A
gradual procession of super bears has been quietly admitting they’ve
been wrong in their bearish assessment of the stock market. As
the major stock market indices continue to push to higher highs and as
market internals continue to reflect a stellar market condition, even
the most stubborn of bearish traders and market commentators have been
forced to reconsider their positions. Slowly, and with little
fanfare, they’ve been covering short positions.
Yet
these same died-in-the-wool bears refuse to turn bullish and are now
standing idly on the sidelines watching stock prices move ever higher.
If they can admit they were wrong to sell short, why can’t they
bring themselves to become buyers in what is obviously a strong bull
market? That is the question we’ll examine in the commentary
that follows.
While
discussing the issue recently with friend and colleague Bud Kress, a
Wall Street veteran, he offered these comments on the bears:
“The perma-bears live in their own little world, wrapped tightly in
a cocoon womb.” I couldn’t help but laugh when I heard this
statement. We then began to openly ponder why certain
high-profile “perma-bears” have maintained an unshakeable bearish
bias for the past few years even as equity prices and corporate
earnings have climbed relentlessly. Our conclusion was that
there must be a “cult of the bear.”
I
looked up the word “cult” in the Webster’s Dictionary and found
this definition:
“a
great devotion to a person, idea, or thing; esp: such devotion
regarded as a literary or intellectual fad.”
This
definition, loose though it may be, could easily be applied to the
stock market perma-bears. After all, the bears clearly have
their leaders to whom they pay unceasing homage and devotion.
They have their own unique literature, a body of writing encompassing
many books and newsletters written by esteemed members of their own
group. They have unwavering devotion to an idea (which we’ll
discuss a bit later in this commentary). And the whole perma-bear
movement could easily be regarded as an “intellectual fad” with
its own distinct doctrines and creeds.
In
recent years I’ve found that it has become somewhat fashionable for
even university-level academicians to espouse the cult of the bear.
Back in the ‘80s and ‘90s you’d have been hard pressed to find
any admitted perma-bears among the ranks of college professors.
But one can see a growing trend in the cult of the bear among this
group ever since the tech market crash and recession of 2000-2002.
Some university researchers have even published writings recently on
the “inherent instability” of the financial markets and of the
possibility (nay, the probability) of another financial super-crash in
the very near future.
One
ivory tower type sent me an e-mail in response to an article I posted
on the market’s recent Dow Theory bullish confirmation. It was
essentially a dictum as to why the market should stop going up “any
time now” and why a bear market should begin. The reasoning
behind this argument was a combination of “inflated earnings
expectations,” “inflation,” etc. In other words, the same
tired arguments the bears have been using since about 1982.
I
recall one market sage commenting on the profound psychological impact
the “tech wreck” of the early 2000s had -- and will continue to
have for many years to come -- on the psyche of the average investor.
He pointed out that investors aren’t quick to forget severe bear
markets and recessions and the negative images tend to remain embedded
in investors’ collective psyche for at least 6-8 years following the
crash. This possibly explains why academicians, who typically
specialize in the extrapolation of long-term trends, refuse to let go
of the horrible memories of all those years ago.
There
is nothing wrong with being bearish when the market situation calls
for it. When earnings growth begins to deteriorate, monetary
liquidity diminishes, investor enthusiasm peaks and market internals
start to erode -- that’s the time to turn bearish. The time
leading into 1999-2000 was one such instance when it called for a
bearish stock market/economic outlook. But now is not the time
for being a bear!
It
will also do well for investors to remind themselves, in a bull
market, of the famous Wall Street saying: “Stocks were created to go
up.” How simple, yet how true! Of course stocks can go
down and even crash. But even a cursory glance at the long-term
charts will show you that the stock market has spent far more time
rising than falling; moreover, the average bull market tends to be
longer and more dynamic than the average bear market. With this
basic fact in mind, how can super bears like Joe Granville (from ca.
1982-1996) or Bob Prechter (ca. 1987-2007) justify their long-term
bearish bias? If these were merely two unenlightened, anonymous
investors we might just as easily ignore their stubbornness. But
by their prominence they have been at least partly to blame for
leading untold numbers along the same bearish path during these years,
some to their own financial peril. So when the market indicators
are decisively bullish (as they now are), how can such perma-bears
justify maintaining a bearish stance in perpetuity?
Indeed,
many a famous bear lives to regret his own bearishness. Jesse
Livermore and Daniel Drew were among the famous bear “plungers”
who sometimes fell victim to their ingrained bearish bias. In
his autobiography the Wall Street pioneer Drew wrote that if he had it
to do all over again he would have spent more of his career “playing
the bulls’ side of the market instead of the bears’.” In
spite of his sometimes spectacular success as a bear raider, he had to
admit that his colleagues who preferred the long side of the market
during bull campaigns (such as “Commodore Vanderbilt”) came out
much better for wear in the long run.
A
recent correspondence I received from an Internet friend illustrates
the bearishness many seem to be grappling with in spite of the
market’s sustained uptrend. He writes, “We live the reality.
I don't care if the bogus Dow goes to 50,000. No one I know
believes in it anymore, nor will they until their own situation
improves.…the system is getting fatter and heavier and is skating on
thinner and thinner ice. I know they are inflating and lying
about it... They make it so you have to buy the “system” to
keep up with the inflation that they created, but I’m not buying it.
I am buying gold, some gold stocks....even cases of propane and motor
oil, but I am not buying Dow/S&P/Nasdaq stocks which are
inherently worthless even under the best of circumstances.”
