Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Stepping up the Market
Since the latter part of July, we have witnessed volatile markets. On many days, the DJIA has changed as much as 300 points. Yesterday (September 12) was not nearly as bad as some days, but as an example, the low point of the DJIA the market was down 167 points from the day before, but closed up 69 points, a change of 236 points. More meaningfully, the market showed a 98% down day at one point yesterday and closed as a 54% up day. If you didn’t tune in until the end of the day, you might have thought “good day in the market.” It is difficult to be a long term investor if you are looking at day to day or even month to month results. If you add to this the media hyping everything that is negative, you can become very depressed. The question that you need to ask is always “is the market getting better or worse?” To answer that question, you need to first look at the ongoing pattern. Many small investors got out of the market on August 8th. Thus far, this has been the bottom point in the current market seesaw. Since then, we have witnessed increasingly higher lows each time the market has dropped. When you see negatives on your account statement for July followed by August, it’s easy to feel bad. If you bailed on August 8th, you should feel sick, because you did exactly the wrong thing at the wrong time. In a Wall Street Journal article on Monday, September 12th, they reported on a study that was done by Prof. Richard Sylla, a financial historian at New York University. Prof. Sylla studied market behavior from 1790 to 2000. “By analyzing patterns detected years ago with two colleagues, he accurately predicted in 2000 the decade of overall declines that haunted investors.” At the request of the Wall Street Journal, Prof. Sylla has made a new forecast. “Better days lie ahead,” he says. If past market patterns hold true, as they did over the last decade, stocks should bottom out during the next few years and begin a recovery. He is not talking about a week, a month or a year, but a decade. Here is the best part. Prof. Sylla says, the DJIA could climb by 84% by the end of 2020 and the S&P could climb by 99% from last Friday’s close. He is expecting a 6.5%, inflation adjusted, real rate of return over the next decade. Is he correct? I don’t know about his numbers, but his attitude of taking the long view is what is so important.
Ed Mallon