Demographics And The Next Secular Stocks Bull

Four demographic measures have been demonstrated to have a correlation with economic, stock market and real estate market performance: middle to young ratio (35-49 year olds versus 20-34 year olds), middle to old ratio (35-49 year olds versus 60-69 year olds), percentage of net investors (35-39 year olds versus the whole population), and dependency ratio when inverted (0-14 year olds plus 65s and over versus 15-64 year olds). Using the population pyramids based on the United Nations 2011 population data and projections I have modeled 24 countries on all four measures and you can see these charts on my new Demographics page HERE.

The data points are 5-yearly and I have modeled the period from 1995 through to 2050, so that we can see the trend leading into our current point in time and the projections forward. Based on the wider research on my site, my forecast is for a secular transition to a new K-Spring from the period around 2013’s solar maximum, namely that secular bull markets in bonds and commodities should give way to new secular bull markets in stocks and real estate in a gradual transition, with the first phase of momentum in stocks likely from around 2015 through to the next solar maximum of around 2025. By my recent analysis, not all major countries around the world will participate in secular stocks bulls in that period, as those with particular negative demographic trends are likely to miss out. The strongest secular stocks bulls should be in those nations with particularly positive demographics based on the four measures.

So let me cut to the conclusions from the data. Those countries with the strongest demographics 2015-2025 out of the 24 modeled are South Africa, Nigeria, Poland, Russia, India, Turkey, Brazil, India, Malaysia and Indonesia (with at least 3 out of 4 measures trending positive). Those countries with the weakest demographics 2015-2025, and likely to struggle to carve out secular bull markets in equities, are China, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Australia/New Zealand and Canada (with at least 3 out of 4 measures trending negative). And lastly those that are in between (more ‘neutral’ demographics) are USA, UK, Mexico, Canada, UAE, Ireland, Vietnam and Japan.

Therefore, based on demographics, the best returns for equities are likely to come in East Europe, South America, South Asia, ASEAN and Africa. Unimpressive returns should be made overall in the ‘developed’ world, with Western Europe perhaps struggling the most. Out of the top 10 largest economies in the world, we might expect Brazil, India and Russia to play a greater role in pulling the world economy and stock markets along, whilst China, Germany and France may be dragging their heels.

Compare Nigeria and France, at opposite ends of the demographic trend spectrum. Here is Nigeria, showing all four demographic measures (which have been scaled to share the same chart) trending positive between 2015 and 2025.

6may20131And here is France, with all four measures trending negative in the same period:

6may20132Some potential investment vehicles to capture the best demographics would be Spdr S&P Emerging Europe which is Russia(56%)-Turkey(23%)-Poland(13%), or Market Vectors Africa ETF with the two largest country holdings Nigeria and South Africa, or Advanced Frontier Markets ETF whose biggest holdings are Nigeria, Vietnam and Gulf countries, together with smaller holdings in many of the less accessible countries with better demographics. There are multiple investment options for the bigger countries such as India and Brazil. Beware ’emerging markets’ ETFs as they often include China, Taiwan and others.

If my primary forecast plays out for a secular commodities peak then a cyclical stocks bear and mild recession before a momentum ‘go’ point as of 2014-15 then the opportunity to load in to these stock markets may not be until then. However, I may be wrong with the timeline of developments, and not all markets will take off at the same point, so another consideration would be which of those positive-demographic markets are currently ‘cheap’ and therefore unlikely to be at risk of much price downside. The cheapest current by p/e include Turkey 12, Poland 10, and Russia at 5.6 with a 4.6 yield. Alternatively, Japan’s stock market appears to have technically broken into a new secular bull already and is belatedly catching up with demographics which turned upwards (not all 4 measures) as of around 2005, so I suspect could already be a buy.

Many of the ’emerging’ markets in the positive demographic list look similar to this, India’s combined chart:

6may20133Three positive trends and one negative, with the negative being the middle-old ratio. This is because until recently people in relatively poorer nations rarely reached old age. In the first half of this century they should see an increasing amount of people reaching old age and therefore the ratio versus the middle aged goes from negligible to something of significance. Nonetheless, the old age populations in these developing nations largely does not become problematic until much further out, unlike the large relative numbers reaching old age in many developed countries as of now.

More Demographics

The lunar positive period begins here for the next two weeks. Is there a buying opportunity in pro-risk? The geomagnetic trend is still up. Sentiment is at pessimistic levels in a variety of commodities which would be fuel for a mean reversion rally. Sentiment remains a little frothy in equities. Economic surprises for the G10 are in a downtrend and negative. US earnings and revenue beat rates are so far unimpressive. PMIs and leading indicators for key nations have overall weakened a little in the latest readings. Here is the combined picture for pro-risk:

29apr201316Source: Bloomberg

It still looks like a correction has been in place since the turn of February, but global equities as a whole have managed to carve out a sideways range rather than down. By 5-models-in-alignment the next move would be up from here into mid-year to make a cyclical top. PFS forecast that recent soft commodity prices will provide economic improvement ahead again, as cheaper input costs make for growth. If solar/secular history is to reoccur here, then commodities and treasury yields should start to make their move. I would like to see some evidence of change in trend in economic surprises and a renewed pick up in leading indicators to bolster this likelihood.

Back to demographics. Here is a reminder of real UK equities:

23apr20131The biggest real gains came in the two solar cycles from 1980 to 2000. I have used the population pyramids to draw out the three demographic trends that have been shown to have a correlation with stock market performance, namely the middle/young ratio (m/r), middle/old ratio (m/o) and the proportion of net investors. We can see that the period of bumper gains in UK stocks was one in which all three measures were trending upwards – a kind of demographics ‘holy trinity’:

29apr201315

Looking forward there is no such golden period ahead for the UK. The caveats, as some of you pointed out, are that immigration policies can change (changing the demographic projection) and investor behaviour may change (disturbing the correlation with the local stock market). But barring any major changes, the UK stock market may struggle going forward.

So here are three countries that do have such a demographic positive unity ahead, i.e. all three measures trending up for a period.

The first is Japan. The black lines are the solar maxima. The outer green box is the overall positive period, and the inner green box when all three are trending upwards together. The window of opportunity is now.

29apr201314The second is Poland. This next solar cycle, from circa 2013 to circa 2025, is one where all three measures are rising. That makes Poland a likely secular bull market in that period.

