September & Closing the Lehman Gap

September!!! Also, Closing the Lehman Gap. August 18, 2009   David Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer

From the Wall Street Journal of August 11:  

“For investors, the period between Labor Day and Halloween is proving an annual fright show. And no one knows why.  It was, of course, in September last year that Lehman collapsed and everything fell apart. But then it was also September-October 2002 that the last bear market plunged to its lows.  The 1998 financial crisis? It began late August, and rolled on for two months.  The famous crash of 1987 came in October. But most people have forgotten that the market actually started sliding downhill in late August.  That's almost exactly what happened in 1929 too. The big crash came in October, but the market peaked just after Labor Day. Prices began falling through September, and then tumbled further still.  The worst month of the Depression?  September, 1931, when the Dow fell about 30 percent.  It was also in September, 2000, that the bear market really got going.  The 9/11 crisis, of course, came in September. That was hardly caused by investors. But what is forgotten is that the stock market was already looking wobbly. In the two weeks before the terrorist attacks, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index fell 7 percent.  The great panic of 1907? October. The great crash of 1873?  September.  Yikes.” 

When Bianco Research excerpted this piece in their weekly news clips they added the calculations of total return for each month since 1926.  For the S&P 500 index, the only month with a negative total return from 1926 through 2008 is September.  OK, this is history, but has anyone explained why it happens?  There are many theories but no hard facts to point to.

Meanwhile, the US stock market recovery stalled at S&P 500 index level 1000 and seemed to reverse itself with a VIX-spiked vengeance in mid-August from the 2009 ascendant move of five months.  The 1000 level is about a 35% retracement of the fall from the October 2007 peak to the March 2009 low.  Market technicians would like to see the market break decisively above this level in order to run bullish in a more robust way.

The 1000 level is also the bottom of the five-week waterfall when the market tumbled over 200 S&P 500 index points last year.  This period is called the “Lehman gap” and is measured by about 1000 on the downside and about 1200 on the top.  It represents a time when stocks fell on a worldwide, highly correlated basis following the Lehman Brothers failure. 

A number of market strategists expect the US stock market to eventually try to close the Lehman gap.  We are among them.  Our target for this closure is next spring.  Others, like Ed Yardeni, argue that it will happen quickly as earnings outcomes for the 4th quarter of this year are discounted this coming October.  Others point to the large amount of uninvested cash as the source of fuel for the additional stock market rally to come.  Yet others look to all the “golden crosses” in various indices as a reason for optimism. 

A golden cross is when a 50-day moving average of a price breaks up through a declining 200-day moving average.  Strategas Research noted that June was the 15th time since 1929 that we have seen the golden cross.  Only twice out of the previous fourteen times did this indicator fail to reach a new high twelve months after its occurrence.  The failing years were 1941 (down 13.8%) and 1957 (down 6.1%).

Even counting the two down periods, a year after a golden cross found the market up 18.8% on average.  That rise would take the S&P 500 Index to the top of the Lehman gap.  The largest post-golden cross upward twelve months followed Sept, 19, 1932; the market rose 50.8% in the subsequent year.  The most recent golden cross was on June 28, 1988; it was followed by a 19.6% twelve-month rise.

Golden crosses get a lot of respect among the technician crowd for good reason.

We are not technicians at Cumberland; however, we do look at their work.  We do that because it is important to see what others are using to guide their decisions.  And we do find some value in the technical work of research firms like Ned Davis or Strategas. 

We find that technical work cannot predict the future. Technical methods do help keep you in a trend longer than you would otherwise do.  This is important, since stocks are mean reverting but rarely stop or stay at the mean.  They tend to overshoot in both directions.

We raised a little cash in US stock account in mid-August.  So far that has served our clients well.  We have buy targets for a number of ETFs.  They are sitting on the trading desk awaiting an entry point.  But for now, we will give September a little more respect than we give Rodney Dangerfield.

We wish to add this postscript.  With all the Healthcare debate cacophony, has anyone noticed that there is a fully functioning federal healthcare system with a nationwide electronic records system and millions of users?  It competes in the present environment.  It maybe analyzed for systems use and it may be both praised and criticized for its good and bad points.  It is funded by the federal government.  I haven’t heard a single Congressman use it either as a positive argument or a negative one.  I wonder if it holds the key to a compromise and that it has in place a national infrastructure so that a new wheel doesn’t have to be discovered.   It is called the Veterans’ Administration; the hospitals and clinics are ubiquitous in the United States.

Cumberland Advisors is registered with the SEC under the Investment Advisors Act of 1940. All information contained herein is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to sell securities or investment advisory services. Such an offer can only be made in states and/or international jurisdictions where Cumberland Advisors is either registered or is a Notice Filer or where an exemption from such registration or filing is available. New accounts will not be accepted unless and until all local regulations have been satisfied. This presentation does not purport to be a complete description of our performance or investment services.

Please feel free to forward our commentaries (with proper attribution) to others who may be interested.

For a list of all equity recommendations for the past year, please contact Therese Pantalione at 856-692-6690,ext. 315. It is not our intention to state or imply in any manner that past results and profitability is an indication of future performance. All material presented is compiled from sources believed to be reliable. However, accuracy cannot be guaranteed.

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