Based on Previous Bear Markets, This One’s Almost Over The S&P 500 finally did it. The major stock market index dropped into a bear market yesterday – representing a peak-to-trough decline of more than 20% -- after flirting with a bear market for about a week. But it was a short-lived stint. The S&P 500 spent all over two hours in bear market territory, before rallying into the close and finishing the day just outside of that bear market threshold. Is that bullish? Bearish? Where are stocks going next? To answer those questions, we performed an in-depth historical analysis of previous bear markets – and what we discovered is actually pretty bullish! What Do Bear Markets Usually Look Like? The first thing we need to understand about bear markets is that, while scary, they are not uncommon. In total, there have been 12 bear markets since World War II. That represents a bear market about once every six years. The last bear market was in 2020, and the one before that was in 2007, so this is the third bear market in 15 years – roughly consistent with historical standards. During those 12 bear markets, the average peak-to-trough decline was about 34%. The average duration of the decline was 285 trading days. Therefore, historically speaking, bear markets tend to whack stocks by about 35% over the course of a year. The current bear market is clocking in around 100 days with a 20% decline. By those metrics, then, this bear market is just getting started. But upon closer inspection, it appears this bear market may actually be nearing its end. Not All Bear Markets Are Equal Perhaps obviously, not all bear markets are created equal. We believe you can segment all the bear markets since World War II into four different baskets. Those four baskets are as follows: Flash Crashes. These are brief but violent drawdowns in the stock market that typically shed more than 30% off of stocks in about 50 days, but quickly reverse course. Examples: 1987 and 2020. Shallow Bear Markets. These are short and shallow bear markets that typically results in a 25% drawdown in stocks over the course of about 220 trading days. They sometimes coincide with a light recession, but not always. Examples: 196, 1948, 1956, 1961, and 1966. Regular Bear Markets. These are mild bear markets that typically push stocks 30% lower over the course of 400 trading days. They tend to coincide with mild-mannered recessions. Examples: 1968 and 1980. Deep Bear Markets. These are painful bear markets wherein stocks crash by more than 50% over the course of nearly 500 trading days. They always coincide with deep, prolonged economic recessions. Examples: 1973, 2000, and 2007. The current bear market is not a flash crash. It has already lasted longer than both previous flash crashes, and fundamentally, shares no common characteristics with either the 1987 or 2020 flash crashes. The current bear market, rather, is either a shallow, regular, or deep bear market. Our analysis suggests it’s a shallow bear market – which means the bottom is right around the corner! Are We Close to a Bottom? We do not believe the current bear market shares much in common with previous deep bear markets. Those were brought on by a 3X increase in oil prices seemingly overnight (1973), elevated stock valuations that peaked at 26X forward earnings (2000), and a subprime lending crisis that blew up (2007). We don’t have any of that today. Oil prices are up, yes, but they haven’t increased by 3X in a matter of days. Also, valuations were elevated, yes, but the S&P 500’s forward price-to-earnings multiple peaked out at 22X – well below the 26X peak from the dot-com bubble. Currently, the S&P trades at 16.5X forward earnings, which is largely in line with where stocks traded close to their bottom in 2002. And there is no subprime lending bubble in 2022. We have elevated housing prices. But it’s a supply shortage driven bubble that’s propped up by a lot of all-cash buyers. No financial crisis hiding in plain sight here. It stands to reason that we don’t have a deep bear market today. What about a regular bear market? That also looks unlikely. In particular, the regular bear market of 1980 was mostly kickstarted by oil surging to $140 a barrel. We’re at $110/bbl today, and $140 looks unlikely baring some significant supply disruption. The last option, of course, is a shallow bear market – and, as it turns out, today’s bear market shares a lot in common with the shallow bear markets of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. Those were mostly Federal Reserve-driven bear markets wherein the Fed hiked rates too much, too fast to combat rising inflation, and accidently spilled the U.S. economy into light recessions. That’s nearly an identical situation to the one we have today. Therefore, we believe the 2022 bear market should be classified as a “shallow” one. Historically speaking, shallow bear markets result in 25% drops off all time highs. We’re already down 20%. Therefore, history says the current bear market only has ~5% more to fall before bottoming. Of course, that’s exceptionally bullish, because following bear markets, you tend to get massive bull market breakouts. |