29apr20138And the last for today is Russia. The positive alignment runs from around 2015 to 2025 for a decade.

29apr201313Russian stocks are still very cheap, at p/e 5.6 and paying a 4% dividend. If commodities can accelerate once more, as per my prediction, then I believe Russian stocks can mean revert to some degree. The positive demographics just ahead also suggest that if the trade does not come good quickly that it should with time.

So my trade for today has been to add to (and average down a little) JPM Russia. The lunar positive period, the expectation that commodities will outperform, plus the picture just outlined.

New Chapter

To add a little more to the last post on demographics, solar cycles and equities, here is the long term inflation-adjusted UK FTSE chart. The ‘xx years’ red/green colouring is not my work. I have instead marked the solar maxima in black.

23apr20131

Source: Monevator

Green circles are secular commodities peaks, every third solar maximum, equities buy point (note the equities buy point follows the secular commodities and solar peak by 1-4 years). Yellow circles are secular stocks interim peaks, every third solar maximum. Red circles are secular stock final peaks, every third solar maximum. It’s a very neat chart from a solar cycles perspective, and it may offer more evidence of the 33-year lunisolar cycle (3 solar cycles) creating sine waves in the markets.

However, the long term Nikkei chart that I presented in the last post did not conform. The secular peaks and troughs aligned with solar maxima but the 33-year cycle was not in evidence in the same way. What is consistent across the long term charts for FTSE, Nikkei and Dow was that secular turns aligned with solar maxima, and demographics dictated whether the market was in a secular bull or bear for any specific solar cycle, between maxima.

The reason the Nikkei made a secular bull in the 1970s solar cycle whilst the Dow made a secular bear was demographics, and the same applied in reverse in the 1990s solar cycle. It appears that a secular bull or bear is dependent on the demographic trend, whilst cyclical bulls or bears within the overall trend are not. During the 1990s, the Nikkei made cyclical bulls and bears that aligned with cyclical bulls and bears in the Dow. However, the Nikkei cyclical bulls were more sideways and the bears more downwards than the Dow’s respectively. In other words, stock indices around the world largely move together in cyclical bull and bear trends, but the gradient of the moves (and p/e progression) differs to create an overall secular bull or bear.

So looking ahead to the next solar cycle, from maximum to maximum, circa 2013 to circa 2025, out of the top 10 largest economies in the world, those with demographic trends in that period to support secular bulls are USA, Japan, Brazil and India (with Mexico and Indonesia just outside the top 10 potentially offering additional support); whilst those with negative demographic trends that would argue for secular bears in this period are China, Germany, France, UK, Italy and Russia (or we might simplify to China and Europe).

Compare this to the last solar cycle which was primarily a secular stocks bull, namely the one from the 1989 solar max to the 2000 solar max. The top 10 largest economies in the world were pretty much as now, just with slight differences in order. USA, Europe, China and Brazil made secular bulls, whilst Japan, Russia and India made secular bears. So not all countries made secular bulls, but out of the most important economies in the world, the total GDP of those in secular bulls exceeded those in secular bears. The same should occur in the next solar cycle, but by a lesser margin (having made a comparative calculation). The bottom line is, there are enough of the big guns in a demographic position to generate a K-spring, and if China were to draw down on its massive currency reserves to stimulate the economy in this period then it could potentially escape a bear too. The UK and the Eurozone don’t have such a fallback, and I think it therefore likely that they will endure another secular bear 2013-2025 (circa), if the demographic correlations hold true.

In summary, I think we see an overall up-cycle for equities for the next solar cycle looking out to 2025 or so (whenever the solar maximum falls), a K-spring. But I think buy-and-hold will do best targeted at USA, Japan, Brazil and India, with Mexico and Indonesia also likely outperformers.

My new chapter is moving home to Austria next week. The big trip inspired a big move (and maybe the solar maximum inspired both?!). Certain further-afield countries on the trip were highly attractive, but with two kids the option we have long had under consideration won out. My wife is Austrian, we have a network of family and friends there already, and the kids will become truly bilingual in both the language and culture of their second nationality. We get the better climate that the trip made me crave.

So Eurozone issues are going to have more resonance from now on. We will be living in Vorarlberg, in the very West of Austria on the Swiss/German border. If you live anywhere near there, e.g. Zurich, Liechtenstein, Bodensee, and would like to meet up, please get in touch with me at john(at)solarcycles(dot)net.

Solar Cycles, Demographics and Equities

A long post coming up, but I found this to be outlook-changing research.

Firstly, the Japanese stock index long term chart, with solar cycle maximums marked as black lines (C for commodity secular peaks):

22apr20131Underlying source: Wikipedia

A fairly simple 100 year history: a long secular bear followed by a long secular bull followed by a long secular bear that potentially just ended at the turn of 2012 into 2013. The secular turns fell very close to solar maxima.

Secondly, the US Dow stock index long term, with solar maximums again marked in black.

22apr20132

Underlying source: Stockcharts

Alternating secular bulls and bears. I argue the mid 20s to mid 30s episode was outsized greed and fear events that cancelled each other out on the way to the true secular peak in 1937. The secular turns fell very close to solar maxima.

Thirdly, the commodities index long term, with solar maxima marked. Again, alternating secular bulls and bears, and again secular turns falling very close to solar maxima.

22apr20133Source: Nowandfutures

Fourthly, 10 year treasury yields long term chart, with every third solar maximum marked.

22apr201317Underlying source: Multpl

A longer term cycling of secular bulls and bears, but again the secular turns falling close to solar maxima.

Here is real estate, but only half as much history available as a global index (hat tip Rob):

22apr201316

Underlying Source: P Loungani

There is a tentative cycle here, with the peaks alternating on solar maxima and solar minima. Furthermore, there is the main (circadecadal) solar cycle averaging 10.66 years, and a lesser (circahemidecadal) solar cycle averaging 5.75 years. They fit rather well with the two cycle parts noted above. But a little more history going forward is required to judge this model’s validity.

Moving on, the next chart is US unemployment versus solar cycling.

22apr201318Source: Gorbanev / Ktwop

Rises in unemployment just after the solar peaks. The chart fits well with my own chart, showing recessions occurring after each solar peak (which correlates with geomagnetism peaks lagging sunspot peaks).

recessions

And also this chart, which shows inflation spikes occurring at each solar peak.

