Stock Market Cycles: What My #1 Predictor Is Saying Now (The Forecast Ain’t Pretty)
by Mark Skousen, Chairman, Investment U
Friday, June 23, 2006: Issue #549
Investors are always trying to find a short cut to forecasting the stock market’s cycle and direction. I remember years ago, in the late 1980s, a “doctor” named Ravi Batra who wrote a book called The Depression of 1990.
He warned that the capitalist system always goes through a regular cycle of boom and bust that lasts approximately 60 years, known elsewhere as the Kondratieff Cycle (named after a Russian economist). Since the last depression began in 1930, the next one could be pinpointed with precision – 1990. The October 1987 crash confirmed Batra’s worst fears. More was on the way. By the time 1990 arrived, the U.S. was in the beginning of a recession, and Batra’s book gained notoriety. It reached #1 on The New York Times bestseller list.
Who Can Forecast the Stock Market’s Cycles and Future?
In last Sunday’s New York Times, Mark Hulbert gave credence to another simple predictor by two professors of finance at Baylor University. By focusing on three ingredients (the stock market’s dividend yield, the T-bill rate, and average earnings expectations of Value Line’s 1,700 stocks), they have created a model that is predicting a bear market through the end of next year.
I won’t go into the details of this model because it failed miserably to predict the biggest bull market in history in the 1990s! Yet Hulbert is somehow convinced that we should pay attention to this strange model.
Subscribers to Investment U know that I have recommended caution and a high cash position in the past month or two. I don’t base my forecasts on mindless technical systems, cycle theory or back testing.
- Geopolitics,
- Macroeconomics, and especially
- Monetary policy.
My motto is simple: “Don’t fight the Fed.”
There are several forces emanating from the Federal Reserve Building in Washington D.C. that are threatening Wall Street’s long-term bull market:

2. Ben Bernanke & the Fed have clamped down on the growth of the money supply.
This is the second leg of “tight money,” and the most dangerous. As I pointed out in Investment U # 542, until early this year, the Fed was printing money like water, at a 6%-10% clip. However, since March, M2 has stopped growing entirely.
Warning: I know of no time in my memory when the Fed has raised rates and tightened monetary growth without creating a short-term bear market in stocks.
I suspect that we are going to see a financial crisis building that will force his hand to reverse course and begin another round of monetary easing.
Good investing,
Mark
Today’s Investment U Crib Sheet
- If you’re looking for a good prime rate fund, check out Investment U # 542, A Stock Market Crash in 2006? Four Investment Safe Havens For The Ailing Market, to see why the Van Kampen Senior Income Fund (NYSE: VVR) is a good choice.
- We’ve been keeping a close eye on uranium prices here at Investment U The energy resource just went up again continuing to make new all-time highs. It’s now $45 per pound, up from $8 in 2000. See Investment U # 538 for the details: Uranium Stocks: While Gold Tops Out, this Forgotten “Yellow” Commodity Hits Its All-Time High.
- The Fed Fund Rate Announcement & Interest Rate Decision
- Robert Shiller: A Chilling Prediction On Fed Rate Cuts
- The Permanent Portfolio Fund: Harry Browne’s “Peace of Mind” Investment
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