I
doubt not the sincerity and frustration over the system this gentleman
references in the above. But I fear he may have fallen victim to
the seductive mantras of the bear cult. Let’s examine first
the claim, which is constantly made by many high profile bears, that
stocks are “inherently worthless even under the best of
circumstances.” For a stock to be “inherently worthless”
the company each share of stock represents must also be
“worthless.” That would mean the company has net profits of
zero on product sales of zero. It would also imply the company
isn’t engaged in the manufacture or distribution of any desirable
commodity or service. I can think of only a tiny handful
companies that have actually fit this description in the past 10
years. The most infamous example being an Internet stock which
was advertised to prospective investors in the late ‘90s as a
company with no formal business objective, but merely an empty shell
posting as an “Internet stock” and whose promoters were
“searching for a business model” while they collected money from
naïve investors. Predictably, the stock’s share price
collapsed to zero before long and the “company” was soon out of
business.
If
we assume that most companies issuing shares of stock are engaged in
legitimate and profitable enterprise, then how can we in good
conscience call such companies “inherently worthless”? Is
IBM, which is a Dow 30 component, an inherently worthless company?
The company provides innumerable essential produces and services to a
broad spectrum and there may be some reading this commentary on an IBM
machine. Is its stock price merely an ongoing long-term
experiment in artificial share price manipulation and deception?
If so, wouldn’t the “smart money” professional traders/investors
have figured it out by now and dumped the stock down to zero?
Let’s
take this example one step further. If one had had the foresight
(or serendipity) to buy shares of IBM at around $15/share in 1993 and
then held those shares through the explosive rise to $135 in 1999
before selling, were his gains mythical or real? Was the
extraordinary bull run in IBM “bogus” as the perma-bears might
have suggested? When our lucky investor cashed in his winning to
the tune of $120-per-share and proceeded to purchase with those
earnings a new house or automobile, is his newly acquired wealth any
less real than if he had, say, invested that money in gold and cashed
in the earnings to buy a new house or car? In either case the
investor must first take his profits, presumably in dollars, before
spending his fortune. Are shares of IBM somehow less worthy than
shares of gold mining concerns? How then can the act of
profiting from a stock market transaction in IBM be considered
“inherently worthless?”
[Insert
IBM chart]
Let’s
take this exercise a step further. If our proverbial investor
had turned bearish in 1999 and sold short IBM at around $135 and held
down to the end of the decline at around $60 in 2002 before covering
his position, were those gains any more real than the gains made by
our investor on the rise from $15 to $135? Does the favored
bearish medium of short selling somehow confer a “reality” to
stock trading that buying in a bull market doesn’t? Are gains
made by selling short somehow more “real” than gains made by going
long? Or even better: is standing idly on the sidelines
parked in cash while the market goes up month after month or year
after year somehow more “real” than not taking advantage of the
bull market and improving one’s financial station?
By
now I hope you can see the logic (or lack thereof) used by the bear
cultists stretches the imagination and knocks down the walls of sound
reason and common sense. Unless one wants to wax philosophical
and propose that the world we’re living in is merely a holographic
projection and that we “don’t really exist at all” then I assume
you can see the fallacy in the above-mentioned bearish sentiments.
For
some, being bearish is an inherent part of their psychological makeup
as individuals. To put it bluntly, some people are just plain
negative. I’m convinced this must be true for more than one of
the high-profile bearish newsletter writers who have retained their
bearish posture for more than a decade without wavering. One
celebrated bear has been bearish on the U.S. stock market and economic
outlook for going on 20 years! Let’s face it, if someone has a
negative/pessimistic outlook on everyday life it will almost assuredly
spill over into his investment outlook. Tragically, such
inveterate pessimism, coupled with its refusal to take advantage of
positive developments and opportunities, has signaled the financial
death knell for many an individual and his family.
The
two dominant motives in all financial transactions are: fear and
greed. Of these two emotions, fear is by far the stronger one.
The bearish investment guru preys on this base human instinct of fear
and I believe this is another reason for the popularity the cult of
the bear sometimes enjoys. People tend to respond more
emphatically to fear (e.g., “protect your hard-earned savings from
the coming depression!”) than to an old-fashioned appeal to
pie-in-the-sky greed. The bearish cult leader counts on this
tendency and personally profits from it.
A
case can also be made that the cult of the bear is based on primal
emotion more than any other factor. Ask any super bear why he is
bearish in the face of a strong bull market, year after year, and
after you’ve stripped away all the intellectual pabulum and excuses
it really boils down to this: he is bearish because it “feels
right.” Bearishness for most bear cult members is a “feel
good” experience. It is stimulating for one to think that
he’s part of a small cadre of wise observers who “know better than
the careless herd” of stock market investors. The perma-bears
believe that theirs is a just cause and that their patience will be
amply rewarded in due time. They believe they will be the ones
to “inherit the earth” when the prophesied stock market apocalypse
arrives and share prices come crashing down.
When
viewed from this standpoint the cult-like attributes of the bear’s
religion come clearly into focus. More than once a high profile
perma-bear has been overheard exhorting his followers to “keep the
faith.” To borrow a term from a famous theologian,
bearishness, for many, is a “religious affection.”
**********
The
Bears’ Lament
“The
sky is falling” or so we’re told,
but
these pronouncements are growing old.
“Sell
stocks and bonds and bar the door!”
Haven’t
we all heard this before?
“The
crash will come,” the bears intone.
Too
bad for them their shorts are blown.
Perhaps
they should give the charts a look,
and
see the market they all forsook.
Instead
of taking their bad advice,
The
investor should ask, “At what price?”
For
they’ve missed more than one bullish run:
no
sense in missing another one.
**********