It was a brutal six and a half months in the markets to start 2022—the S&P 500 was on pace to log its 7th worst year ever at its low point. Since mid-July though, the winds seemed to shift. The S&P 500 was up about 12% since mid-June, and the Nasdaq bounced up even higher at 15% after recording its best July ever—only to crash back down over the last couple trading days. Given these recent sharp and positive bounces in the market, we can’t help but ask: Are these temporary green spurts just relief rallies, or is it a sign that we'll soon be entering greener pastures? The bullish outlook—optimism - Inflation drops: The US just clocked its second official CPI reduction of the year, and it was 3x more than the 0.2% drop in April. When markets are up, they are hopeful inflation has peaked.
- Good news for stocks: Elsewhere, we know valuations are down across the board, and both companies and indexes have shaved off some fat gained over the last two years. Earnings from Q2 were also less dismal than expected as 77% of the S&P beat EPS estimates.
- The recession: The average duration of a recession going back since WW2 has been just 10 months. If we’re truly in one based on the technical definition of two consecutive quarters of negative GDP, that would put this recession having begun in January, meaning that, historically speaking, we’re almost out of it.
The bearish outlook—pessimism - Inflation’s still bad: While it’s nice to see inflation finally drop a bit, we could also definitively state that it’s still historically high. That means it has the potential to remain unresolved if the slightest thing goes awry in the global economy again. The threat of this alone could give us yet another spike and bring the bears back out.
- The recession: Although it is possible that if we’re in a recession, we may be almost done with it, it’s also possible that it hasn’t even begun. Why? Well, since 1950, each time inflation has exceeded 4% while unemployment dipped below 5%, we’ve seen a recession sometime within the next two years.
We won’t know til’ we know While it’s still nice to have a general idea of what to expect, the reality is, that nobody knows. The foolproof outlook is to invest for decades no matter what happens and adjust your short-game fun money strategies according to what happens. Be diligent in the long game and fluid in the short, some combination of Taoist and stoic with the markets. |
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