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As a
resident bear, I’m not yet ready to concede that we are in a secular
bull market. I will, however, acknowledge, that the bulls are “on
serve,” for the next year or two, to use a tennis phrase.
In
tennis, having the right to “serve” (put in play) the ball is a
decided advantage, so players alternate serves between games, sharing
this advantage. Between two almost evenly matched players, whoever
serves will win most games, by “holding serve.” But in the typical
“set,” the better of the two players will win an occasional game
while the other person is serving, a result that is known as “breaking
serve.” This, together with the fact that he or she is serving half
the time and (presumably) holds all serves, means that the slightly
better player will likely win the set by getting a majority of the games
with a score of say, 6-4. If a player both holds serve and breaks serve
consistently, the result could be a more lop-sided 6-0 tally that
clearly demonstrates who is the better player.
In
the U.S. stock market, the “serve” is determined by the election
cycle, with bears getting the “serve” in the first two years, and
bulls getting the “serve” in the last two years. Despite “having
serve,” bears like me lost in 2005 and 2006. Or to put it another way,
the bulls “broke my serve.” The next two years in the election
cycle, 2007 and 2008, feature the bulls on serve. Oddly enough, between
the two sets of years, it is during the “pre-election” years, like
2007, 2003, 1999, 1995, etc. (when the incumbent party is pumping up the
economy to maximize the chances of re-election), that the market is more
likely to rise, not the election years themselves.
Still,
there are a couple differences between the stock market and tennis. The
first is that order of magnitude counts in the stock market, more than
in tennis. Suppose there was a three set (usually woman’s) match,
where one contestant posted set scores of 6-4, 0-6, 6-4. The first
contestant would win the match, two sets out of three. But in the
example I constructed, the second contestant actually won more games,
14-12, because of the lopsided second set. To most investors in the
market, this would be the more important point, because they’re more
concerned about the cumulative size of their wins rather than the
frequency.
The
second difference is that the bears in the stock market win the
ties—because of inflation. On this basis, maybe the bears had a point
in 2005, at least. From 1966-1981, the market went up in nine of sixteen
years (a majority for the bulls) and essentially went nowhere in nominal
terms. But the bears were more nearly correct, because the market went
down big time in inflation-adjusted terms.
My
cautious optimism for 2007 is supported by one of the bulls’ main
arguments: that the strong earnings growth of the past few years has
dramatically lowered P/E multiples, leaving room for “catchup.” On
the other hand, I’m still basically of the “Kassian” view that the
U.S. economy is fundamentally weaker today that in was in 2000. Hence my
belief that we won’t go anywhere near a new high in P/E ratios, or
even reach inflation-adjusted levels of that year (which would imply a
lower multiple of higher earnings). I’m mentally “capping” the Dow
at 14,000, just below those levels, and disagree with another street.com
commentator who predicted a 16,000 Dow for 2007 (a 2003-like gain of
almost 30%)—unless we have a double-digit inflation that makes 16,000
the new 14,000.
Under
other circumstances (i.e., if the Presidential election had just
occurred in 2006), I’d probably be a bear right now. The tie breaker
was where we are in the election cycle. Even so, the mid-term election
rally started earlier last year than in other similar years, thereby
dampening this year’s likely returns relative to its “peer group”
(other pre Presidential election years). Since it rose last year, I
believe that there will be no more than a 15% gain in the S&P 500
for all of 2007, compared to the historical average of about 23% in
pre-election years, and the 30%-ish advance that often takes place when
the preceding year is down. And as this is the twentieth anniversary of
1987 (the last pre-election year ending in “7”), I wouldn’t even
rule out a similar result—a strong rally on momentum followed by a
crash on fears of overvaluation that leaves a single-digit net gain for
the year.
In
fact, stocks have gone up in every pre-election year for the past
century except three—1907, 1931, and 1939. The first year featured the
short but severe Depression of 1907 that ultimately led to the creation
of the Fed in 1913 (because J.P. Morgan & Co., the nation’s de
facto central bank in 1907, couldn’t do the job). The second year
was in the depths of the 1929-1932 bear market that signaled the onset
of the Great Depression; and the last year marked the start of World War
II. So a market decline in a year like this could have very serious
implications. Even I, one of the biggest bears on the site, don’t
think that it will get that bad, because the bulls are not only “on
serve,” but have the (pre-election year) “wind at their backs.”
(Tennis players also alternate sides of the court so they get an equal
amount of sun, wind, etc.) In 2008, the bulls will still “have the
serve,” but with the election year “wind in their face,” as in
2000, which is why the bears are somewhat more likely to “break
serve” next year. But if my cautious optimism for the coming year
proves to be unwarranted, it is likely to mark the start of another
Great Depression—or World War.

© 2007 Thomas P. Au
Editorial Archive
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Thomas P. Au
R. W. Wentworth
New York City, NY
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