17sep18

Below we see money velocity rising into solar maxima and peaking before or at the subsequent recessions:

22apr201314And the next chart shows the treasury spread (10 year treasury yields minus 3 month treasury yields) widens to a peak leading into a recession:

22apr201315

Source: New York Fed

Let me draw all that together. At each solar maximum, we see a particular risk asset or assets making a secular peak, whether this be equities, commodities, real estate or bond yields. I argue this is sunspot-driven biological human excitement that translates as a speculative mania in the popular asset class of the time. We also see inflation and money velocity spikes at each solar maximum, which I argue is also behavioural effects in the economy of the same excitement phenomenon. After each solar maximum we see peaks in the yield spread and unemployment and recessions. Market history dictates that bull market cycles end with inflation rising, yields rising and overtightening, so this fits with the picture being revealed. Excessive and unsustainable speculation and buying in the markets leads to excessive inflation and tightening and tips the world into recession – economists would relate to that phenomenon as a regular cycle of greed and fear, boom and bust. But add in solar theory, and sunspot maxima biologically help inspire the greed/boom part, whilst geomagnetism maxima (lagging sunspot peaks) depress sentiment to assist in delivering the fear/bust part.

So by this modelling, we should be seeing a secular peak in commodities and a secular bottom in treasury yields around the current solar maximum, which should fall either Feb 2012 (past) or ahead in Fall 2013.  Both commodities and treasuries have fulfilled secular bulls through to 2012/13, regardless of what happens next. The difficult part is in timing the turns when you are close in on the action, as we are as traders here in 2013. What is clear is that money velocity has not yet picked up and inflation has not peaked (making its high thus far in 2008). US jobs and yields spreads do not indicate a recession, and geomagnetism is currently benign. Jobs are in fact predicted to grow ino the Fall:

22apr201329

Source: PFS Group

Historically, recessions have begun an average 14 months after solar peaks, so we might expect to see leading indicators for jobs falling by now if the solar peak passed in feb 2012.

Collectively, these suggest the solar peak is more likely ahead in Fall 2013 than behind us in February 2012. I previously showed that world bond yield and money velocity charts could be bottoming out based on technical action thus far in 2012-2013, and in which case an escalation from here through the solar peak (assuming Fall 2013) would fit well with history. That would also suggest an inflation peak, and a secular commodities peak, lies ahead.

We can now cross-reference this solar picture with demographic models.

The next chart is a 100 year chart of the US Dow p/e ratio together with the trend in US demographics as measured by the middle-aged to young-aged ratio:

22apr201319Source: CXOAdvisory

This chart is the same demographics trend shown against the inflation-adjusted Dow.

22apr201320Source: CMG Wealth

Both the p/e and ‘real’ Dow do the same job of removing inflation from the picture. There is a clear correlation between equities and demographics.

Chart 14 shows the SP500 netted of inflation versus the same demographic trend, and I have added in the solar maxima (black lines) again.

22apr20134Underlying source: Chris Puplava

Now things get interesting, because there appears to be a three-way relationship between solar maxima, demographics and equities, with peaks and troughs in all three lining up. In my Trading The Sun PDF I noted there was some research identifying solar cycling as influential in population and demographics in other species, as well as research attempting to correlate solar cycles with longevity and mortality in humans. But I have now additionally found a research paper by Walter Randall (1991) that identifies an 11-year cycle in human births, and here is the chart showing that dominant cycle in the US:

22apr201349

Source: W Randall

Randall also found variation in human conceptions relate to sunshine levels and geomagnetism.

I have added the solar maxima to the US births per year chart below. We see births have typically spiked up a little at the solar peaks.

22apr201350

Underlying Source: CalculatedRisk

And here are UK births, with solar maxima overlaid:

22apr201352

Some clear peaks and troughs aligning with solar maxima.

So, we have solar-inspired waves in demographics which provides a reasoning for a correlation between the two.

We can also explain the demographics correlation to the stock market. There are young borrowers/spenders, middle-aged investors (partially investing for retirement) and old-ages disinvestors. If the middle group is growing relative to the others, then we have a growing demand for the stock market. Similarly, the old and the young don’t typically buy houses, so a swelling middle-aged group relative to the others is an environment for a housing boom, and vice versa.

So there we have our three way correlation between sunspots, demographics and equities (and housing too). Because of the solar cycle related births swells, we will find certain demographic groups peaking in numbers and relative numbers around solar peaks. That provides peak demand or supply (e.g. a peak in retirees disinvesting), and together with the sun-driven biological changes in human excitement at the peaks, we have a recipe for asset invesment and speculation peaks at solar maxima.

In the US demographic chart above we can see that the steepness of the secular bull from 1980 to 2000 appears related to the steep demographic uptrend of that period. Now here is the same demographic model for Japan:

22apr20135

Underlying source: Chris Puplava

Again, peaks and troughs in stocks, solar and demographics line up. The steep secular bull up until 1989 again appears related to the steep demographic uptrend of that period. The reversal in demographic trend as of 1989 appears to explain why Japanese equities topped out at that solar maximum and did not keep going until the 2000 solar maximum, whereas US demographics did.

Looking forward, we can see that the US demographic model reveals a new uptrend from this solar maximum (circa 2013) to the next (estimated mid 2020s), which is supportive of a secular bull, albeit a relatively shallow one in real terms. Meanwhile, the Japanese model is already in an uptrend and is good until around 2020. Japanese stocks are currently in a sharp upswing, belatedly catching up the demographics and suggestive of a new secular bull.

We have looked at middle-young demographics, so let’s now draw in middle-old demographics. The chart below shows the picture for the US:

22apr201324

Source: BusinessSpectator

The US faces a demographic headwind looking out to 2020 in this regard, unlike its middle-young asset. Using the m/o ratio only we see a prediction for the p/e ratio to drop to just 2-3 by 2020. This should be offset to some degree by the improvement in the m/y ratio. Nonetheless, there is something notable here, which is that p/e ratios for country stock indices appear to largely reflect demographics. In other words, a country stock index with a cheap p/e is only a good buy if the demographic trend forecast reveals an uptrend ahead. Some of the most ‘expensive’ stock indices around the world right now by p/e valuation are Indonesia, Mexico and Philippines, all of which have very favourable demographic trends looking forward compard to most of the world. Rather than shying away from these indices because they appear overvalued compared to historical averages, it might instead pay to invest there, as they should get more ‘expensive’ going forward. This also explains why the Nikkei around 1982 maintained a p/e of around 20 whilst other stock indices were making single digit secular bottoms, because it was in the midst of a positive demographic trend looking out to 1989. Note this relationship is longer term and does not preclude shorter term p/e oscillations. P/e valuations will overshoot and undershoot the demographic trend but mean revert to it over time.

