``Mankind is condemned to repeat history, the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.”-Karl Marx (1818-1883), German political philosopher and economist
I find it comical to see some analysts or experts completely in DENIAL to the present circumstances. Some see the present opportunities as a buying window, where they suggest that the present correction runs a “normal” course of action to the underlying trend. This runs contrary to common sense.
Ok let us revert to some technical standpoint to see how “
Figure 2: Chart of the Day: September is the Worst Month for US Markets
This means that as August (barely changed from July 31st) progresses which seem to be acting out an inflection point, September could even deliver more sufferings to the rear view mirror looking bulls. So essentially why take the risk today unless there is a tradeable short term window (but again risks prospects are high)?
Notice on the left chart that the 10 biggest declines had occurred mostly during October (5 times) followed by August (2 instances).
So aside from seasonal weakness for the month of September, August until October has proven to be a quarter previously SENSITIVE to the biggest one day losses for the Dow Jones. This implies that if HISTORY would ever rhyme again, then the present quarter has INCREASED the odds for the Dow Jones to be equally SUSCEPTIBLE to a HUGE one day decline!
Moreover, if today’s market has turned out to be an inflection point rather than a “normal” correction then the rightmost chart tell us that the average bearmarket in the US falls by around 40%!
And since our Phisix and most of the global markets has closely traced the movements or have been POSITIVELY CORRELATED with that of the
In a similar timeframe, coincidentally the Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell by about 52% (blue line) and the Phisix (red line) an even harder 62%!
And when fundamentals and technical viewpoints match, they tend to deliver quite a meaningful impact!
Of course I can always be wrong (which I hope I am--it will be a financial drought anew for us in the industry under a bearish environment--I should perhaps look for a new job).
Maybe confidence will be regained soon (I hope), the liquidity drought reverses and recovers (I hope) and credit conditions will ease (I hope) as the housing recession in the
But as a student of risk and market cycles, I wouldn’t bet on HOPE UNTIL the market proves me WRONG by stabilizing and eventually recovering. For the moment, this OBVIOUSLY isn’t the case.
Our goal is to preserve capital first and foremost.
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