How to Engender the Return of a Bull MarketBill Bonner 02/27/12 Salta, Argentina – Did you miss us, Dear Reader? You won’t believe this... we hardly believe it ourselves... but after months of planning and preparation for our expedition to the high, dry mountains of Argentina, we’re still here in the city of Salta… Our project has been delayed... by floods. As you may recall, it is so dry up at the ranch that visitors wonder what the cows eat. We tell them we have developed a new race of low-fat, low cholesterol cattle we call “sand fed beef.” But what ho! Now we are still in Salta, a city about a 5-hour drive from the ranch, and we are stuck. “Well…” says our foreman “... the road to Angastaco is blocked by the river. The road to Molinos is blocked by mud. But you don’t have to worry about that. You can’t get anywhere near there, because the road to Cafayate is impassable because of rockslides... and the road over the mountain pass has been washed out completely.” Yes, dear reader, we have been hit by a low, unexpected blow... from water! The ranch got only 120 mm, or about 5 inches, of rain last year. The year before it was only about 4 inches. It looked to us as though the whole place was going to dry up and blow away. But so far this year, the gods have poured 15 inches of water on that parched ground... and it keeps raining. Fifteen inches is not a lot. Not for Maryland. But up in the barren mountains, the water rolls of the rocks... down through the gullies... and fills the rivers. Soon, it is over its banks, floating automobiles and rolling boulders. “They’re clearing the main road now,” says our friend. It should be passable tomorrow... if it doesn’t rain tonight. But getting from Cafayate up to your ranch is another matter. Nobody knows what has happened up there. They’ve been cut off for weeks.” Hmmm… And so, we cool our heels... we rest our heads... we pace the room and watch the skies... eager to see a ray of sunlight... and some hope of proceeding to our objective. And so... we have time to reckon after all. And we reckon that investors are in ‘hope mode.’ How else to explain the recent bullishness? Albert Edwards elaborates:
In our view, the real turning point came in the year 2000. That’s when America’s decline began to speed up. It’s when the credit-driven economy could no longer produce real jobs... or real GDP... or real wealth. Stocks rose. But they were rising on a bubble of debt. Then, it was mostly private debt. Now, they rise again... this time on public debt. Either way, it can’t last. Eventually, the bear market will resume... taking down the prices of assets until they are cheap again. At 16 times earnings, stocks are higher than usual... and earnings are at near record levels. We expect earnings to fall... and stocks to fall too… Then, they will keep falling... until they finally reach the bottom. Edwards:
But we can’t reach the bottom of this cycle unless and until investors give up hope. As long as they have hope they will buy the dips, hoping to catch the next up-move. Only when they become convinced that there will be no move to the upside, will they stop buying the dips and prices can finally fall to their ultimate low. Hope must be destroyed. Then, a real bull market can begin. ### source: http://dailyreckoning.com/how-to-engender-the-return-of-a-bull-market/ Feb 27, 2012 Bill Bonner is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. Bill's book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics, is a must-read. He is also the author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century (John Wiley & Sons). In Bonner and Wiggin's follow-up book, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic brand of humor to expose the nation for what it really is - an empire built on delusions. Copyright © 2000-2013 Agora Financial LLC. |