The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

The 150-yearold chart that predicts the stock market

Hog farmer from 1800s told investors to sell just before the 2008 crash, writes Charlotte Gifford

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After the worst year for stocks since the financial crisis and fears of a fresh global banking crisis, investors are looking for ways to navigate choppy markets. Now a dusty old chart from the 1800s may give them the means to do just that.

In the late 19th century, an American farmer from Ohio called Samuel Benner created a chart forecastin­g the rise and fall in the average price of hogs, corn and pig-iron. Since then, it has been weirdly accurate at predicting ups and downs of global stock markets – seemingly foreseeing the Wall Street Crash, the Second World War, and the dotcom bubble.

The 150-year-old chart – which tells investors when to sell and when to buy – earned Benner national renown as an economic prophet. His forecasts are still being referred to today with retail investors sharing the so- called Benner Cycle on social media.

His original cycle only went as far as 1891. It is thought another 19th century forecaster, George Tritch, extended the cycle up to 2059 and published the chart, annotating it with instructio­ns of when to buy and sell stocks.

The chart tells investors to sell in 2007, just before the financial crash. It also says that 2023 will be a year of “low prices” when investors should buy and hold – which, given last year’s share price falls, complies with the logic of “selling high and buying low”.

Benner wrote Benner’s Prophecies of Future Ups and Downs in Prices after seeing his assets wiped out in “the Panic of 1873”. He identified an 11-year cycle in corn and hog prices, as well as a 27-year cycle in the price of pig iron.

There are a few reasons why the chart has been strangely accurate so far. It is based on the theory that solar cycles impact crop yields, affecting agricultur­al supply and causing ups and downs in commodity prices.

Rob Burgeman of wealth manager RBC Brewin Dolphin says the chart also highlights the cyclical nature of stock markets, which he says are “ruled by the primitive emotions of fear and greed and how these sentiments contribute in the short term and the long term to the volatility of markets”.

However, investors should demonstrat­e caution before they buy or sell their holdings based on the instructio­ns of the 19th century hog farmer as not all of Benner’s prophecies have come true.

The chart has possibly become less accurate over time as the driving forces of the global economy have shifted. In his book, Benner called pig- iron the “monarch of business”.

Jason Hollands, of investment firm Bestinvest, says: “I would argue that since countries moved to fiat currencies in the late 20th century, the single biggest driver of financial markets have been the ebbs and flows in the supply of money driven by central banks. We are seeing this play out at the moment as the world has rapidly exited an era of ultra-low rates and money printing.”

Investors should also probably avoid using a theory based on the solar cycle to try and predict stock markets. But there are other patterns that investors use when deciding whether to buy or sell, and some of them are fairly reliable.

“These include the notion that you should avoid the markets in the summer (‘sell in May, go away, come again on St Leger’s day’) and the often strong performanc­e of markets in December (a phenomena known as the Santa Rally),” says Hollands.

In the case of “sell in May”, while returns have historical­ly been more muted over summer, long-term average returns are still positive during these months. However, the Santa Rally is a more convincing pattern. Over the past 50 years the MSCI World Index has delivered a positive return 76pc of the time in the month of December which is far higher than any other month.

For Burgeman, there is a modern day oracle whose advice investors should follow instead of Benner’s.

“As so often, perhaps we should listen a little more to the sage of Omaha, Warren Buffett, whose mantra is ‘ be greedy when others are fearful, but fearful when they are greedy’,” he says.

 ?? ?? BANK RUN
The Wall Street Crash 1929
BANK RUN The Wall Street Crash 1929
 ?? ?? HOUSING CRASH The financial crisis 2007
HOUSING CRASH The financial crisis 2007
 ?? ?? BEAR MARKET Oil crisis 1973
BEAR MARKET Oil crisis 1973

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