Freshly squeezed market commentary & analysis
Recently, the stock market has fixated on the lack of economic growth, or lack thereof. This is the narrative most are using the describe todayâ??s weakness in stock prices. The G20 are more concerned about reducing their fiscal deficits and weâ??ll have to leave it to history to decide if this path of austerity is the right way to pull us out of a deep and persistent recession.
Right now, the ECRIâ??s WLI has captured the attention of traders and investors because of the steep decline it recently suffered. The decline of the US weekly growth rate to -5.8% got many worried and its further fall to -6.9% last week only helped to convince more about a coming â??Double Dipâ?.
Last week I made a case for questioning the â??Double Dipâ? Shiboleth. While everyone is focused intently on the ECRIâ??s WLI numbers, they are ignore the interpretation of this decline by the creators of the very same index. But even if we ignore this, we then have to contend with the other data that suggests this is a mere slowdown in the pace of the economic recovery, not a fresh decline into a new recession.
But if we ignore that also, we then have to ask ourselves about the connection between a â??Double Dipâ? and the stock market. Right now, very few are asking the question but instead simply assuming that if the economy does fall into another recession, this will mean disaster for stock prices.
Whenever something captures the attention of Wall Street so thoroughly and whenever it seems that everyone is convinced of it as a foregone conclusion, I canâ??t help but be skeptical. This weekend I was all set to embark on a historical analysis of the previous times that the ECRIâ??s Weekly Leading Index had fallen into negative territory and compare those incidents with how the stock market performed going forward.
And then the bright minds at Bespoke beat me to it. So rather than re-invent the wheel, here is the result of their research showing what has happened to the S&P 500 index when the ECRIâ??s WLI has fallen to -5% or less: Source: Bespoke Investment Group
The study covers 1968 to the present and only picks out incidents when the ECRIâ??s WLI fell below -5% (after being above that level for the past 6 or more months). Those criteria provide us with only 9 other similar scenarios which isnâ??t very many.
The average performance in the short term has been weak, although not extremely so. Over the medium term, the S&P 500 has been positive and even slightly outperformed relative to its own average. This confirms my other analysis that the equity market has lost its afterburners and entered a period of lower return (not necessarily negative return). This is also inline with what weâ??ve seen in the aftermath of bear markets.
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The results indicate that the WLI drops during secular bear markets tend to lead to more consistent losses.
Yeah, but how many of those period were preceded by a debt crisis. Itâ??s an apples to oranges comparison because I suspect that it is going to take longer than normal for the standard Fed playbook to work its magic.
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