"Markets Crash When They're Oversold"

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Peddling Fiction

On Tuesday, as I watched the President’s State of the Union Address, the President made the following statement.

“Anyone claiming that America’s economy is in decline is peddling fiction.”

While I certainly understand the need to put a positive spin on the current economic backdrop during your last SOTU address, there is a good bit of misstatement in that comment.

The President is correct when he stated that the impact of technology on wage growth and jobs was not a recent development. It is, in fact, an impact that has been occurring since the 1980’s as shown in the chart below.

GDP-Avg-Growth-Cycle-011416

While the big driver of the decline in economic growth since the 1980’s has been a structural change from a manufacturing based economy (high multiplier effect) to a service based one (low multiplier effect), it has been exacerbated by the increase in household debt to offset the reduction in wage growth to maintain the standard of living. This is shown clearly in the chart below.

GDP-Debt-LivingStandard-011416

The problem for the President is that while sound-bytes of optimism certainly play well with the media, the average American is well aware of their current plight of the lack of wage growth, inability to save and rising costs of living.

The decline of economic growth is, unfortunately, a reality and an inevitable outcome of decades of deficit spending and debt accumulation. Can it be reversed? I honestly don’t know, but Japan has been trapped in this cycle for 30-years and has yet to find a solution.

Here’s Real Fiction – Low Oil Prices

Over the last couple of years, economists from Wall Street, to the Federal Reserve, to the White House have repeatedly made the following statement:

“Falling oil prices are great for the consumer as it gives them more money to spend.”

I have written many times over the past couple of years, as oil prices fell, that such was not actually the case. To wit:

“The argument is that lower oil prices lead to lower gasoline prices that give consumers more money to spend. The argument seems to be entirely logical since we know that roughly 80% of households in America effectively live paycheck-to-paycheck meaning they will spend, rather than save, any extra disposable income.

 

The problem is that the economy is a ZERO-SUM game and gasoline prices are an excellent example of the mainstream fallacy of lower oil prices.

Example:

  • Gasoline Prices Fall By $1.00 Per Gallon
  • Consumer Fills Up A 16 Gallon Tank Saving $16 (+16)
  • Gas Station Revenue Falls By $16 For The Transaction (-16)
  • End Economic Result = $0

Now, the argument is that the $16 saved by the consumer will be spent elsewhere. This is the equivalent of ‘rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.'”

Increased consumer spending is a function of increases in INCOME, not SAVINGS. Consumers only have a finite amount of money to spend and whatever “savings” there may be at the pump, it gets quickly absorbed by rising costs of living – like health care.

Most importantly, the biggest reason that falling oil prices are a drag on economic growth, as opposed to the incremental “savings” to consumers, is the decline in output by energy-related sectors. 

Oil and gas production makes up a hefty chunk of the “mining and manufacturing” component of the employment rolls. Since 2000, when the oil price boom gained traction, Texas comprised more than 40% of all jobs in the country according to first quarter data from the Dallas Federal Reserve.

The obvious ramification of the plunge in oil prices is eventual loss of revenue leads to cuts in production, declines in capital expenditure plans (which comprises almost 1/4th of all CapEx expenditures in the S&P 500), freezes and/or reductions in employment, and declines in revenue and profitability.

The issue of job loss is critically important. Since the financial crisis the bulk of the jobs “created” have been in lower wage paying areas such as retail, healthcare and other service sectors of the economy. Conversely, the jobs created within the energy space are some of the highest wage paying opportunities available in engineering, technology, accounting, legal, etc. In fact, each job created in energy-related areas has had a “ripple effect” of creating 2.8 jobs elsewhere in the economy from piping to coatings, trucking and transportation, restaurants and retail.

Simply put, lower oil and gasoline prices may have a bigger detraction on the economy than the “savings” provided to consumers.

Why do I remind you of this basic economic reality – because it only took the Federal Reserve 18-months to figure it out. In a recent speech San Fran Fed president John Williams actually admitted the truth.

 “The Fed got it wrong when it predicted a drop in oil prices would be a big boon for the economy. It turned out the world had changed; the US has a lot of jobs connected to the oil industry.”
No S*^t!

Markets Crash When Oversold

Earlier this week, I discussed the oversold nature of the market and the likely of a “bounce” to “sell into.” 

“With all of the alarm bells currently triggering, the initial ‘emotionally’ driven response is most likely an urge to go look at your portfolio statement and start pushing the ‘sell’ button. Don’t Do It!

 

On a short-term basis, prices oscillate back and forth like a rubber band be pulled and let loose. Physics state that a rubber band stretched in one direction, will initially travel an equal distance in the opposite direction when released.

