by Lance Roberts, Clarity Financial
Over this past weekend, Barronās Magazine published its big story the ā2017 Market Outlook.āĀ Here is what was interesting, after 8-years of a bull market advance not one of the forecasters had a ābearishā outlook. In fact, as the article concludes:
āIf all goes smoothly, our expertsā forecasts might even prove too tepid. The old bull isnāt ready to call it quits yet.ā
If that isnāt enough to get you all āgiddyā for the holiday season, I am not sure what is?
I have written over the last couple of weeks the markets would likely advance heading into the end of the year as portfolio rebalancing, window dressing and performance chasing all collide to give a lift to stocks. However, as we will examine, there is sufficient evidence the markets may have run too far, too quickly.
Signs Of Exuberance
It really isnāt surprising the majority of Wall Street analysts are bullish as prices have advanced improving their performance numbers for the year. Of course, since it is rising asset prices whichĀ drives their business ā being ābullishā is good for business.(Telling investors to move to cash doesnāt create inflow for their firms or funds.)Ā However, as investors, it is extremes in both āpsychologyā and ābehaviorsā that tend to give us the best indications as to future outcomes.
The legendary Bob Farrell had two rules specifically relating to todayās topic.
The first was Rule #9:
āWhen all the experts and forecasts agree ā something else is going to happen.ā
Or, asĀ Sam Stovall, the investment strategist for Standard & Poorās once stated:
āIf everybodyās optimistic, who is left to buy? If everybodyās pessimistic, whoās left to sell?ā
While psychologically it may seem as the markets will rise indefinitely, the reality is they donāt. The reason is excesses are built whenĀ everyone isĀ on the same side of the trade.
While there is ALWAYS both a buyer and seller to every transaction ā it is at WHAT PRICE that matters. Ultimately, when aĀ shift in sentiment occurs, the reversion is exacerbated by the stampede going in the opposite direction as a āvacuumā atĀ current prices form.
Currently, we are seeing a lot of exuberance being built into the markets as shown by the composite indicator of both individual and professional investors.
Furthermore, as noted by Randy Frederick at Charles Schwab:
āIt is a little scary to see such optimism.Ā But at the same time, when I look out between now and the end of the year, Iām having a difficult time finding anything thatās probably going to derail this market outside of a black-swan event.
The only thing Iām worried about is that it seems like nobody is worried about anything right now.ā
With virtually all equity put/call ratios areĀ in bullish territory there is literally no one hedging against a potential market decline.
Then there is this:
āThe stampede into U.S. equity ETFs since the election has been nothing short of breathtaking,ā said David Santschi, chief executive officer at TrimTabs.Ā āThe inflow since Election Day is equal to one and a half times the inflow of $61.5 billion in all of last year.Ā One has to wonder whoās left to buy.ā
It is even more evident when combining both ETF and Mutual Fund flows and comparing it to the overall market.
In other words, all the ākids are in the poolā which is typical near short to intermediate-term peaks in the market.
Snap-Back
Psychological exuberance is a by-product of the extension of prices. As prices rise, investors ābettingā on the market become more emboldened in their choice. It is this self-reinforcing cycle as prices rise whichĀ push individuals into taking on increasing levels of āriskā in order to āchase the market.āĀ
It is this push higher in prices, as noted by Bob Farrellās Rule #2 that is most important:
āExcesses in one direction will lead to an opposite excess in the other direction.ā
Markets that overshoot on the upside also overshoot on the downside, kind of like a pendulum. The further it swings to one side, the further it rebounds to the other side.
On a longer term basis markets adhereĀ to Newtonās 3rd law of motion:
āFor every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.āĀ
The first chart shows that cyclical markets reach extremes when they are more than 2-standard deviations above, or below, their respective 50-wk moving average.Ā While markets can trend higher in the near-term, there is ALWAYS a point where prices revert to the 50-week moving average or beyond.
The second chart shows price reversions of the S&P 500 on a long term basis. Notice that when prices have historically reached extremes ā the reversion in price is just as extreme. This current extension above the long-term historical mean will likely end just as badly as they always have in the past.
As Bob Farrell also states:
āThere are no new eras ā excesses are never permanent.ā
There will always be some ānew thingā that elicits speculative interest.Ā TheseĀ ānew thingsāĀ throughout history, like theĀ āSirenās Song,āĀ has led many investors to their demise. In fact, over the last 500 years, we have seen speculative bubbles involving everything from Tulip Bulbs to Railways, Real Estate to Technology, Emerging Markets (5 times) to Automobiles and Commodities.
It always starts the same, and ends with the utterings ofĀ āThis time it is differentā
Being a contrarian can be quite difficult at times as bullishness abounds. However, it is also the secret to limiting losses and achieving long-term investment success. As Howard Marks once stated:
āResisting ā and thereby achieving success as a contrarian ā isnāt easy. Things combine to make it difficult; including natural herd tendencies and the pain imposed by being out of step, since momentum invariably makes pro-cyclical actions look correct for a while. (Thatās why itās essential to remember that ābeing too far ahead of your time is indistinguishable from being wrong.ā)
Given the uncertain nature of the future, and thus the difficulty of being confident your position is the right one ā especially as price moves against you ā itās challenging to be a lonely contrarian.ā
Yet, it is being a contrarian that allows investors to ābuy low and sell high.ā Furthermore, it is what allows individuals to truly garner a real advantage over long-term investment time horizons.
Donāt mistake these views thinking I am ābearishā and am therefore āout of the market.ā I assure you that I am not. As I have often stated, as a money manager I must navigate the markets to the best of my ability otherwise I suffer ācareer risk.ā
However, as I always tell new prospects with whom I am going to work with:
āWhile there will indeed be years I underperform the market asĀ they rise, I would much rather have the conversation about how to improve performance next year versus how I am going to recover a large loss of your capital this year.ā
Currently, there is an elevated risk of principal loss over the next couple of months.
This isnāt bullish, or bearish, it is ājust what it is.ā
In the meantime, enjoy your holidays and Merry Christmas.
Lance Roberts
Lance Roberts is a Chief Portfolio Strategist/Economist for Clarity Financial. He is also the host of āThe Lance Roberts Showā and Chief Editor of the āReal Investment Adviceā website and author of āReal Investment Dailyā blog and āReal Investment Reportā. Follow Lance on Facebook, Twitter and Linked-In