Sunday November 22 7:36 AM ET
Is This The Stock Market Rally To Remember?
By Pierre Belec
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Don't try to corral this bull market, just yet. Investors may be looking at the ''Rally to Remember,'' if an old Wall Street maxim is correct.
Investment guru Norman Fosback developed a trading theory back in 1970 that says the stock market has showed boundless upward energy whenever the Federal Reserve makes two or more interest rate cuts in a row.
''It's a very old and reliable bullish signal for the market that's called 'Two tumbles and a jump' rule,'' says Don Hays, chief investment strategist for Wheat First Union in Richmond, Va.
Indeed, Wall Streeters rushed to their history books after the Fed lowered interest rates for the third time in as many months to insulate the economy from the contagion that has wrecked economies in Asia, Russia and Latin America.
Hays said Fosback's trading rule -- which was activated for the 20th time this week -- has an incredibly good track record in forecasting the market's direction.
''It states that a major buy signal is given any time the Federal Reserve reduces one of its three major policy tools -- either the discount rate, stock margin requirements, or commercial bank demand-deposit requirement -- two times without an intervening increase,'' Hays said.
He said that since the Fed was created in 1914, the central bank has made back to back cuts in interest rates on 19 occasions. The easing of monetary policy, which has traditionally been done to reinvigorate the economy, has been good for stocks, producing median average market gains of 20 percent in 12 months.
''These signals come very rarely, and in the past only about once every four years,'' Hays said. ''This time, it has been even longer, since February 1, 1991.''
One explanation for Wall Street's bullish response is that stocks have a history of rising in an environment of falling interest rates.
Hays said the trading theory has produced some eye-popping results over the years.
''In the five days after these signals were activated, the average percentage change for the Standard & Poor's stocks has been a gain of 0.7 percent and the market has risen on 11 out of 19 times.''
In a 10-day period, stocks have gone up 1.6 percent in 13 of 19 times and over 15 days, gained 3.5 percent 16 out of 19 times.
Over six months, the market has increased 16.0 percent in 18 of 19 times that the Fed trimmed interest rates twice or more and it has posted an average gain of 30.3 percent over 12 months 18 of 19 times. The 15-month gain has been 34.8 percent in 18 of 19 multi-rate cuts and over 18 months, the gain has been 35.3 percent in 18 out of 19 times.
''If you analyze all the signals post-crash, since 1932, you find every signal created a major successful long-term buy opportunity,'' Hays said. ''They don't all start immediately, however, but are certainly close enough that an investor with a time horizon of 12 to 18 months would have never lost money.''
This comes as good news for investors who are now recovering from one of the nastiest market plunges ever.
After soaring 17 percent for the year in mid-July, the market went into a nosedive that wiped out all of the gain by late August.
The Dow Jones industrial average has since rebounded nicely and is now up 15 percent for the year after a hair-raising rebound of more than 1,500 points in October, thanks to the Fed's rate cuts, which rekindled investors' confidence.
The latest shot of adrenaline by the Fed convinced Wall Streeters that the central bank has done the right thing and has moved quickly enough to save the American economy from the foreign economic threat.
Investors are betting on a brief but mild economic slowdown next year.
But some experts don't buy into these trading theories.
''Investors are running out of new stories to justify the stock market's high levels,'' said John Geraghty of North American Equity Services, a consulting firm.
''Some times, the market itself needs a story and now that there's basically been no change in the economic news, people are starting to depend on cyclical data, charts, technical analysis or anything that they can cling to, to justify what they're doing in the market,'' he said.
The Dow index has been powering higher since hitting bottom on Aug. 31 at 7,500. It stands just a couple of hundred points below its July 17 record high of 9,337.97.
The rally has been propelled by a shift by investors from the ultra-safe money and bond funds to take more risk in stocks.
Market watchers say that barring an unexpected shock, the tremendous recovery in stocks could last for some time.
One reason is that bull markets tend to run longer because they rise gradually and need a continuous infusion of fresh cash.
Also, bull markets are self-fulfilling prophecies -- the more profits investors make in rising markets, the more cash they put back in and the higher the markets go.
On the other hand, bear markets are short-lived and intense because they are a function of mistakes as investors rush to get out at any price.
Will this be the 'Rally to Remember,' or the 'Rally to Forget.'? Stay tuned.
For the week, the Dow was up 239.96 points at 9,159.55, the Nasdaq composite index rose 80.22 to 1,928.21 and the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index was up 37.83 at 1,163.55. |