a cot in a fema camp. The jews plan mass depopulation.
I left the cesspool 5 years ago.

Unfriendly
Unfriendly
March 31, 2016 7:57 pm

William desperately longs for his “safe space” as he types his comments probally wearing his sister’s panties and lace. He desires “rational discourse” and against “gutter talk” he will enforce, nevermind the source. Grow up you politically correct faggot. You self-righteous maggot. Grow a set of balls, and forget your sensitivity protocols. Here, the First Amendment reigns. There are no chains. No offense. Just my two cents. In other words, get over yourself…

Mark
Mark
March 31, 2016 8:26 pm

Numbers don’t lie; only liars can make numbers lie. This Wall Street scam has been running on fumes from the sweat of working people’s money. When the crash hits, the best investment will be iron umbrellas to protect one’s butt from the jumpers.

I will not post
I will not post
March 31, 2016 8:34 pm

Hmm , Looks like a job of the POCB’s !

Cough , Cough , really?

Let me work and trade my after tax labor and give it to the byatches that fucked everything up ?

Really?

Or buy something tangible ? Thinking . Thinking .

Alex I will take tangibles for $1000.00 .

What , a daily double ? Lol .

If you participate in the so called market that is controlled by POCB’s , then you better have every other category funded first . Then , knowing that you are taking a gamble, you can forgo the Las Vegas vacation . Since you are already throwing the dice .

Yes , it is one very small part of a portfolio , long as it is understood that it is a rolling of the dice .

Whatever .

Greg in NC
Greg in NC
March 31, 2016 8:36 pm

Well it seems everyone fell for William’s rhetoric as he hijacked the thread. Ignore his crap and get back to the discussion.

BTW, How does one go about getting a thumbs down for correcting a bad link? Yeah I am searching for a safe space but hey, I’m feeble minded like that.

Kurt
Kurt
April 1, 2016 4:10 am

I agree with William, when you 12 and learn to spell the F word and know its intent you use it with vigor and and every other word pales in its ability to match it. When you grow up and that’s relative to your E.Q you can say the same thing without using any vulgar language and get the same message across.

become a cunninlinguist…

Silent Majority
Silent Majority
April 1, 2016 8:02 am

Fantastic article Quinn. I literally printed out several copies and passed them around the office ( I work in finance). As one could imagine, this type of honesty did not sit well with the psychopaths I work with. Please continue to create such articles, they truly have an effect on the delusional people that believe in the farce we are being sold. I was already the office pariah due to other strongly held beliefs and my outspoken nature….so no worries there.

Dave
Dave
April 1, 2016 12:20 pm

Its better to play safe rather than risking the money. Personally i am a long term trader and like to taste the dividends. My suggestion go for best dividend paying stocks you can enjoy. There are lots out there some of them I found like this.
http://www.profitconfidential.com/tag/dividend-paying-stocks/

Silent Majority
Silent Majority
April 1, 2016 12:47 pm

@dave- if your buy and hold strategy is something you are comfortable with then stay with it, but I would highly recommend you think in a more short term approach.

Unequivocal
Unequivocal
April 1, 2016 9:26 pm

The best investing advice I ever received was this: “Buy low. Sell high”. I just loved the overall simplicity of that, ya know?

In fact, I just sold all my gold and silver, leveraged my real estate and sold a bunch of my guns and ammo so I could capitalize on the latest stock market returns.

April fools! Ha, ha! 🙂

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
April 2, 2016 12:42 pm

No one knows the future. Those who pound the table in certainty are the biggest fools.

For heaven’s sake just look at a daily chart of the SPX, with an MACD, from 1/2008 to 4/2009 and compare to 5/2015 to now. It is clear that lows in the market telegraph themselves. Declines tend to be vertical and when they pause, a rally is usually imminent.

It is far more difficult to make money on the short side than the long side. Far too many people promote getting rich during declines. It’s better to simply step aside when supporting diagonals are broken.

We remain in an antebellum period. Enjoy it while it lasts, no one knows when the bubble will pop.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
April 2, 2016 12:47 pm

What will be interesting is if the actions in the market of the last year are a larger analog of the two set-up-then-plunge declines of last summer and then Nov-to-mid-Feb.

Such an analog predicts an SPX near 1100 at the low of an.analogous decline.

No a forecast, just a mental exercise.

Piper Flyer
Piper Flyer
April 3, 2016 1:16 am

Well truthfully, I’m confused. It seems as the doom sayers are the flip side of the brainless cheerleaders. If Mr. and Ms middle zone America is tanking, and tapped out, just who is fueling this relentless rise? The one percent? I thought they all bailed long ago and bought offshore properties, and jets to get there. Everytime the market crashes, in 3 months, it’s back again. I don’t own any of this crap, let it crash. It won’t affect the man on the street, and in 4 months it’s the same old same old. The whole thing is just another side show to take your attention away from the main event.

RichM
RichM
April 6, 2016 3:30 am

So, I have been thinking the bubble will indeed pop and we will see at least a 50% drop in the DOW this year. Given I believe this combined with this article, I am thinking about going almost all in on shorting the market via DXD (2x inverse ETF betting against the market) and/or maybe a combination of this combined with some other inverse funds betting against the S&P and Nasdaq.

I am open to opinions but I am thinking about going almost all in on this with about $500K. If the market drops 50%-70% this year, I would make about $2.5M – $4.5M respectively…. but if the bull market resumes and the DOW went up to say 18,000, I’d lose about $200K. Would I be crazy to do this?

My other concern is political in the sense that Donald Trump is saying we are in a bubble and that a massive recession is coming. Well, the media and political establishment HATE Donald Trump so it makes me think they will not allow his prediction to come true before the election. If the market did tank, it would likely propel him forward and if they can prevent it, they will call say he is wrong. What do you think the odds of the market not falling in 2016 because it is an election year?

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