The Bull Is Dead. The Bear Is Upon Us

By Dominic Frisby Mar 16, 2011

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The disaster in Japan has hit global stock markets

It's taken the devastating combination of an escalating sovereign debt crisis in Europe, revolution across the Arab world and one of the most horrific natural disasters in modern history to finally take this two-year bull market down, but take it down it has.

Until mid-afternoon yesterday, when we saw some welcome respite, this week has seen nothing but inexorable, across-the-board selling.

It's felt like 2008 all over again. It doesn't matter what you own, quality or not, everything has been sold. The baby has been thrown out with the bathwater. Panic has set in.

This is one of those times, if ever there was one, to 'keep your head when all about you are losing theirs'.

So let's take a step back and think"¦

Historians may well look back and see it differently, but this sell-off began before the Japanese quakes. Emerging markets have been trending down since December last year. Despite new highs in gold and silver, the major gold stocks also made their highs late last year. The DAX, the FTSE, the Dow, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq all peaked later, around February 21st.

Even uranium stocks, which are down by about 40% in barely two days (!) this week, were trending down a good three weeks before the earthquake hit. In fact only the CRB, the commodities index (which is heavily weighted to oil), was making new highs last week.

It has hugely exacerbated it, yes "“ it has turned it into something more serious. But the Japanese crisis wasn't the initial cause of this sell-off.

In fact just last week, the day before the quake, I wrote: "It could be that this turn down (in the gold-silver ratio) is the beginning of the next phase of the financial crisis. It wouldn't surprise me. It's long-overdue and there are bearish signals all over the place. Senior gold stocks have been in a downtrend since late last year, even although gold has been rising. Emerging stock markets have been falling, although their Western counterparts have been rising. And a spike down in the gold:silver ratio often marks a major market turn".

But this is all academic. We need to recognize the environment we're now in. And the short of it is this: the bull market is over. We're in a bear market now.

The first thing we can expect in the coming days is huge volatility. We've seen that to the downside already. At some stage "“ hopefully sooner rather than later, and it may even have started yesterday "“ we'll get the bounce. And we'll be able to learn a lot about what lies in store by the magnitude of that bounce.

Trade this volatility at your peril. Some will earn fortunes doing so, but many will not. Once the dust starts to settle, we can get a clearer idea of where things are trending.

Those that went defensive and started to take cash off the table as this bull market became more and more extended will be mightily relieved they did so. Those that didn't should use rallies to build up cash for the opportunities that bear markets inevitably create.

For my part, this is what I see ahead.

The Nikkei has already been the hit hardest of any market. I hate to say it - and not everyone in the MoneyWeek office agrees - but I think that's likely to continue. It's rallying as I write this, and should bounce from these oversold levels. There will also be some buing opportunities in individual stocks. But I'm afraid it looks doomed to eventually retest its 2009 lows around the 7,000 mark. Too many Japanese companies have been too badly beaten up by all of this.

But who knows? Maybe that will mark the final low at the end of Japan's interminable bear market, just as in 2001 commodities retested their 1999 lows and finally ended their 20 years in the doldrums. Here we see a log chart of the Nikkei since 1988.

Many may look at the Dow over the last two years and think what a wonderful market it's been, while they look at the Nikkei over the same period and think, 'What a dog'. But this has largely been a result of the relative currency weakness. This week aside, the Nikkei's recent performance isn't as bad as it may seem.

If you take the Nikkei and measure it in US dollars, and take the Dow and measure it in Japanese yen, the performance has been virtually identical. This is shown in the chart below.

The strength of the Dow has been an illusion created by currency weakness.

The yen has been rallying as stocks are liquidated and cash pours into the area. This might well continue for as long as the stock market declines. Then these two may well turn together, perhaps as soon as early summer, as the spending and inevitable money-printing continues. (I bet the Japanese government will wish they hadn't spent as much these last 20 years and got into so much debt, when they didn't really need to).

For now, the Japanese must enter a period of mourning. And our thoughts and prayers should be with them as they do so. But once they start that rebuilding process, they will do so with great persistence and energy. And they're going to have to import a lot of iron, a lot of copper, a lot of cement, a lot of energy. The Daily Telegraph says this "tragedy is expected to become the costliest natural disaster in history, with the repair bill likely to top £100 billion".

So as we emerge from this panic, and the dust settles, commodities will likely resume their secular bull market, while stock markets and currencies continue to meander.

All that matters to most people when buying shares is the price. But how you actually own the shares is important too, says Tim Bennett. You could be handing over crucial rights to your broker without even realising it.

Comments (22)

Share with:More

By John Stepek, Mar 12, 2011

By Dominic Frisby, Mar 11, 2011

By Simon Wilson, Mar 11, 2011

By Merryn Somerset Webb, Mar 11, 2011

(16 March 2011, 11:24AM)  Complain about this comment

Hi Dominic Junior gold stocks have been leading this crash, do you have any idea of what the bottom in juniors will look like? They have lost so much value now that I feel married to them. I guess I am just going to ride the storm out as I believe in the long term story for gold and silver. QE3 will come after we have 10-20% hit in the S&P.

(16 March 2011, 11:29AM)  Complain about this comment

Dominic Frisby begins by saying-(viz) 'the bull markets over, we're in a bear now.' And finishes by saying 'commodities will resume their secular bull as soon as the dust settles'.-while stockmarkets continue to meander...' (ie go sideways?)Bit of doublespeak here ?Not sure what information we're getting from this ? Bear market or correction ? Sounds more like the second.

(16 March 2011, 11:38AM)  Complain about this comment

I really hope you re wrong.

(16 March 2011, 11:47AM)  Complain about this comment

I believe you are jumping the gun a bit on calling the bear market. We still have the rest of mar through june of QE. This is just a correction-maybe of a larger degree - but a correction just the same. Do your Elliot wave counts an dsee if there is not another leg up before a much greater correction before another round of QE.

(16 March 2011, 11:47AM)  Complain about this comment

@ 3. based on the author's track record, there's not much to worry about. How can readers be expected to take this article seriously?

(16 March 2011, 12:14PM)  Complain about this comment

Yeah, I agree with some the commentators here - QE3 is coming. This is just the correction to scare the world into believing we need it, the alternative is political suicide. Obama went golfing yesterday - crisis what crisis? He's got the memo from printer Ben!

(16 March 2011, 12:17PM)  Complain about this comment

There will be a contruction boom starting in a few months in Japan. Smart money will be buying this sell off soon, central governements have no choice but to continue printing and that inflation will knock on to higher markets. I do not think this is the start of a bear market. It is a correction, a much needed one. Silver and Gold have a long way to go, too much at stake politically in the states to see a bear market start now - Bernake will continue printing and he will buy Japanese bonds. Use this time to pick up value due to pure panic. When the panic ends, the markets will move back up. Bear? Too much money being printed.

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