Unloved Bull Markets. Craig Callahan

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Unloved Bull Markets - Craig Callahan

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yield on the 10-year Treasury: year-ends 1962, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2019, and 2020. Once the two were about equal: year-end 2015. What was going on these seven times to reverse a normal, rational yield relationship? News events at the time of a few of these could explain investor behavior. The Cuban Missile Crisis was October 1962. The financial crisis was October 2008. The European debt crisis round two was September 2011. Investors were obviously afraid of owning stocks and were clinging to the safety of Treasury notes. They sold stocks and bid up the price of the Treasury notes, which lowered their yield. Five times during this multiyear bull market, investors disliked stocks so much, we were offered a higher yield on the S&P 500 than on the 10-year Treasury, despite the potential for the S&P 500 to provide dividend growth and capital appreciation. We had not seen this desperate yield relationship for forty-six years, then it appeared five times just before and during this multiyear bull market.

Year One-Year Two-Year
1962 22.8 42.9
2008 26.5 45.5
2011 16.0 53.6
2012 34.6 53.0
2015 12.0 36.4
2019 18.3 ???
2020 ??? ???

Graph depicts Compounding at 10% and 5%

      A couple of years before the end of the eleven-year bull market, I was working out at my fitness center in Naples, Florida. A stock market channel was on most of the TVs and the market was up that day. One retired fellow joked to his buddies, “If the stock market keeps going up, I'll actually be able to afford my life style.”

      1 15. I didn't notice S&P 500 earnings have grown 107% from 2008.

      2 14. After 2008, I changed my risk tolerance.

      3 13. I am stuck in the 1970s and thought inflation would come back and interest rates would rise.

      4 12. I was waiting for unemployment to get below 5%.

      5 11. I bought gold instead of equities.

      6 10. I didn't like the bailouts.

      7 9. I don't understand the Federal Reserve and thought the government was “printing money.”

      8 8. I forgot every economic recovery is different and I was waiting for housing to recover.

      9 7. I heard Fed easing was like “pushing on a string.”

      10 6. I saw a head and shoulders top-forming a few times.

      11 5. I thought P/E ratios were too high.

      12 4. I was told we are in a seventeen-year secular bear market.

      13 3. I worried about deflation and Greek sovereign debt.

      14 2. My accountant told me I didn't need huge capital gains.

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