Dear Higgie,
Higgenbotham wrote:
> Third, after some discussion of technical measures, Biryini goes
> on to predict that the S&P will go to 1500-1700 over the next 2 or
> 3 years. He even calls it a prediction. The only conclusion I can
> draw is that his prediction must be based solely on the fact that
> he feels pretty good about where things are headed.
> Then why not pull somebody in off the street to have this
> discussion?
That's very funny, and, once again, what does this say about the Wall
Street Journal?
Higgenbotham wrote:
> Thinking back to some of the quotes I've read over the years from
> the 1930's, these were exactly the types of sentiments echoed at
> the top of the April 1930 rebound high before the long grind down
> to July of 1932 started. Whether the market can suck more people
> in first, I have no idea.
This is very interesting, and it got me to thinking.
From the point of view of Generational Dynamics, I'm always looking
for changes of attitude in the masses of people. Sometimes these
changes are subtle, and sometimes they're obvious, but they always
tell you what's really going on (as opposed to what the journalists
and politicians tell you).
As you suggest, I believe that there's been a major change in
attitude since the March 9 low.
Prior to August 2007, the general attitude could be characterized as
"total obliviousness," meaning that the assumption that the stock
market would always go up was simply assumed, just as everyone
assumed that 2+2 would always equal 4.
After August 2007, particularly with the Bear Stearns, Lehman
Brothers and AIG collapses, people had a shock equivalent to
discovering that the value of 2+2 had suddenly changed to 5, and they
became highly desperate and risk-averse. This happened over a 19
month period (Aug 2007 to March 2009).
Then, starting in March, something happened. There was a major
change in attitude, the desperate anxiety turned to desperate hope,
and a new stock market bubble was born. This change in attitude was
triggered by the $11 trillion bailout and stimulus plans, and by the
view that this "recession" has gone on so long that it HAS to end
this year.
Now, two months later, the new bubble mentality is firmly entrenched,
just like in 1930, as you suggest.
So what happens next? The new bubble mentality is VERY fragile, and
it will take very little to derail it. I think it's very likely that
when "something" happens, the correction will be very sharp, and it
may even turn into the generational stock market panic and crash that
I've been predicting.
One person who I think agrees with this is Art Cashin, the UBS floor
manager at the New York Stock Exchange. I see him most mornings on
CNBC around 8:50 am, and I could swear that in the last two months
he's aged 20 years.
Last year, he seem very complacent about predicting "capitulation,"
claiming that there would be a big correction, but then the worst
would be over, and the market would grow again.
His predicted capitulation has never occurred, and my feeling
watching him all these months is that he considers this to be a very
dangerous development. His complacency seemed to me to disappear as
the weeks went by, and now, as I said, he looks like death warmed
over.
This morning he said something about the market possibly falling
below a support level of S&P 820, after which the plunge might get a
lot worse.
He's also been recently quoted as saying, "When the market starts to
disbelieve something, the selling can turn violent."
This is exactly the kind of thing that can be expected from a
generational analysis.
Now, maybe I'm misreading him, and he's simply developing a stomach
ulcer or something, and that's why he looks sickly. But I think that
he's suspecting the worst.
Sincerely,
John