Posts Tagged ‘ Ed Easterling ’

What are Secular Market Cycles?

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November 13, 2011

Via Barry Ritholtz we get one of my favorite market analysts’, Ed Easterling, 12 Rules of Market Cycles:

1. Secular cycles are driven by the inflation rate (deflation, price stability, and higher inflation)

2. Secular bulls occur when P/E starts low and ends high over an extended period

3. Secular bears occur when P/E starts high and ends low over an extended period

4. Cyclical bulls and bears are interim periods of directional swings within secular periods

5. Cyclical cycles are driven by market psychology, illiquidity, or other generally temporary condition(s)

6. Time is irrelevant to the length of secular stock market cycles

7. Secular bulls require a doubling or tripling of P/E

8. Secular bears occur as P/E stalls and falls by one-third to two-thirds or more

9. When real economic growth is near 3%, there is a natural floor for P/E between 5 and 10, a natural ceiling around the mid-20s, and a typical average in the mid-teens

10. If economic growth shifts upward or downward for the foreseeable future, the natural range moves upward or downward, respectively

11. Inflation drives P/Es location within the range; economic growth drives the level of the range

12. The stock market is not consistently predictable over months, quarters, or periods of a few years; the stock market is, however, quite predictable over periods approaching a decade or longer based upon starting P/E

That pretty much nails it. I highly recommend that you read the analysis below from July of 2012 which shows exactly why so many have been so wrong about how cheap the market is over the last eight years or so. Click the image to read, or print the article.

Are We There Yet? The Value Restoration Project Resumes

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August 17, 2011
Secular Bears

Most of us can relate to driving and having children ask "Are we there yet?" JJ Abodeeley tries to answer that question. Like us, JJ sees what we have been going through since 2000 as a long process of the market working itself from an expensive peak to a cheap bottom. JJ calls...
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The Misuse of Forward P/E

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August 16, 2011
As Reported versus Operating Earnings

JJ Abodeeley hits a pet peeve of ours here at Risk and Return, the misuse of forward operating estimates to claim that markets are cheap. Of course, we have spent ten years listening to people claim stocks were cheap no matter the environment.
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Todays Links: The View from Here

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October 14, 2008
Todays Links: The View from Here

Yesterday was one fo the best days ever for the stock markets: What does it mean? I think it ultimately depends on factors unrelated to the move itself. Econompic provides us with some context: Obviously large one day moves in and of themselves tell us little about what is to come. So, let us...
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Jeremy Grantham in Favor Again

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February 20, 2008

The Financial Times writes of his feeling of vindication. Jeremy never falls out of favor here, but then, we are a client. Inevitably when he is early, as he generally is, people take it as a sign he is wrong, and note the returns he gives up when he frequently goes against the tide....
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