|
The Bounce Is Aging, But The Depression Is Young
|
|
|
August 20, 2009 By Bob Prechter
The following is an excerpt from Robert Prechter's Elliott Wave
Theorist. Elliott Wave International is currently offering Bob's
recent
Elliott Wave Theorist, free.
On February 23, EWT called for the S&P to bottom in the 600s and
then begin a sharp rally, the biggest since the 2007 high. The S&P
bottomed at 667 on March 6. Then the stock market and commodities
went almost straight up for three months as the dollar fell.
On March 18, Treasury bonds had their biggest up day ever, thanks
to the Fed’s initiating its T-bond buying program. The next day, EWT
reiterated our bearish stance on Treasury bonds. T-bond futures
declined relentlessly from the previous day’s high at 130-15 to a
low of 111-21 on June 11.
That’s when there were indications of impending trend changes.
The June 11 issue called for interim tops in stocks, metals and oil
and a temporary bottom in the dollar. The Dow topped that day and
fell nearly 800 points; silver reversed and fell from $16 to $12.45;
gold slid about $90; and oil, which had just doubled, reversed and
fell from $73.38 to $58.32. The dollar simultaneously rallied and
traced out a triangle for wave 4. Bonds bounced as well. As far as I
can tell, our scenarios at all degrees are all on track.
Corrective patterns can be complex, so we should hesitate to be
too specific about the shape this bear market rally will take. But
from lows on July 8 (intraday) and 10 (close), the stock market may
have begun the second phase of advance that will fulfill our ideal
scenario for a three-wave (up-down-up) rally. In concert with rising
stocks, bonds have started another declining wave, and the dollar
appears to have turned down in wave 5 (see chart in the June issue),
heading toward its final low. Although commodities should bounce,
their wave patterns suggest that many key commodities will fail to
make new highs this year in this second and final phase of partial
recovery in the overall financial markets. |
Keep up with the latest Trends and Inflation
information
Subscribe to our FREE
Monthly E-zine "E-Trends"
And You will receive a Free copy of
"15 Ways to Beat 95% of Investors"
|
|
Meanwhile, our forecast for a change in people’s attitudes to a
less pessimistic outlook is proceeding apace. Here are some of the
reports evidencing this change:
More than 90 percent of economists predict the recession will
end this year. [The] vast majority pick 3rd quarter as the time.
(AP, 5/27)
Manufacturing and housing reports this week may offer signs that
the recession-stricken U.S. economy is within months of hitting
bottom, economists said. (USA, 6/15) Fewer people say they’ve
prospered over the past year than in decades, a USA TODAY/Gallup
Poll finds. Over the past two months, however, expectations for
the future have brightened significantly amid rising optimism
about a stock market rebound and economic turnaround. “I think
the administration is going in the right direction,” says… Now
36% of those surveyed in the Gallup-Healthways well-being poll
say the economy is getting better. That’s not exactly
head-over-heels exuberance, but it is double the number who felt
that way at the beginning of the year and a notable spike in the
nation’s frame of mind. Thirty-three percent say they’re
satisfied with the way things are going in the United States; in
January, just 13% did. (USA, 6/23/09)
If only to confirm the socionomic causality at work, an economist
quoted in the article above muses, “The one anomaly in the puzzle
is that people shouldn’t be feeling better because the jobs market
is so terrible and unemployment is likely to keep rising.” Of
course it would be an anomaly, and people should not feel better, if
mood were exogenously caused. But it is endogenously regulated, and
it precedes social actions, which produce events such as job
creation and elimination. That people feel better is evident in our
rising sociometer, the stock market. If the rally continues,
economists will soon agree that the Fed’s “quantitative easing” and
Congress’ massive spending are “working.” Those predicting more
inflation and hyperinflation will have the last seeming confirmation
of their opinions. Then, a few months from now, some economists will
probably express similar puzzlement when the stock market starts
plummeting again despite the fact that the economy has improved.
But all of these considerations are temporary. Conditions are
relative, and behind the scenes, the depression has been, and still
is, grinding away. For more information, download the FREE 10-page
issue of Bob Prechter’s recent
Elliott Wave Theorist. It challenges current recovery hype
with hard facts, independent analysis, and insightful charts. You’ll
find out why the worst is NOT over and what you can
do to safeguard your financial future. |
 |
|
|
|