The Fascinating Psychology Of Blowoff Tops

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Central banks have guaranteed a bubble collapse is the only possible output of the system they’ve created.

The psychology of blowoff tops in asset bubbles is fascinating: let’s start with the first requirement of a move qualifying as a blowoff top, which is the vast majority of participants deny the move is a blowoff top.

Exhibit 1: a chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJ-30):

Is there any other description of this parabolic ascent other than “blowoff top” that isn’t absurdly misleading? Can anyone claim this is just a typical Bull market? There is nothing even remotely typical about the record RSI (relative strength index), record Bull-Bear ratio, and so on, especially after a near-record run of 9 years.

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The few who do grudgingly acknowledge this parabolic move might be a blowoff top are positive that it has many more months to run. This is the second requirement of qualifying as a blowoff top: the widespread confidence that the Bull advance has years more to run, and if not years, then many months.

In the 1999 dot-com blowoff top, participants believed the Internet would grow at phenomenal rates for years to come, and thus the parabolic move higher was fully rational.

In the housing bubble’s 2006-07 blowoff top, a variety of justifications of soaring valuations and frantic flipping were accepted as self-evident.

In the present blowoff top, the received wisdom holds that global growth is just getting started, and corporate profits will soar in 2018. Therefore current sky-high valuations are not just rational, they clearly have plenty of room to rise much higher.

Skeptics are derided as perma-bears who’ve been wrong for 9 long years. This is the third requirement of qualifying as a blowoff top: Bears and other skeptics are mocked and/or dismissed as irrelevant.

Meanwhile, observers who haven’t drunk the punch recognize this as the final leg of a 9-year orgy of central bank stimulus. Pump $14 trillion into global financial assets and all sorts of wonderful things happen, especially if the central banks make it clear in public statements that they will “do whatever it takes,” i.e. assets will not be allowed to decline.

Consider the psychology in play: central bankers have sought to convince private-sector players that central banks will never let markets decline, and so the smart strategy was to buy the dips, and buy every new high–in essence buy, buy, buy and don’t bother hedging long positions, as there was no need to squander money on hedges against declines that would never happen.

Now the central banks are facing runaway asset bubbles that are the direct consequence of their promoting the belief that “central banks will never let markets go down.”

So how do central banks deflate the bubbles gently? How do they change the market psychology without triggering a crash? If central banks cut off the stimulus, and send messages that “now we will let markets decline,” then what’s the rational response? Sell, and sell everything now rather than ride the bubble collapse down.

As I’ve noted before, “We live in a system of human emotions that masquerades as a science (economics).” Central bankers are deluding themselves if they think they can calibrate and fine-tune human emotions. When the Bullish certainty that “central banks have our backs” erodes, the switch to bearish impulses to sell before everyone else sells will be sudden and irreversible.

In other words, the central banks have guaranteed a bubble collapse is the only possible output of the system they’ve created.

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7 Comments
kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon
kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon
January 15, 2018 4:18 pm

Off topic: Just letting people know that all the ‘enhanced’ screen names are tanfastic.

Maggie
Maggie
January 15, 2018 4:49 pm

I think it is related to this discussion by Fitts.

kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon
kokoda the Deplorable Raccoon
January 15, 2018 6:00 pm

FWIW, last summer (about) M. Armstrong said that the Market would either top at 23,000 or 42,000.

Something happened and I no longer get Armstrong daily update; nor can I find a ‘subscribe’ on his site.

factual
factual
January 16, 2018 7:15 am

British Carillon just blewup!
Their health care system is collapsing! Britain just cancelled 60K operations slated for January 2018. Prompting a senior Health Care Official to apologize for the 3rd World Conditions in British hospitals(shithole).
And they have inflation with people marching on the streets protesting price increases!
Their medicine of massive QE program and ZIRP has now become the poison that will rip Britain apart!
Watch out for contagion!!! It’s coming folks!

Maggie
Maggie
  factual
January 16, 2018 8:24 am

Can you give a link? Never mind.

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/01/15/britains-carillion-collapses-as-banks-refuse-to-lend-it-any-more-money.html

Do you really think this will have an impact beyond the construction industry in Europe?

Truther
Truther
January 16, 2018 7:55 am

OVER the past 50 years there have been 14 market corrections and 11 bear markets. The industry standard definition of a market correction is a peak-to-trough decline of at least 10% and the definition of a bear market is a peak-to-trough decline of at least 20%. The avg correction was -12.35% and trough to recovery was 107 days. The longest being 11/14/78 to 8/10/79 -13.55%. The avg bear market was -31.84% and trough to recovery was 684 days. The worst being 10/3/74 to 7/14/80 -48.20% decline and trough to peak being 2122 days long. What you will notice is historically the worst declines are when incompetent democrats control our govt followed by great recovery when strong republicans follow. 10/9/07 to 3/5/09 was the worst being -56.39 and 1489 days long most coming during Obamas reign not Bush. However since this crash happened at the start of Obummers reign of terror and compounded by moronic democratic leadership, it lasted 309% longer than the avg being the worst percentage point decline in history and third longest recovery. The working middle classs, gun owning, christian, family oriented are relieved Trump redacted many oppressive Obama executive orders and laws and thus allowed Capitalism once again, resulting in a bull market. This is not a blowoff top. It is normal after walking 6 years in the desert of socialism and SJW, BLM bullshit for normals to quench their thirst by drinking, gulping more than the average. Pent up purchases of cars, homes etc. are fueling the mkt and people dont spend when fearful of oppressive govts advocating theft of their hard earned assets via socialism. What you see today is confidence in Trump, in capitalism, nationalism, patriotism. Unless another moronic idiot like obummer (i.e., Oprah only because she is a racist black woman) becomes president you will then see the crash, again. Guaranteed. It’s so obvious a snail can see it. The key is to see who the elites have chosen as the next president before it’s obvious!

All these libtards love bashing capitalism. Yet they ignor hyperbolic things like student debt, college tuition, joblessness of college grads, college grad avg debt up over 1,213% in 20 years, avg car cost inflation due to libtard EPA standards. Yeah let’s ignore all this And focus on all the bad shit that should already have happened and ignore what happened when hard working people save and spend money and make capitalism shine. Typical snowflake.

Mad as Hell
Mad as Hell
  Truther
January 16, 2018 11:49 am

Truther, while agree with your thesis that Trump has made some changes that will benefit society in the longer term, unfortunately that is purely emotional reasoning. The math of it is that the Fed is increasing interest rates. There is no way that assets can continue to appreciate in a largely financialized economy (read, monthly payment credit based). Impossible.
It may not happen overnight, and probably won’t, but no matter how bullish the average investor, OR institutional investor, if you have a large servicing debt, and that debt gets more expensive to service, it WILL suck money out of other activities. Once of which is buying investments, ANY investments. Leverage works in both ways, and without low interest rates and money printing (new money) coming in to the system – any of the systems BTW, asset prices cannot continue to rise. Be cautious, because the laws of mathematics are NOT suggestions. This applies equally to pensions, government debt, your mortgage (if adjustable rate) your home price (IE goes down as servicing on 30 year money goes up etc.