DEEP THOUGHTS FROM RICHARD RUSSELL
Richard Russell has some particularly thought provoking comments. If you’re not a reader of Russell’s Dow Theory Letters I highly recommend it:
Yesterday I ran into an old friend, and we talked for a while about the years gone by and our lives. He asked me one question that had me thinking. He asked, “Richard, you’ve been writing about the markets ever since I’ve known you, didn’t you start around 1960?” “1958,” I corrected him. “Yeah, I started writing in 1958, and I’ve never lost my interest in the markets.”
“What do you like about the business?” my friend quizzed me further.
“Well, what I find fascinating about the business is that it includes absolutely everything. It has to do with what’s really happening, it has to do with trends, it has to do with the real world as we know it, and it has to do with our future. The markets cut through the propaganda, the lies, the hopes and the fears. Basically, when you’re following the markets you’re following man’s most precious possession — his money.
My friend looked puzzled and said, “Interesting — Give me an example of the trends you’re talking about.”
“I thought for a while, and answered, “Look at the rise of China and Asia. And look at the slow, steady demise of the US. That’s a trend that nobody wants to deal with, but the money says it’s happening. The US is fast losing its industrial base to China. Gold, real money, is accumulating in China. In a year or so, China will be the world’s leading manufacturer and buyer of automobiles. China is buying up all the assets on the planet that are available. In my neighborhood, two of the most expensive houses have been bought over the last month by Chinese. I see an increasing number of Chinese walking around La Jolla. It’s a trend that I note, and it’s a rising trend.
Then there’s the fascinating situation in Japan and Russia where their populations are contracting. In Japan the reason is that Japanese women don’t want to get married any more. They think Japanese men make lousy husbands. Japanese men are demanding and macho and hate to do work around the house. Japanese women and young ladies have more fun staying single. And it’s creating a huge problem for Japan.
The whole trend of empowerment for women is changing the world. Women own 40% of the businesses in America. Women make most of the decisions on what cars or which house a family buys. Women globally make $12 trillion in salaries and wages each year. Currently, there are 99 women billionaires in the world. 92% of decisions to take vacations and where are made by women.
Then there’s the huge question of America’s future. Bob Prechter has come out with a fabulous 1000-page volume entitled, “The Mania Chronicles, A Real-Time Account of the Great Financial Bubble, 1995 to 2008.” This is a tremendous profusely-illustrated work, and when you go through it, you realize that there will be huge repercussions. I gather Prechter thinks one repercussion will be a hair-curdling depression. We’ll know about that with the passage of time.
And I wonder, if Bob Prechter is correct, will it be a deflationary depression or an inflationary depression? Either one would be a disaster. Either way, Americans would be wiped out. Americans were wiped out by a deflationary Depression in the 1930s. Germany was wiped out by a hyper-inflationary depression during the early 1920s.
Today the US sits spellbound and confused while the Obama administration (actually the Fed and the Treasury) attempts to halt the bear market and turn it into a bull market. Amid a flood of government propaganda, “less bad” has been given a new meaning, “less bad” is the new “good.” Evidently, investors have believed in the Fed’s efforts to thwart the bear, believed it enough to trigger a powerful bear market rally. Most analysts and economists have belatedly jumped on the band wagon and have belatedly declared that a new bull market has been born.
If they’re right, we’ve been “saved.” If they’re wrong, then we’re pouring trillions in newly-created fiat money down the drain. Personally, I believe the optimists are wrong. But bear market rallies can go a long way. As I’ve said, if the Dow recoups just 50% of its bear market losses, the Dow could rise to the 10,300 area.
So follow the markets, which is really following the money. I know of nothing more fascinating, which is why I’m still at it after all these difficult years.
Time for some long-term perspective. Below you see a chart of the S&P going back to 1949. The long rising trendline was violated in 2002. The S&P then rose to a new high, following which it plunged, breaking below its 2002 low in 2008. At the same time the Dow broke below the halfway or 50% level from 2002 to 2007. That 50% level was 10725. Interestingly, the Dow has never since risen above 10725. My conclusion is that we are experiencing a rally in an ongoing bear market.
From another standpoint, I have never seen a bull market of the size of the 1980 to 2007 affair end without a major bear market to follow. Such bear markets always terminate with great values such as a price/earnings in the 5-6 range and a dividend yield of 5-6%. But as they so often say on Wall Street, “Maybe this time it’s different.
Source: Dow Theory Letters







Another angry bear who missed the rally
I’ve been following RR off and on since 1974, my experience with his service is that it’s better to follow his Primary Trend Indicator (PTI) relative to the moving average he uses, than to follow his written recommendations. Don’t know where it is today, quit following him in 2006. Barry Ritholtz says we’re in the 6th or 7th inning of the rally. (Last 10 minutes of a 2 hr easter egg hunt?)
Barry’s thoughts:
http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/330576/Rally-May-Only-Be-in-6th-or-7th-Inning-Ritholtz-Says
x,
You seem to be missing a pronoun/subject in your statement, but I’m assuming you’re referring to RR vs. making a public statement about your position?
If so, you should read up more. RR has actually published much bullishness in his letters. As any good investor, he has his personal opinion (bearish) but follows a discipline. You’re way off base here …
TPC, i think you can fix your black bar (where the menu items like home, about us, etc are). It looks uggly where the search window overlays the black bar (at least in IE). I beleive all you need to do is to stretch the size of the black window by some value so that it fits just once in your main window.
X,
Russell sat out the entire bear market and has been bullish for well over 15% of this bull move from the bottom. That’s pretty remarkable stuff….
a,
thanks for looking out. I have no idea how to do that, but I’ll send it off to a tech guy to look at. website design is not my area of expertise….thanks.
i beleive it can be tweaked via the style.css file for your page. It has stuff like this
#head {
width:1000px;
margin:10px auto;
margin-top:0px;
padding:0px;
font-size:0.8em;
}
#page {
width:1050px;
margin:25px auto;
padding:25px;
background:#ececec;
font-size:0.7em;
}
Those various width sizes are defining the page layout. But yes you need someone who understands it, it is very easy to screw the css layout as things are interdependant.
a,
Thanks for your help. I ship these things off to people who know it better than I. When I touch the CSS the site blows up and stops working for days….Appreciate the help.