The next chart shows the middle/old trend for Japan, which is a tailwind out to 2020, like the middle/young for this country.

22apr201322Source: Zerohedge

Two more demographic measures for the US. The first chart points to a bottoming out by around 2020, followed by an upswing into 2036, which is supportive for a secular bull market.

22apr201323

Source: HS Dent

And this chart shows an enduring trend in nominal labour force expansion in the US into mid-century, standing out from the other developed countries shown.

22apr201325Source: SeekingAlpha

So combining all four demographic measures for the US, we have strong odds of a secular bull from around 2020 to 2030. Prior to 2020 it may struggle to gain traction, and  need a deeper washout in p/e. Let’s not forget that we are dealing with ‘real’ Dow/SP500 and p/es, so inflation matters. A sharp rise in inflation could drive down p/es whilst the index goes sideways. A lack of inflation could mean the index falls nominally before embarking on a momentum secular bull run from 2020-2030. Either way, because this demographic uptrend from 2020-2030 is ahead, we might not expect a major washout in p/e in the US. The SP500 and Dow are amongst the more expensive indices by p/e around the world but this could reflect the positive demographics ahead.

Let’s now look at dependency ratios (proportion of retired and young to the working population) demographics globally. Trends in the developed world contrast starkly with trends in emerging countries, as shown here:

22apr20136

Chart 23 reveals the bad situation kicking in as of now in developed countries:

22apr20138

Whilst the next chart shows a particularly positive outlook for Philippines, Malaysia and India:

22apr201327And the next chart provides another comparison:

22apr201328Brazil looks good. The USA improves looking out to mid-century. And the worst: Japan. So let’s return to Japan, which we can also model using the dependency ratio as below:

22apr201332

Japan is understood to have battled with asset deflation for 2 decades. However, we see that demographics were responsible for a p/e or real downtrend in Japanese equities from 1989 to around 2000. Then the m/o and m/y demographic trends picked up again, and we can see in the chart below that the Nikkei effectively tracked sideways since then.

22apr201330

We might therefore take a fresh look at it and consider the Nikkei was in a downtrend for a decade (or one solar cycle) and then turned sideways as the demographic trends in m/o and m/y changed upwards. The massive spurt since October 2012 therefore looks reasonable, as a belated catch up to trend. However, not all is well for Japan. The dependency demographic trend is the worst around the world in that it is likely to become devastating by mid-century. It also has the largest debt-to-GDP ratio in the world, over 230%. Interest rates are effectively zero, and cannot be allowed to rise much because of the servicing of the debt. There is little hope of major GDP growth in the years ahead because of the dependency trends and the debt. Despite this, Japan is going hell for leather in a bid to restart the economy and ignite inflation, now doubling money supply from 29pc of GDP to 56pc of GDP by 2014. The first result of this ultra-aggressive policy has been a swift 20% drop in the yen. As Japan is an energy importer, this has immediately produced a big uplift in energy price inflation. If I am correct in predicting a pick up in money velocity here, and also correct in a commodities/inflation peak ahead relating to the solar maximum, then I suggest there is the potential for Japanese inflation to quickly become problematic. As the government cannot combat with rate rises because of the debt servicing, the risk then would be hyperinflation. I know hyperinflation is overhyped, but I just wonder whether it is worth an outside bet here.

Hyperinflation has historically been initiated by either rapid increases in either money supply or money velocity, then the other one has joined in to complete the feedback looping. Japan is obviously at full acceleration on the former. Under hyperinflation, stock markets have historically gone wild in nominal terms, but the cost of living has gone even wilder. In Zimbabwe, the stock market went up 47,000% in a year, but the cost of living rose even faster. So a Japan hyperinflation trade could be achieved either by a spreadbet on the nominal index or a long Japan fund whilst short the yen. This is how I see it: Japanese stocks should rise on the belated catch up to m/o and m/y demographic trends, regardless of the Japanese government’s policy actions, but those actions have the potential to produce wild inflation which would then take Japanese stocks in nominal terms much higher.

Back to demographics. The headwinds facing many developed countries in dependency trends are problematic. Here is real estate modelled against dependency for six developed nations:

22apr201331Source: Business Insider

If we refer back to the global house index chart further up the page, that cyclical model projected no real take-off in global house prices until 2019. These dependency charts suggest headwinds that further cement the likelihood that housing won’t offer a great return for the next few years in the developed world, applying equally to most other European countries, New Zealand and Canada. China and Korea also faces the same dependency trend issues starting around now.

The countries with the best demographic trends looking forward include India, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia and Philippines. South Asia, ASEAN and South America look particularly fruitful regions going forward, and Sub-Saharan Africa too. If this is a global transition into a K-Spring, then investments in equities and real estate (K-Spring’s champions) might do best in these countries and areas. The USA should perform well too, from 2020 to 2030, but the period before 2020 is less certain.

Brazil and Mexico have good prospects until around 2025 but India and Philippines extend until 2040. Contrast this with China, which is just hitting trend reversal point into a negative trend, and we can see the likelihood of China stepping back from being the world’s leading growth engine, and in doing so maybe provide a backdrop to a secular commodities bear (as it is the world’s largest commodity consumer).

22apr201334

Source: DarwinsMoney

Dependency ratio trends and projections for select nations:

22apr201335

Source: John Eyers

Maybe the investment star of the next two decades will be India, which could feasibly rise for multiple solar cycles in a powerful secular bull that resembles the Nikkei into 1989 or the Nasdaq into 2000. With its 1.2 billion inhabitants it has the potential to mobilise something significant. But India, just like Brazil or Philippines or Mexico or Indonesia is an emerging country, with emerging risks. Let’s say the demographic outlook provides potential for great returns in these countries, but the structure to achieve it is less reliable than in the developed nations. The developed nations conversely have the track record but now the demographic headwinds.

