I watched you suffer a dull aching pain
Now you decided to show me the same
--Rolling Stones
In the summer of 2007, stock markets showed early warning signs that something was going on in the credit markets. Led by the banks, we had a few big down days in July/Aug.
I happened to be in NYC at the time and recall that, while there was some palpable concern among traders, many viewed the bearish action as a minor, necessary correction to relieve overbought conditions in what had been a strong multi-year uptrend. A stroll thru Midtown certainly did not suggest that luxurious lifestyles had taken much of a hit yet. Excess was still visible everywhere.
One rationale offered by the bulls was that it was the year before an election year, and that the Bush/GOP political machine would pull out all stops to keep markets from falling. After the summer swoon, markets indeed reversed higher. In fact, the S&P 500 (SPX) notched a marginal all time high in early fall.
After that, however, things came unglued. For most of the following 18 months, stocks cratered alongside the credit markets, lopping more than 50% off the value of the SPX.
It is safe to say that maneuvers employed by politicians to keep things 'contained' (and they used that word alot) were not very effective.
So here we are four years later. Markets softened back in March and then ralled to marginal highs for the move off the early 2009 lows. Prices have given back more than 7%. From a macro standpoint, we have the end of QE2, data suggesting a softening domestic economy, a sovereign debt crisis in Europe, and stress cracks in the Chinese machine. As a whole, this constitutes a big stinking mass of bear fodder that could/should propel markets much lower.
Yet, similar to four years ago, many have been trotting out the year-before-the-election-year rationale once again. Obama can see his poll numbers sliding w/ the weaking economic picture, the thinking goes. He and his political machine will therefore pull out all stops to keep things afloat into next year's election.
I have no doubt that many political stops will be pulled--some perhaps more extreme than we've seen already (and that's saying something). Whether those stops will 'stop' the bleeding is another question entirely, as our analog four years ago suggests.
Can't shake the sense that all the king's horses and all the king's men will once again prove ineffective in parrying the corrective forces of markets seeking balance.
position in SPX
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
All the King's Horses
Labels:
Bush,
China,
credit,
EU,
intervention,
leverage,
manipulation,
Obama,
risk,
technical analysis
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2 comments:
At this juncture, however, the impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime market seems likely to be contained.
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke
The Economic Outlook
Before the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress
March 28, 2007
However, participants also noted that the rapid decline in the unemployment rate over the past several months suggested the possibility of stronger-than-anticipated economic growth over coming quarters.
~FOMC meeting minutes, April 26-27, 2011
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