Saturday, May 22, 2010

Bigger Than A "10% Correction"?

Every Big Bear Grew From a Cub


The famous "10% correction" that market pundits talk about sounds so nice and tidy, so predictable and tolerable. It's as if this "cute little correction" came neatly wrapped, looked like an M&M candy character, and smiled at you and your family after you open the box.

If only it were so.

"If all the market ever did on the downside was dip 10% once every two years, then investing would be easier than shooting fish in a barrel. Obviously, this is not the case. The fact is that the stock market's movements are a fractal. Declines come in widely varying sizes."
Elliott Wave Theorist, December 2001

There is no way to know in advance whether a particular market downturn will fall 11%, 35%, or 89%. Even the Wave Principle only forecasts probabilities -- not certainties.

One thing that is certain -- every bear market reached a 10% drop before prices fell even further.

And another near-certainty is that too many money managers will use the phrase "buying weakness" when the market falls 10%. On May 7, after the Dow Jones had fallen several hundred points in a few days, two money managers being interviewed side by side said in effect, "Buy." Not a word was said about caution. Not a word was offered about even the possibility of a major trend change in the market.

On the other hand, it was refreshing to hear a representative of a fund family say, "I don't know why anyone needs to be a hero, and try to catch the bottom."

You may be tempted to jump back in because the market has recently "corrected." Yet consider what EWI's Short Term Update subscribers read on May 7 -- ". . .we would caution that some of history's largest stock declines have occurred only after stocks were deeply oversold."

Eduard Hamamjian
GeaSphere LLC

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