To draw back together demographic trends, solar cycling and equities, we might expect that the positive demographic trends that have been in place in some of these emerging countries to have provided a secular bull over the last solar cycle, much like the Nikkei powered its way through 4 solar cycles in a secular bull set against a positive demographic backdrop. This is indeed what we see:

22apr201340

22apr201341

22apr201343

22apr201345

Source: Yahoo Finance

Over the last solar cycle, from 2000 until now, all the four country indices shown have made secular bull markets, not secular bears, in line with the demographic trends. They are all also amongst the most ‘expensive’ countries in the current p/e spectrum in the world, again in line with the demographic trend. I suggest that the ‘expensiveness’ of a country’s p/e rather has to be measured in terms of its relativity to its demographic trends. I also suggest that due to the demographic trends in all four remaining positive for another solar cycle, they should go on to continue their secular bull over the next solar cycle. I suggest that may be at a steeper rate, because it will be against the backdrop of a global K-spring, an up-cycle. As a reference point, see how the Nikkei secular bull (first chart in the article) that lasted for 4 solar cycles was at its steepest in the solar cycles of 1947-1958 and 1980-1989, both of which were global upcycles, a K-spring and a K-Autumn.

To conclude, these are the opportunities that I see (for myself of course… I am not an advisor).

1. Long Japan, due to m/y and m/o demographic uptrends until 2020, and an outside bet for hyperinflation. Averaging into any falls. We can see Japan’s little window of positivity here, in the upturn in the green line between 2005 and 2020:

22apr201346

2. Long USA, but more compelling as of 2020. At risk of a p/e washout before then. These two charts show head and tail winds respectively for the US market from now until 2020:

22apr201347

22apr201351

Source: Informed Broker

3. Long a basket of emerging markets with the best demographic outlooks: choosing from India, Philippines, Indonesia, Brazil, Mexico and potentially sub-Saharan Africa. Averaging into any falls.

Here is the very long term look at dependency ratios to end:

22apr201348Source: Appliedmythology

If these projections hold true, then the four lowest listed regions should offer the best opportunities over the next solar cycle. The following solar cycle the USA stands to fare well (where the blue line flattens). And later his century Russia and Eastern Europe may get their shot at being investment gold.

Additional chart: prospects for specific sub-Saharan African countries: positive demographic trends for the next solar cycle for Algeria, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, Ivory Coast and South Africa:

22apr201360

Gold vs. Nasdaq

If this is a sharp correction before a secular finale for gold, then there is a potential mirror from history in the Nasdaq.

The Nasdaq made a long secular bull market from around 1982 to 2000. Just over a year before its parabolic finale it made a sharp correction that potentially signaled an end to the bull market.

21apr20131

Underlying Source: Azizonomics

A technical break in a long mature uptrend with p/es having reached largely over 50. If you were trading at this point, there was an obvious case for considering this to be the end: a 16-year bull, very frothy valuations and a major technical break.

Zooming in on the break, we can see the Nasdaq corrected down to support in wave 1, then tracked weakly along support in August and then a technical break triggered a wave of sharp selling in 3 days at the end of August:

21apr20132Source: Stocktradersalmanac

Both the technical action leading into the falls and the percentage drop (in that wave 2) were similar to current gold. The Nasdaq then spent around 3 weeks gradually retracing its falls to backtest the breakdown, before a further wave of selling brought it to a new and final low. It then took off and didn’t look back, spending 18 months carving out a mania, a parabolic blow-off top.

With hindsight, we might argue that the clue that the Nasdaq wasn’t done was that the uptrend up until 1998 had been fairly measured with no mania. This applies to gold now. If this the end of a K-winter with gold the leading asset, then we might expect a final mania, along the lines of the Nikkei in 1989 or gold itself in 1980. Below we see it has only made a fraction of their respective peak gains.

21apr20133Source: Sharelynx

The Nikkei in 1989, the Nasdaq in 2000 and gold in 1980 all spent a couple of months falling hard following their peaks and transition into secular bears – averaging losing 40% of their secular gains. If gold just made the final snap into a new secular bear then we should probably expect more falls to resume fairly swiftly, with more big down days.

Let’s see how gold fares then this week.

The Secular Position For Equities

I wrote last year about secular equities bear market progression in this post (click to view). I suggested that a pentagon was a typical formation based on history, and that based on pattern repetition what should occur next was an upwards breakout, followed by a retrace to the nose level, then secular bull momentum after that.

This is how the MSCI World Stock Index now looks:

19apr20131Underlying Source: MSCI

A breakout has occurred. This pentagon shape and breakout can be found on the same timeframe for FTSE, Dax, SP500, Dow, Hang Seng and other indices. The action represented by the black arrow is what I suggested could happen next, with the momentum go point potentially coming in 2014/2015. This idea was based around my primary scenario of commodities making a secular top ahead in 2013/2014, helping to tip the world into a mild recession with stocks falling into a mild bear accordingly, before they charge – rather than the alternative that commodities peaked in 2011 and secular stocks bull momentum is already underway.

Here are the SP500 and Dow technical shapes during the last two secular bears:

19apr20132In addition to the pentagon formation, I have highlighted on these charts and the top MSCI world chart above what is in effect a large W formation followed by a small W formation (in red). OK, we are operating on a fairly meagre sampling from history here, due to many country stock indices only having recent history, so perhaps don’t read too much into either of the formations that I am picking out. However, the message from both the pentagon and the WW formation would be that secular bears typically end with a coiling, a narrowing of volatility, and based on that we might not expect another major cyclical bear market ahead.

However, these charts are nominal. The inflation adjusted picture is very much a down-sloping pentagon, rather than the relatively benign-looking sideways range that the above charts show. The true secular bear progression can also be revealed through a gradual wash out in the stocks to gold ratio, and a similar gradual demolition in the price/earnings ratio in equities. In the last secular bear, US stocks began with a p/e of 24.1 and ended on a p/e of 6.6, shown here:

19apr20134Source: Zealllc

Also note the bottoming p/e of the 1940s secular bear reached around 9. What I have tried to highlight with boxes on the above chart is that both the last secular bears ended with overall sideways action whilst p/es fell significantly to reach their secular low. This was because they both ended with an inflationary peak (circa 1947, 1980). High inflation will pull down the p/e ratio as stocks trade sideways, because they are cheapening in real terms.

