Originally Published by Casey Research
Stocks had a horrible day TuesdayView the Casey Research Guide to Crisis Investing on InformedTrades
The S&P 500 lost 1.23%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 1.09%.
Indices around the world also fell
The Euro Stoxx 600, which tracks 600 of Europes biggest companies, lost 3.12%. Germanys DAX lost 3.80%. Japans Nikkei 225 lost 1.96%.
Casey Report readers know this is part of our script
The S&P 500 plunged into its first correction since 2011 on August 23. A correction is when an index falls 10% or more from its last high. In total, the S&P 500 plunged 11% in 6 days.
In the latest issue of The Casey Report, E.B. Tucker told his readers that this big drop marked the end of the 6-year bull market in U.S. stocks. He wrote:
We believe the era of asset prices soaring on a wave of easy credit is over. Last months major stock market decline is the start of a very tough time for stocks and the economy
This bull market is unraveling because it was built on easy money. E.B. explains how the Federal Reserves easy money policy has propped up the price of almost everything.
The Feds easy money policy has lifted the price of just about every asset over the past six years. Cars, luxury watches, art, boats just about everything thats for sale costs more than it did a couple years ago. Thats especially true of the stock market.
The Fed cut its key interest rate to effectively zero during the last financial crisis. And its kept it there ever since. Low interest rates were supposed to boost the economy. But theyve also pushed up the price of stocks and encouraged reckless borrowing, as E.B. explains:
By making enormous amounts of credit available, the Fed stoked the economy, stocks, and the housing market. Stocks tripled from their 2009 lows. Average U.S. home prices climbed 50% from their previous lows. Companies with poor credit ratings borrowed record amounts of money...far more than they did before the 2008 crisis.
E.B. went on to explain how high stock and home prices were masking a huge problem:
In 2015, the total net worth of American households reached $85 trillion, an all-time high. On the surface, things look good. But the long period of low interest rates has created an extremely dangerous situation
By taking interest rates to zero and holding them there for nearly seven years and counting, the Fed has created bad investments and reckless speculation on an epic scale. Not billions...but trillions.
The crash last month pushed U.S. stocks below an important long-term trend line
E.B. explains why this is such a big deal:
A long-term trend line shows the general direction the market is heading. Many professional traders use it to separate normal market gyrations from something bigger. Think of it as a line in the sand.
As you can see from the chart below, there have been a few normal selloffs since 2011. On Friday, August 21, however, the S&P dropped below its long-term trend line for the first time in about four years.
U.S. stocks rebounded after last months crash
But E.B. told his readers the rebound was only temporary. He said the market was in the middle of a dead cat bounce.
E.B. thinks U.S stocks will keep falling, in part because theyre so expensive.
Right now, the S&Ps CAPE ratio is 24.6 about 48% more expensive than its average since 1881.
The S&P has only been more expensive a handful of times since 1881. That includes the years around the 1929, 2000, and 2007 market peaks.
CAPE is a popular valuation metric. Its the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio with one adjustment. Instead of using one year of earnings, it uses earnings from the past 10 years. This smooths out the effects of booms and recessions and provides a useful, long-term view of the market.
The chart below shows that the market eventually collapsed after the high-CAPE periods around the 1929, 2000 and 2007 market peaks:
The Feds easy money policies have fueled a reckless debt binge...
And debt acts like dynamite when a financial crisis hits.
Were in a very fragile situation. E.B. thinks last months brutal selloff in U.S. stocks was just the beginning. Things are likely to get much worse from here. But they dont have to get worse for you
E.B. can be your personal guide as this 6-year bull market continues to unravel. Hes recently shown readers how to profit from crashing oil prices and the digital revolution in money. You can read all about E.B.s favorite investing opportunities every month in The Casey Report
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The article The Bull Market is Over was originally published at caseyresearch.com.
The Bull Market is Over (Justin Spittler)
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