Imagine, you’re in the exciting new 21st
century. Civilization still exists on Planet Earth. Wall Street’s
still in business. But you’re still asking: Why can’t we hear the
next crash? Are we deaf? No. The warnings are always long and loud.
So why can’t we “hear” them? In fact, it’ll get worse. Here’s
why …
Yes, crashes will keep coming: History lesson:
The 1929 crash led to the Great Depression. On March 20, 2000 we
warned: “Next crash? Sorry, you’ll never hear it coming.” Few
listened. The 1990’s dot-com mania led to Wall Street losing $8
trillion in the 2000-2003 bear-market recession. Nothing changed.
Another round of warnings roared from 2004 into 2008. Few listened.
Another crash. Wall Street lost even more, $10 trillion.
Through much of 2013, pundits warned how bad
the market really was. Then in December the Wall Street Journal
revealed that after 13 years in negative territory, Wall Street’s
“Lost Decade” (which lasted from the 2000 crash to the end of
2013), finally broke even on an inflation-adjusted basis.
Fearing 1929, investor sentiment swung wildly through holidays
And
here we are panicking again, fearing that 1929 will repeat in 2014:
Wall Street, Main Street, tens of millions of Americans, the Fed,
SEC, all of Washington. Yes, outward calm. Inside? You guessed it,
total Panicville. Especially following Mark Hulbert’s
thought-provoking: “Scary
1929 market chart gains traction.”
But
even scarier? That “consensus,” the “predictably irrational”
defense the bulls countered with in “Consensus
on ‘scary’ 1929 chart: Enough already, it’s not happening.” For
one thing, that so-called “consensus” actually proves Hulbert’s
point: Investors really are worried he’s onto something, afraid the
market may indeed be close to repeating the 1929 crash.
Never trust a “consensus,” they invariably
miss the mark, prove nothing. Any so-called consensus of “predictably
irrational” readers and some professional traders must be suspect.
Remember Profs. Terry Odean and Brad Barber’s research conclusions:
Most traders lose money more than 80% of the time? You can’t trust
a “consensus.”
Stop playing musical chairs in an unpredictably irrational casino
We’ve been tracking cycles, trends, waves,
patterns and charts for a long time, since publishing our Future News
Index back a couple decades ago. And noticeably since early last year
they’ve been riding wide, wild and acting unpredictably irrational:
- Just before Halloween, after months of bearish predictions in the first half of the year, we reported: “2014 ‘Year of the Boom!’ Bet on the bulls now,” picking up the shift to a bullish sentiment reflected in the Leonardo DiCaprio movie about the pre-1929 “Great Gatsby” era of the Roaring Twenties.
- Then before Thanksgiving, the spotlight shifted to the “Roaring Katy Perry” market in “Shiller’s hot P/Es powering a ‘Roaring Bull’ till 2017.” We focused readers on the 2004 panic and crash that never happened: “While P/E ratios were over 26 in early 2004, the bubble did not pop. In fact, with tongue-in-cheek, billionaire Ken Fisher dismissed the bears in his Forbes column; ‘The market’s a great humiliator’.”
- Shortly after, in early December, this strong positive energy accelerated. We highlighted opportunities in “12 get-rich sectors for a hot 2014 bull market.”Investors were in cloud nine with “optimists dreaming of another 22% return in the New Year.”
- Then, a bear warning: Just before Christmas we reported a shift back to bearish sentiment in “Doomsday poll: still a 98% risk of 2014 stock crash,” harking back to “the dark warnings from last January through the fall when even the Fed saw an ‘unsustainable bubble’ … Bill Gross: ‘Credit Supernova’ … Nouriel Roubini: ‘Prepare for perfect storm’ … Jeffrey Gundlach: ‘Kaboom Ahead’ … Charlie Ellis: ‘Don’t own bonds’ … Gary Shilling: ‘Shocker’ … Peter Schiff ‘doubling down’ on his ‘doomsday’ prediction … and InvestmentNews’ dark warning to 90,000 professional advisers: ‘Tick, tick … boom!’
Warnings yes, but nobody listened. Yes, we hear
them. All of them. But with bulls and bears fighting, contradicting,
messages get neutralized. And ignored, as crash after crash we watch
investors lapse into denial, till too late. That cycle’s centuries
old.
Why? Because investors keep playing musical
chairs. Love gambling, the hunt, the thrills. Yes, they know bulls
always peak, pop. But not when. So they keep pushing the envelope.
Squeezing out just one more win. Convinced they will get out in time.
You’ll never hear the crash coming … then suddenly it blindsides you
Early warnings of a crash are dismissed over
and over (“just a temporary correction”). They gradually numb us
about the inevitable. Time after time we forget history’s lessons.
Until finally a big surprise catches us totally off-guard. Financial
historian Niall Ferguson put it this way: Before the crash, our world
seems almost stationary, deceptively so, balanced, at a set point. So
that when the crash finally hits — as inevitably it will —
everyone seems surprised. And our brains keep telling us it’s not
time for a crash.
Till then, life just goes along quietly,
hypnotizing us, making us vulnerable, till a shocker like Lehman
Brothers upsets the balance. Then, says Ferguson, the crash is
“accelerating suddenly, like a sports car … like a thief in the
night.” It hits. Shocks us wide awake.
One moment we’re playing musical chairs,
excited, in denial, convinced we can pocket a few more winnings
before the inevitable. Convinced we know when, where, how to exit.
Then the “thief in the night” suddenly attacks, catches us by
surprise. Even then, in our denial, we may keep telling ourselves
it’s just another short-term correction in a hot bull market. Until
suddenly, it’s more than an accelerating sports car … it’s a
Mack truck roaring loudly.
Both optimism and fear are inside jobs. But the
early warnings come long and loud from outside us. But our brains are
programmed, constantly choosing between this new information and our
long-held beliefs, personal biases and ideologies. Which invariably
override new information to the contrary. How else can we explain why
just before the 2008 global banking collapse our own Treasury
secretary, a long-time former CEO of Goldman Sachs, told Fortune that
the economy was the best he had seen in his professional lifetime? It
was not. But his belief wouldn’t let him be confused by the facts.
Predicting crashes: Forget consensus. Forget Soros $1.3 billion bet
How to predict a crash? The secret is
programmed in your brain, your genes, your psychological personality
profile. You’ll do what you always do. Look within. You’ll keep
playing your own version of musical chairs, either naturally bullish
or naturally bearish, timing your exit strategy to suit your risk
tolerance, your judgments, your beliefs, biases, ideologies, not the
data.
Yes,
you will read new warnings, like “ Soros
doubles a bearish bet on the S&P 500, to the tune of $1.3
billion.” You may double down too. Or do nothing. You may
listen to Hulbert, Gross, Gundlach, Ellis, Shilling, Roubini and
Schiff. And still do nothing. Or something. You will listen, take it
all in, and do what you always do. Your way, based not so much on all
the warnings, the facts, evidence, predictions. Rather you’ll make
your own decisions based on some inner consensus of voices that
always guides you from deep inside your brain.
But when the Mack truck suddenly shifts into
high gear … accelerating rapidly … finally catching all of us by
surprise… none of this will matter … you’ll never hear it
coming … till too late … few did in 1929, in spite of all the
warnings … you didn’t hear in 2000 … nor in 2008 … nobody
will in 2014 … the Mack truck will finally catch all by surprise,
once again.
Paul B. Farrell is a MarketWatch columnist
based in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Follow him on Twitter @MKTWFarrell.
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