We had been bullish on stocks all the way back to March 2009, when mark-to market accounting was fixed and the Financial Panic started to recede. At that time the S&P 500 traded as low as 677. What a time to buy!
After that we remained bullish. We didn’t recommend selling in spite of a wide range of fears that spooked many others, including the Great Recession lasting through 2010, a double-dip recession, a second wave of home foreclosures, an implosion in commercial real estate, the passage of Obamacare, a Greek debt default, a potential breakup of the Eurozone, the Fiscal Cliff, Brexit, or the election of President Trump. While others bailed out way too early on the bull, we kept riding.
We rode it so long that some called us “perma-bulls.” But as we looked at low interest rates and healthy profits, we didn’t see any other choice.
Then in June we announced we were bullish no more. In particular, we said “we don’t expect the S&P 500 to hit a new all-time high, above the old high of 4,797, anytime soon.” Instead, until one of our two scenarios plays out – a recession or the realization the Fed has pulled off a soft-landing – US equities are likely to be in a trading range with potential bear market rallies that come and go.”
We still expect the much more likely scenario is that a recession will arrive sometime in 2023 (possibly early 2024) and that stocks will remain in a bear market until the recession hits. Why a recession? Because the Federal Reserve will have to get tight enough to reduce inflation toward its target and a monetary policy that’s tight enough to control inflation is going to send the economy into a recession.
Back in June we said that stocks could easily rally from then-current levels, when the S&P 500 was at 3675, but that such a rally wouldn’t last. After that the S&P rallied up to a closing high of 4305 in mid-August before dropping to 3693 at Friday’s close. Don’t be surprised by other bear-market rallies, which will also fade.