 

Take a look at the chart below.”

SP500-MarketUpdate-011216

“In particular note the top and bottom portions of the chart. These two indicators measure the ‘over-bought’ and ‘over-sold’ conditions of the market. As with the rubber band example above, you will notice that when these indicators get stretched to the downside, there is an effective ‘snap back’ in fairly short order.

 

With the markets having issued multiple sell signals, broken very important support and both technical and fundamental deterioration in progress, it is suggested that investors use these ‘snap back’ rallies to reduce equity risk in portfolios.”

I reiterate this point because the market continued to slide on Wednesday which led to several comments about the inability of the markets to get a sellable bounce. There is an important “truism” to remember.

“Markets crash when they’re oversold.”

Let’s step back and take a look at the past two major bull markets and subsequent bear market declines.

SP500-MarketUpdate-011416

(Note: I am using weekly data to smooth volatility)

The top section of the chart is a basic “overbought / oversold” indicator with extreme levels of “oversold” conditions circled. The shaded area on the main part of the chart represents 2-standard deviations of price movement above and below the short-term moving average.

There a couple of very important things to take away from this chart. When markets begin a “bear market” cycle [which is identified by a moving average crossover (red circles) combined with a MACD sell-signal (lower part of chart)], the market remains in an oversold condition for extended periods (yellow highlighted areas.)

More importantly, during these corrective cycles, market rallies fail to reach higher levels than the previous rally as the negative trend is reinforced. All of these conditions currently exist.

Does this mean that the markets will go straight down 20% without a bounce? Anything is possible. However, history suggests that even during bear market cycles investors should be patient and allow rallies to occur before making adjustments to portfolio risk. More often than not, it will keep you from panic selling a short-term market bottom.

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Fri, 01/15/2016 - 00:17 | 7049274 fowlerja
fowlerja's picture

What do you get when you have prosperity and a free market system...why you become a slave to the whims of the stock market system...

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 02:04 | 7049417 hibou-Owl
hibou-Owl's picture

I agree with the analysis but the MACD and using momentum indicators in the oversold area are very lagging indicators and difficult to trade.

In the current situation the oversold situation is likely to correspond to a significant sell off, as the market has turned impulsive (down. The shorter time frame elliot wave has counted out as wave one and we have had correction completing wave two.

Wave three down isjust starting ad should exceed the first in magnitude.

This is where investors lose hope (after failed retest) and the fifth wave is dispear and shorts should be covered. 

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 02:48 | 7049457 Batman11
Batman11's picture

The bi-polar world of finance  .....

Wild optimism or utter despair.

Rational markets?

You have got to be kidding.

Break out the Lithium to turn the bulls and bears into rational market participants.

 

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 07:00 | 7049686 Youri Carma
Youri Carma's picture

Extending Low Oil Prices Will Kick the U.S. 'growth' Economy right in the Nuts http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=264446.0

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 07:48 | 7049769 matagorda
matagorda's picture

Good technical analysis, but assumes investors are rational, which of course they are not.  The human brain panics at the thought of behavior that puts it outside the herd.  Examples are lottery winners and NFL plyers, most of whom go broke spending all the money trying to make friends, to be part of the herd.  However, in our particular case we have markets that have been commandeered by the government to disguise grotesque fiscal mismanagement.  Remember the old B&W TV show The Outer Limits, where the creepy announcer would suggest that your set was being controlled by an outside force and then at the end would "return control to you"?  Same situation with markets now.  The fed is purporting to return the markets to a charmingly quaint standard of price setting by the free flow of information.  Only problem is, the actors who formerly took the risk of sticking their necks out committing capital and their reputation in the marketplace no longer exist.  Independent brokerage firms have been swallowed up by the very big banks that the government "rescued" and "research" and "risk taking" are now the province of ritalin-addled gamers to whom individual securities are disembodied statistical flows with terrified corporate managements who know their jobs last only as long as they continue to feed the buyback ponzi.  So the likely outcome will be like Enforcement Droid Series 209 in Robocop whose innaugual performance consisted of machine-gunning an executive out a 50-story conference room and met its demise when it could not navigate down a flight of stairs.  As the Chinese curse goes, "May you live in interesting times."

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 08:46 | 7049913 12357111317
12357111317's picture

That's what the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 ended, and what the Gramm-Leach-Bliley act ("Financial Services Modernization Act") of 1999 began again.  I believe Phil Gramm is now a high-level officer at UBS (bank) now.  Gramm is Episcopalian (Church of England, right?).

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