We are not even six months removed from a period when many economists were predicting we’d see a double-dip recession.
During times like these, confidence of the average investor is incredibly fragile.
But as Harvey Dent reminded us in The Dark Knight, “The night is darkest just before the dawn.”
Bob Veres, author of Inside Information, wrote a piece back in September that discussed some important counter-points to the bearish prognostications that perpetuate the the wall of worry a bull market typically climbs.
Bob’s Take
If you’re feeling a bit gloomy about the economy and the markets, you have a lot of company these days.
All of this gloominess is leading investors to search for alternatives to corporate stocks–including gold and cash equivalents like CDs and Treasury bills. One online blog is titled “Nine Adult Entertainment Stocks to Weather the Recession;” it recommends Playboy and several providers of “mature entertainment” in hotel rooms.
There’s only one problem with following the herd down this gloomy path, or stuffing your portfolio with gold and smut.
In the past, people have been least optimistic about stocks and the economy right before the economy recovered and the markets produced higher-than-average returns. Business Week published its famous cover article entitled “The Death of Equities” in August of 1979, after the stock market had sustained serious losses and the long-term health of the U.S. economy was in doubt. The article noted a massive flight of investors from the market–right before one of the longest and most powerful bull runs the market has ever seen, which would take the S&P 500 index from just over 95 in 1979 to more than 1469 over the next 21 years.
If you want an extreme view of gloom and doom, then consider this quote from Time Magazine:
“In a normal rebound, Americans would be witnessing a flurry of hiring, new investment and lending, and buoyant growth. But the U.S. economy remains almost comatose a full year and a half after the recession officially ended. Unemployment is still high; real wages are declining… The current slump already ranks as the longest period of sustained weakness since the Great Depression.”
Sounds pretty awful, right?
Except that this is a quote from Time’s September 28, 1992 issue, talking about the gloomy prospects for the economy coming out of the 1990-91 recession. It reflected the mood of economists and the country at large–and, with the generous benefit of hindsight, we now know that this severe downer of an article was followed by a 16 year economic boom in the U.S. economy, without a single down year until 2008. The S&P 500 ended calendar 1992 at just over 435, and climbed, with more ups than downs, to just over 1576 at the peak in 2007.
There are good reasons to be cautious in today’s economy and investment markets. We don’t know what the markets are going to do tomorrow or next year. But the good news is that everybody else doesn’t too.
Photo Credit: kevindooley