Business Day

Idea that US may be in a new bull market looks like lot of bull

• Calling the upwards moves of equities a ‘bull market’ is to miss the forest for the trees and will not stick when there is little consensus on what one is

- Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and Noel Randewich New York/San Francisco

Investors wait, were ’could back be in forgiven a bull for doing a double-take: market? The Dow Jones Industrial Average’s surge of more than 20% from its coronaviru­sinduced recent low this week, by one definition used on Wall Street, suggests a new bull market. The surge came on hopes that a $2-trillion stimulus measure would flood the country with cash in a bid to counter the economic effects of the intensifyi­ng pandemic.

But that definition should be treated with a large piece of caution. The very definition of bull market is debatable, and given the market’s volatility on news about the pandemic, some said that calling the move upwards a “bull market” was tantamount to missing the forest for the trees.

“Labelling it a bull market when it fits a definition of being up 20%, kind of removes any perspectiv­e from where we have been over the past month, and more importantl­y, where we might be going over the next few months, ” said Willie Delwiche, an investment strategist at Robert W Baird.

Other definition­s say the index should crest the previous high and that a bull market can only be identified a long time after the event.

For example, a mini-bull market has occurred previously during a bear market — providing a false hope of relief. The S&P 500 logged a gain of 24% over a period of 30 trading days starting on November 20 2008, even as the bear market continued during the height of the financial crisis, and the index did not bottom till March 9 2009, marking the start of the bull market.

Ed Yardeni, president and chief investment strategist at Yardeni Research, said that while there is consensus about the definition of a bear market — a 20% decline from a peak — the definition of a bull market is less widely agreed upon.

“Bull markets occur between bear markets,” Yardeni said.

Part of the confusion about whether the Dow is indeed out of the bear market is because while one group is widely recognised for determinin­g US economic cycles — the National Bureau of Economic Research — no such body is uniformly accepted for defining bull and bear markets.

Analysts warn against putting too’ s much rise or stock fall, how in strict much definition­s average of market cycles. Factors such as the velocity of the market stocks have changed, and the reasons behind the moves also contribute to whether investors view a major move as a turning point in sentiment or a short-term interrupti­on to an existing bull or bear market.

Howard Silverblat­t, senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices in New York, said he still sees the Dow in a bear market. The Dow would need to hit 29,551.42, the high of February 12, to be technicall­y in a bull market, he said.

“If we keep going up, eventually we could have a bull, but until it hits the record, it’s a bull run in a bear market,” Silverblat­t said.

IF WE KEEP GOING UP, EVENTUALLY WE COULD HAVE A BULL, BUT UNTIL IT HITS THE RECORD, IT’S A BULL RUN IN A BEAR MARKET

 ?? /Reuters ?? Muffled trade: A trader wears a face mask on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange after some other traders had tested positive for coronaviru­s in New York.
/Reuters Muffled trade: A trader wears a face mask on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange after some other traders had tested positive for coronaviru­s in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa