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Back in April of 2006 I
wrote an article entitled
Inflation similarities between the 2000s and the 1970s
and detailed the many similarities between the two
decades.
Now two and a half years
later, Rick Pendergraft is seeing the same correlation between the
current stock market and that of
1974. If he is right you don't want to miss this article.
You also might want to check out what I had to say about the
Inflation similarities too.-- editor.
History Repeats
Itself... So You'll Want To Be In The Market For The Next Six
Months
By Rick Pendergraft
I don’t remember
much about 1974, I turned 7-years old that year. I remember that my
dad lost his job with Firestone that year and that my family almost
moved to Georgia in order for my dad to stay with the company. We
ended up not moving from New Castle, but ’74 and ’75 were tough
years for my family.
So why is 1974 so
important 34 years later? The last time the employment picture was
this bad was in 1974.
The November
employment report showed 533,000 jobs vanished from the U.S. economy
for the month. This, along with a revision to October’s numbers,
brings the total number of jobs lost this year to 1.8 million. This
is the worst employment report since December 1974 and the fourth
worst since 1939.
In December ’74,
the economy showed job losses of 602,000. That December is
historical for another reason too. It marked the end of the bear
market that gripped the U.S. for two years. But what happened next
is the astounding part.
From December ’74
through June ’75, the Dow rose an incredible 42 percent. Could this
be a replay? Is this a case where things look the bleakest right
before a turnaround?
The market is
certainly due for a bounce and the oversold levels are where they
were in ’74, so the similarities go farther than just the employment
numbers. In fact, it gets downright eerie. The low in 1974 came on
Friday, December 6. I don’t know whether or not the employment
reports always came out on the first Friday of the following month
or not, but it certainly is spooky how things are setting up almost
identically.
If
the next six months play out just like things did in ’74-’75, where
would it take the market? The Dow would jump from the 8300 level to
approximately 11,800. From December 6, 1974 to May 9, 1975, there
were only four down weeks out of 22. The market soared very
quickly.
The
similarities continue. From the peak in January ’73 to the low in
December ’74, the Dow lost 46.58 percent. From the October ’07 peak
to the November low, the Dow dropped 47.53 percent.
So looking beyond June, what can we expect for 2009? Everyone seems
to think the market will remain troubled for the first half of the
year and then things will get better in the second half of the
year. I actually think the first half of the year may be better
than the second half. Should the market soar higher over the next
six months, sentiment will likely get overly optimistic and then we
will see a choppy second half. I look for the Dow to move back
above 10,000 by the end of the summer and then move sideways through
the end of the year.
I look for oil to stabilize down here in the $40-$45 range, and then
it will start climbing as the economic picture starts improving. I
look for interest rates to continue their downward path over the
first half of the year and then they will start rising again towards
the end of the year.
I think the best place to be for the first half of 2009 is in
stocks. As we reach the summer months, you will need to step back
and reevaluate whether it still makes sense or not.
Good luck and good trading,
Rick
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