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From: | "Peter" <pmaiden@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 1 Dec 2001 14:21:42 +1300 |
Agree
Phaedrus. This is not a debate around technical stuff and fundamentals but about
gathering all the information we can and making our own assessment as to what
might happen over the next five / ten / twenty years.
A lot of what was covered in that
article by Warren Buffett in Fortune is also covered in the book I mentioned a
few weeks ago - Stock Cycles: Why Stocks won't Outperform Money Markets
Over The Next Twenty Years by Michael Alexander.
It's pretty
heavy reading but it points out that basically there have been 14 secular (very
long term) trends since 1800 - seven secular bull markets and seven secular bear
markets. But underneath it all there has been an uptrend - ie higher lows
etc.
This study of
secular trends along with a bit of economic, socionomic and stockmarket cycle
theory clearly points to the current state of the world stockmarkets being
bearish. And each of these secular trends have lasted for up to 15-20 years.
To what level
the current bear market will fall is anybody's guess but in all probability the
low will be higher than the low of 1982. This will continue the long uptrend of
world sharemakets since 1800. It is also worth while pointing out that this
uptrend should in theory be relative to earnings over
time.
Have a look at this chart (if it
comes through). It is one that Mike Alexander uses in his papers. It shows the
S&P500 (in 1999 dollars) adjusted for dividends. It shows the last 14
secular trends and why in all probability a new bearish trend has commenced. A
picture is as good as a thousand words.
Cheers
Peter
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