So, in our current times, if stocks are to end with a similar final washout in p/es before new secular bull momentum, then there are two ways to achieve it. The first would be in line with history and this would be a period of peak inflation, where p/es shrink as stocks trade overall sideways. The second would be an absence of inflation (commodity slack and low money velocity continue), whereby stocks fall hard in nominal terms to achieve the p/e washout. This second scenario perhaps has a rhyme with Japan’s secular bear from 1989, which made a series of lower lows as it progressed, in the clutches of deflation. So, like I posed yesterday, is the US the new Japan, or is inflation still dominating and peak inflation a likely possibility? I suggest the shaping of the secular bear to date (we are currently at all time highs despite being in a secular bear) and the undoctored picture of inflation reveal that inflation is in play in the US, rather than deflation.

17sep18

I don’t subcribe to a hyperinflationary outcome, but I think a pick up in yields and in money velocity and an inflationary feedback looping with stocks moving overall sideways is more likely than a deflationary end to the secular bear, whereby stocks fall hard to reach a washout in p/es. But have stocks already washed out enough by p/e?

I believe there is a reason why US stocks bottomed at a p/e of 9 in the 1940s bear, compared to 6.6 at the bottom of the 1970s bear, and that’s the difference in yields and rates, which were at opposite extremes in the two periods. In the current enviroment, and back in the 1940s, bonds and cash are earning little or even negative returns. Dividends are higher on many stocks than the yields on bonds. The p/e alone then doesn’t tell the whole story, because stocks are relatively more ‘valuable’ if bonds and cash are paying you a guaranteed loss. I suggest therefore that, generally speaking, a bottoming p/e of 9, rather than 6, may be more appropriate for this secular bear.

The Dow, SP500, Dax, FTSE, Singapore Straits and Hang Seng all already reached either p/e of 9 or below in this secular bear, not to mention much lower p/es for the PIIGS. Plus equities in general began this secular bear in 2000 from a much higher p/e (44) than the previous bears began. This begs the question as to whether we are going to see higher secular p/e bottoms and tops now and in the future as stocks capture exponential technological evolution or human progress. This question aside, perhaps we could doubt that US equities have washed out enough when we look at CAPE (at its lowest 12 so far) or the Q ratio (0.6 so far versus 0.3 historically). However, not all stock indices necessarily have to washout to single CAPEs (Japan ended the last secular bear at CAPE 20), and the Q ratio perhaps has a long term trend towards higher values, as shown by the narrowing of its two components over time here:

19apr20135

Source: Dshort

In short, I don’t see a compelling case that equities need to wash out more than they have by valuation in this secular bear so far. Meanwhile, the Dow-gold or SP500-gold ratio has also washed out ‘sufficiently’ in this secular bear, if not to record extremes.

So could secular stock bull momentum already be underway and commodities flipped into a secular bear in 2011? Much of what I wrote in The Alternative Scenario (here) to support this alternative possibility is still valid, with the added developments that gold has since broken down and NASA say perhaps the solar maximum already occurred in February 2012. It will become clearer as developments unfold with time, but until then, perhaps my best case against this having happened would be a lack of pick up in yields or velocity by now.

So these are my current conclusions. I don’t see a massive case to wash out valuations further, but will assume that some last drag-down is ahead because of historical secular bear ending patterns and perhaps CAPE and Q ratio. I don’t see a deflationary case for equities to tumble in nominal terms to achieve this, as the secular bear has proceeded against an inflationary backdrop with stocks currently at all time highs, so any such washout, if it is to occur, I’d expect to be overall sideways against an inflationary backdrop. The environment of low yields and rates is pertinent: it perhaps means stocks do not need to wash out ultra low by valuation, and that bid support would be higher. And there is also the potential that we have a permanent shift higher in Q ratio and p/e bottoms. In summary, I don’t expect a major drawdown in equity prices. but something milder.

So, I want to buy into a significant pullback in stocks with a secular bull view. Ideally something that looks like the pullback to the pentagon nose level. Ideally with a few more countries dropping under p/e 10, and ideally on the back of an escalation in commodities and inflation. Until I can rule out that a secular bull in stocks began already, I will likely adopt the strategy of layering in to any pullbacks that I consider deep ‘enough’, perhaps 10% off or more.  However, if stocks were to mount such a pullback, then the action in commodities would likely be telling as to whether they have a peak left ahead, and in turn shed more light on the secular equities position, which which to further navigate.

Velocity, Yields, Inflation, Growth And Commodities

I maintain the late 1940s is our closest historical mirror, as per this chart:

Idealised Solar Cycle

Then, as now, they had a problem with money velocity. But it reversed course and took off as of 1946.

18apr20131

Source: Hoisington

Yields also reversed course as of 1946.

18apr20132

18apr20133Source: Milton Friedman

As per my last post on money velocity, there is a historical relationship between the two. Here we see it clearly:

18apr20134Source: BNVInsight

Essentially, expectations of rates, inflation and growth determine the path of yields and velocity. In 1945, like now, there were very low expectations in these three areas due to excessive post-war government debt, government controls and growth that would not stick. But then in 1946 yields and velocity began to increase and inflation took off and peaked in 1947. The picture changed.

In my recent post on money velocity I showed a selection of charts that show a current potential bottoming out of both velocity and yields, though only tentative at this stage. If this is the case, then we could also be set to see inflation take off and potentially reach a peak within a year in line with the historical mirror. If the solar peak is ahead later in 2013, this is a very good fit with 1947 which was also a solar maximum.

Here are 5 year treasury yields versus core inflation (excludes food and energy). We can see yields are overdue a catch up. Money is parked in bonds paying a negative real return. The divergence captures a lag in belief and sentiment that is overdue a reversal.

18apr20136

Source: Scott Grannis

Yes the Fed is manipulating this market, but it is not the difference since 2011 – it was doing this before. Rather it is the mired perception of unsustainable growth. However, since mid-2012 we have seen a sustained positive picture in leading indicators that still persists at the time of writing. Unless leading indicators turn down again sharply soon, then I give good odds to a belated change in perception, a belief in growth, that should generate an upturn in yields, velocity and inflation.

What would that mean for commodities and stocks? Using the late 1940s historical mirror, we can see that commodities were the beneficiary, with corn and copper charted here:

18apr20137

28nov201214

Both accelerated as of the turn up in yields and velocity of 1946, and had made the bulk of their parabolic rises within a year. Oats and wheat performed similarly, crude oil escalated in price by 50% from 1946 to 1947, and the CCI index as a whole made its peak by late 1947.

If we turn to the Dow-gold ratio, we can see that by 1947 the ratio was already in an uptrend, because stocks had been on a tear, much like now.

