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Sell The Bear-Market Bounce

Published 05/30/2022, 05:20 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Bear market bounces are violent yet short-lived. The latest excuse for an oversold rally was provided by JP Morgan's Jamie Dimon. The bank's CEO stated at Morgan's Investor Day Conference on Monday, May 23, that the US economy remains strong despite gathering storm clouds. He said:

"I'm calling it storm clouds because they're storm clouds. They may dissipate."

This was indicative of the typical vapid speech of the optimistic bank CEO. While he was at it, he also raised the bank's outlook for Net Interest Margin at the bank's conference, causing the usual parade of Dimon groupies to celebrate with orgasmic delight about his confidence in the economy.

Perhaps Dimon is compelled to do his impression of PT Barnum because shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM) have lost 30% of their value so far this year.

But before you believe Dimon is some economic oracle, listen to what he predicted about US economic growth on Jan. 11 when he publicly proclaimed his 2022 outlook,

"We're going to have the best growth year we've ever had this year, I think, since maybe sometime after the Great Depression."

He said this during a quarter that would later show to have shrunk at a 1.4% annualized rate. And that bad economic data didn't cease at the end of Q1. S&P S&P GlobaI US Composite PMI Output, which tracks the manufacturing and services sectors, fell to a reading of 53.8 in May, from a 56.0 reading in April, which means the economy is fast approaching contraction territory in Q2.

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A slew of manufacturing PMIs also supports the view that the US and, indeed the entire global economy is faltering. The plunging numbers on home purchases and refinancing activity indicate danger is ahead.

Nevertheless, despite a parade of sharply declining economic data, the financial media is promoting the view of Wall Street analysts that earnings growth is actually going to be robust this year and next.

This is one reason why the bottom of the bear market isn't yet in sight. In fact, if the stock market were to return to a more normal valuation, one where the total market cap of equities was equal to annual total output of the economy, it would have to decline by 37% from the current level.

But bear markets seldom, if ever, just decline to fair valuations; they usually slice through that level and find support once the market displays a broad array of metrics that indicate it is undervalued. So, despite a brutal bear market, the grand reconciliation of asset prices should continue on.

How brutal has it been? Ycharts calculated the percent declines from all-time highs of some widely held stocks at the end of last week.

Percent From All Time High

As bad as this has been, it is more indicative of how overvalued the market had become rather than being a sign of an imminent bottom.

Vanda research recently reported that the average retail portfolio is down 32% this year. And this bloodbath isn't limited to stocks. The flagship crypto (BTC) is down 55% since November of last year, long-duration Treasuries are down 20% YTD, and the housing bubble is the next in the queue to implode.

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Indeed, the evidence of an incipient real estate debacle can be found in the 6 straight months of decline in the Pending Home Sales Index.

The bear market should continue until a sufficient amount of disinflation is manifest, which can then give Chair Powell the economic and political cover to turn dovish.

But this probably won't occur until around September or October. However, in the next four months, Powell will have raised the Fed Funds Rate by an additional 125 - 150 bps and destroyed $250 billion from the base money supply.

There is still a lot of damage that can be done while we wait for inflation to retreat towards 2%. Hence, investors should not expect the "Fed Put" anytime soon just because the economy is rapidly decelerating.

The Fed now blames the weakening economy precisely because of inflation that ran too far away from its target. Getting inflation back toward 2% is Powell's number one priority—that is, unless the credit markets stop functioning.

However, another round of Universal Basic Income and QE, which may be deployed once again if the credit markets meltdown, will occur while the wounds of record-high inflation have not even begun to heal.

That could end up being devastating for our currency and debt markets. In other words, there is no pain-free path for the Fed to take. Turning dovish may not send all asset prices soaring as it has done in the past because intractable stagflation is the salient risk and indeed the most likely outcome—and that isn't good for most stocks.

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Powell should have resigned a long time ago.

In response to the upcoming recession, expect the Fed, Treasury, and D.C. to coordinate the monetization of trillions upon trillions in helicopter money. But think twice if you believe that will fix everything.

Just imagine the consequences of turning back towards a massive inflationary policy while the sting of destabilizing inflation is still raw in the minds of consumers and investors.

The US now has record-high inflation while also enjoying a tremendous dollar bull market over the past year. But just imagine how destructive that inflation will become once the Fed's balance sheet vaults over $10 trillion and then quickly races towards 100% of GDP; with no end in sight.

And, at the same time, the dollar crashes—not only against goods and services like what is happening now, but against our major trading partners—causing import prices to surge.

In conclusion, the bear market has many innings to go, the Fed pivot is still months away, and that turn towards a more dovish policy isn't going to solve all the economic and market problems.

Indeed, it will make them much worse. This is why the buying and holding of a typical 60/40 portfolio no longer works. And why an Inflation/Deflation investment strategy is growing more crucial to successful investing with each boom/bust cycle.

Latest comments

Basically agree with this analysis, thank you Michael
Great article💪🏾. It's truly disturbing that we are this optimistic despite so maybe signs that the worst is yet to come.Maybe we're just naive ...smh
I like your thoughts and have soldmost of me portfolio. and continue to be very cautious thank you for your opinion.
Oil is on a tear and will be the last to fall.
Interesting... "This is why the buying and holding of a typical 60/40 portfolio no longer works."... So what works?
Cash is king in times like these.
Fed seems convinced that the only way to stop inflation is to force the economy into recession. Sad but it seems true. Fed put? No way., Fed seems to suggest. Fed needs to be honest and tell people the truth.
why bitcoin callsed a cirrency? which crntral bank has issued it?
bitcoin itself seems to be a big fraud isn't it?
Short on SPY, TQQQ, ARKK, AAL, CHPT, DIA, HOOD and BITO. Plan to Short TESLA and AAPL starting Tuesday as well. I also have short term PUT options but plan to start taking longer term options for September 30th on all of these. I see Oil going up tremendously and don't see companies doing as well as they think they will, so valuations will likely go south.
Lol. Same plan
Michael Pento, I agree with all your points, and I went to read your previous articles. I noticed that you know a lot about what's going on in Japan. I came to Japan again after 2.5 years absence, will meet my friends and talk to many people here. If there is any information or observations that I can do that you could use, please tell me how we could connect and what can I do for you. I appreciate the knowledge that you are sharing with your readers!
Good logical reasoning for selling bear market rally. But even such bounces are required and cause enough pain and hope for both sides of the trade, the buyer and seller. Such bounces get the weak investors get whipsawn or whipsawed. I don't know which one is correct
Top notch analysis Mr. Pento!
100%
that was before Russia invaded Ukraine, before China shut down its economy, and before the Fed raised rates. Historically, we could easily be in 1927-1928 or 2006-2007. The crash is coming, but not until it does. Plus, supply chains could smooth out and ease inflation.
Analysts keep ignoring 1 self-evident thing: the very definition of inflation rate is how fast prices are growing. Consumer reaction will linger much longer because of where the prices will end up staying, unless salaries will catch up (which they never do). Even if inflation would stall and stop completely now, people would already decrease spending at the current level of prices.
Also, Todd Gray, I agree that all the underlying factors were there even before the war and renewed lockdowns. I guess the market needed more prompting to realize how high it climbed? One thing that I find unbelievable though: I'm a real novice in all that, and I could see and told my friends all the points in the article... last summer. I'm definitely not the smartest investor: really just learning. And I don't have access to any fast information that analysts do. What's the catch here, how can it possibly be that I could see something better than they did, even for a few months? Can it be that most analysts are deceiving everyone deliberately? I don't believe in any conspiracies, so that's a stupid question... I just can't make sense of it.
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