18apr20138

Source: Macrotrends

Here is the Dow Jones chart from the period in question:

18apr20139Source: Stockcharts

Stocks rose fairly steeply into a 1946 peak. That stocks perform well in an environment of low rates and low growth was in evidence then, as it has been into 2013. In 1946 stocks made a pullback and then traded sideways, before the secular stocks bull momentum ‘go’ point as of 1949. So whilst stocks consolidated around 1947, commodities esclatated.

But let’s not get too carried away with the historical rhyme. Back in 1946 in the US, price controls, that had been implemented during the world war, were lifted, which along with weather-related bad harvests, helped drive up commodity prices. There are no such price controls today. The government also abolished the buying rate it had set for treasury bills, which helped free yields. In short, the government took several measures at the time to reduce its controls over the economy. Clearly there is a chime with today: the US government has supressed yields and taken controls over the economy in terms of ZIRP and QE and other policy actions. What we do not yet see is the relinquishing of such controls. However, if the US government were to announce it was stepping back from QE or eyeing an end to zero interest rates in the future, then this could have the same effect as in 1946 of yields rising, which would be accompanied by velocity, and inflation could then logically follow. Perhaps then an end to QE would not be a nail in the coffin for gold, but the opposite.

What 1946/7 and 2012/13 do have in common is the solar maximum. If you subscribe to the theory that sunspots drive human excitement and this manifests itself as speculation, buying and inflation, then we have another angle. This alone should encourage money velocity, bullish policy actions, and drive money into pro-risk.

Now if you don’t buy into the solar idea, or maybe the solar maximum passed already in Feb 2012, and you don’t buy into the historical correlation with the late 1940s either, the we nonetheless still have an unsustainable situation of negative real rates and yields, and money supply and velocity at opposite historical extremes. Unless the system is broken, then at some point growth is going to stick and accelerate, and these extremes will mean revert. Is it broken? Is the US the new Japan? Unable going forward to get growth and inflation to entrench? As it is by far the largest contributor to world GDP, this would be felt globally for some time. Well, the US was keen to avoid Japan’s errors, i.e. being slow to react to deflation until it was set in. It was aggressive in response to the 2008 crisis. We also have an exponential trend in technological evolution, which at an even faster rate of paradigm shifts going forward, should be the fuel for a new secular stocks bull. The US remains a world leader in technology. Plus, through natural gas disoveries and shale oil the US has its own ample energy resources again to power growth, which Japan lacked. So time will tell, but there are reasons to believe that the US can make a normal transition into a new K-spring, and so likewise the global economy.

I suggest the natural cleansing cycle, a regular secular bear, a K-winter, has worked through within normal parameters, and we are in the realm of a secular transition. Unless you do believe the system / the US is broken, then a new cycle of growth should be emerging, and yields and velocity should be undergoing a reversal. As that occurs, it would be normal to see the fresh circulating of the parked money bring about inflation, and for commodities to enjoy another leg up. If you draw in solar cycles (assuming the solar max is ahead not behind) and the 1946/7 historical mirror to this, then the prediction is refined further: we should see stocks pull back and give way to commodities outperforming, for yields and velocity and inflaton to rise up, all around now. The Dow-gold ratio having bottomed should not be the death knell for gold, but instead reflects the environment being positive for equities as it was into 1946, and such a  pullback on equities (as occurred then) would be a buying opportunity for a forthcoming momentum ‘go’ point in stocks.

In the worst case scenario, the current status quo would persist for some years longer. Yields and rates and velocity would remain trapped at ultra low levels as sustained, entrenched growth remains elusive. Therefore, I continue to watch leading indicators closely. I believe that if they can remain positive and healthy into mid-2013 then we would have a long enough run behind us to change perception, and this should inspire the moves I am imagining.

State Of The Markets

Starting with leading indicators, the latest Conference Board table is a sea of green:

17apr201319Source: Conference Board

Global money supply suggests a flattening out of industrial output in mid-year, but at good growth levels:

17apr201318Source: Moneymovesmarkets

US leading indicators remain positive:

17apr201323Source: Dshort/ECRI

In short, the global picture looking out on the horizon is good.

However, with coincident data, things look different. Economic surprises have tumbled of late:

17apr201322Source: Brokenmarkets

If we look at relations between the CCI commodities index, the MSCI World stock index and major economy economic surprises, then we see they generally move together, but typically economic surprises lead the turn:

17apr201321Underlying source: Brokenmarkets

What is notable is that equities have diverged over the last 6 months, whilst relative weakness in commodities has been more in line with the trend in economic surprises. It suggests equities may be overdue a correction.

If we aggregate 10 year treasury yields, Euro-USD, the CCI Commodities and MSCI World Equities indices, then the collective trend changes over the last 12 months appear like this:

17apr201316Source: Bloomberg

We see a notable downtrend in pro-risk since the start of February but with equities diverging. To be specific, it is the US and Japanese stock indices that have diverged, as we see corrections more clearly over the last couple of months in the Hang Seng, STI, Dax, FTSE. And a result of outperformance in US and Japanese stocks is more expensive valuations, with both now having p/es of around 17 (compared to the other country indices listed which are between 11 and 14 p/e). So are US and Japanese stocks due a period of underperformance, a belated correction? Or do the two biggest QE programmes in the world make for a difference that will endure until those policies are reigned in?

There is a potential topping pattern in the Dow Jones currently, as shown by the historical mirror below:

17apr20137Source: HubertMoolman

The overthrow out of the wedge could be reversed. Monday’s action – when gold toppled 10% – added to the likelihood of this topping pattern. However, yesterday we saw a partial retrace. The trend in economic surprises suggests they are overdue a proper pullback, however on the flip side the geomagnetism trend has resumed upwards. If I remove lunar phasing and show the short term geomagnetic trend only versus the SP500 it looks like this:

17apr201326

A correction has given way to a new uptrend which currently extends out to mid-May. This could imply that the pro-risk chart aggregate above is due a turn into a new uptrend, in line.

If equities were to make a proper pullback, then the question is whether commodities would outperform, as they historically tend to as late cyclicals. Below we see this occurring in both 2000 and 2008.

17apr201324There is a distinct gap between stocks and commodities formed over the last 12 months. If there remains a secular bull in commodities, then we should see that close again and commodities to perform well despite a pullback in equities. On the other hand, if the secular bull in commodities is over, then we should see that divergence continue. The CCI commodities index remains tantalisingly in a triangle, as shown:

17apr201317Source MRCI

The breakdown in precious metals has pulled it to the support line, which makes the next move in commodities the key.

So imagine commodities made their secular peak in 2011 and the sharp breakdown in gold is to be followed by general steep commodity falls that take the CCI into a breakdown. Resource stocks would get hit hard, and we would see a pullback in equities accordingly. Equities would fall, commodities would fall harder, treasuries would be a likely beneficiary. However, I can’t square this scenario with the positive picture in leading indicators. Unless we see a rapid deterioration in the general picture of growth ahead then I see it as more likely that commodities will hold up, and at worse continue to build out the triangle sideways. To add to this, from my recent post on money velocity, we see a potential bottoming out in progress in money velocity and treasury yields, that I suggest could have begun in 2012. We similarly see a potential bottoming out  in UK gilt and Geman bund yields below, as of mid-2012:

17apr201310

17apr20139Source: Fxthoughts

If the wall of parked money begins to circulate a little in the economy, based on a more entrenched picture of growth, then we ought to see a pick up in pro-risk asset inflation and a pick up in price inflation. So I continue to watch leading indicators for evidence that growth is becoming entrenched or for evidence that we are cycling down into danger again, to be met by another central bank response. Right now the evidence is for the former, and so I have my doubts that the commodities secular bull is quite over. Below we see the secular bull progression in commodities since around 2000, in terms of relative expensiveness versus other assets:

17apr20138Source: Nowandfutures

It is clear that there has been a large relative repricing of commodities in that period, but it is also clear by the various measures that we have not seen levels reached in the 10s, 40s or 70s. That said, we saw a much more extended repricing of equities into 2000. So my question would be: has the exponential rate of technological evolution brought about a change whereby we see future Dow-gold ratio tops and bottoms at ever higher levels (as human progress is captured in equities)? Or is this offset by increasing scarcity of commodities and increasing demand (more humans chasing fewer resources), which means the secular commodities bull still has work to be done to drag those ratios to normal historic levels?

Below we see the Dow-gold ratio and the author (not me) questions whether what we just saw in gold was the equivalent of a 1987 event for stocks, namely a crash that appeared to spell the end of the bull market in stocks and a breakout for gold, but was swiftly reversed.

17apr201313

Source: Goldversuspaper

If that is so, then we should see buyers step back in on precious metals and retake the breakdown level of 1550 in due course.

A look at gold monthly in log scale shows the crash so far like this:

17apr201312

As things stand this is a correction that does not violate the secular bull market. UBS echo Chris Puplava’s view that the correction in gold will turn out the start of a new up phase:

17apr201325Source: UBS

And a reminder of real yields globally is still a positive environment for gold:

17apr20132

However, I maintain the picture for gold – and commodities – is very much in the balance. As you know I can write a broad-based case for commodities having peaked in 2011, aligned with a sunspot maximum in 2012, as well as a broad-based case for the secular commodities peak being ahead, in line with a sunspot maximum in late 2013. The breakdown in gold adds weight to the former. Piece by piece we will see the clear winner, and right now I look to see if buyers step in on gold to reveal a weak-hand shake-out whilst retaining its log support and whether commodities attract interest here to prevent a CCI breakdown. Sunspots have picked up, but not to new highs, and so it remains in the balance as to whether the solar maximum was in Feb 2012 or is ahead.

If gold did make its secular peak in 2011, then we could point to similar technical shaping at the end of the last secular bull:

17apr201314Since that chart was produced, gold dropped to a low of 1320, which would be equivalent to around 350 in 1981. Looking at what happened next in the 1980s, gold was then not far off a bounce, which retraced half the falls before failing again.

17apr201315In summary, I still think it remains in the balance as to whether the secular bull market in commodities and gold is still in play and has one final (biggest) leg up still to come. Since selling my stock indices longs, my positions consist of short treasuries, long multiple commodities, and long gold, silver and gold miners. I doubled up on these last three into the sharp falls. My exposure is significant, and it is going to get expensive if the secular bull market is over and more falls are ahead. However, if this was the last correction before a bull market finale, then those positions would conversely turn out highly profitable. It’s a risky business, but I am leaning towards staying put and watching developments for further clues, rather than lightening up.

Friday Update

The SP500 has pushed up to the 1600 zone, which fits with the Birinyi/Bannister target, in a potential overthrow move. Plus this weekend marks the shift from the lunar positive to the lunar negative period, and a geomagnetic storm is predicted to be on its way. Lastly, economic surprises for the main regions have been in collapse and a change in trend in this indicator has previously led tops in the market. So collectively reasons for a top here.

However an opposing case can be made too. We don’t see particular degradation in stocks breadth and the SP500 has broken out into clear air. We see a strong/stable position in leading indicators. Here is the latest OECD collection:

12apr20132Source: OECD

Plus CB reported Japan leading indicators at +1.0, in the first of this month’s updates. Using narrow money the updated picture is one of potentially moderating growth ahead, but as yet no significant downturn.

12apr20133Source: Moneymovesmarkets

In terms of overbought and overbullish, some measures for equities are elevated, but there is a lack of major warning signs. Conversely we do see extremes in sentiment versus some commodities and commodity related sectors but the other way: bearish.

If you are following the SP500 or Nikkei then things look to be overwhelmingly bullish, but it should be noted that these are the two countries with the most aggressive central bank stimulus/easing programmes. A wider look at pro-risk is captured through combining the world stock index, equally weighted commodities index, euro-usd and 10 year treasury yields:

12apr20131Source: Bloomberg

We see collective behaviour in pro-risk, but with under- and out-performers. So, up from June to Sept 2012, down to mid-November, up then to the turn of January into February, down into the end of last week. Could we now be the start of a new collective uptrend for pro-risk? Again, followers of the SP500 or Nikkei might find that hard to believe, but the wider look at pro-risk suggests it could be possible, and a rotation in leadership if of course feasible. The collective picture for pro-risk fits with 5-models-in-alignment:

https://solarcycles.net/2013/01/09/tools-for-2013/

Namely, a pullback from the end of Jan to Mar/April, then a final rally into around June time, to either end the cyclical bull (in my primary scenario) or produce a significant swing top (in my alternative scenario).

With US earnings season just getting under way, there is another potential mover in the markets. Let’s see.