In a stock market that rises and rises and never comes down, what we once recognized as denial can start to seem like conviction.
Stocks have rallied for seven straight weeks and are up more than 23% since late August, when traders first caught a glimpse of central bankers huddling near the printing presses. On Friday, the Standard & Poor’s 400 Mid-Cap Index reached an all-time high, surpassing even its 2007 peak during the credit bubble. Can the Russell 2000 index of antsy small stocks be far behind?
It wasn’t just how stocks have risen, but how they haven’t looked back lately. The market hasn’t suffered a one-day loss of more than 1% since before Thanksgiving, notes Bespoke Investment Group. When the Dow Jones Industrial Average pulled back—gasp—all of 0.32% last Monday, that blemish marked the blue chips’ harshest setback since Nov. 30. The last time the Dow went this long without a 0.32% loss, Omar Shariff was nuzzling Julie Christie in Doctor Zhivago, and the hills were alive with the sound of music.
Today, the chorus reverberating through the market is how economic growth is picking up again, and economists are growing so convinced they’re hiking their 2011 forecasts (for all the pesky details, see Economic Beat). Meanwhile, the latest Investors Intelligence survey showed the bullish herd swelling to the most crowded in years, while bearish sentiment shrank to 19%. The last time the bearish ranks were this thin was in May, just before Greece and the flash crash re-distributed the bull-bear tilt.
If capital preservation, like Manhattan living, requires a scrupulous avoidance of crowded traps, then now may be the time to take a little profit and wait for a better—read: cheaper—day. It isn’t just the zealous consensus, or the increasingly bullish jockeying in the options market. Economically sensitive emerging markets have slowed their spurt, the Indian stock market is down in 2011, and the S&P Retail SPDR (ticker: XRT) has recently drooped 2.8%.
The Dow, however, did climb to its highest level since June 2008 and ended last week up 113, or 1%, to 11,787. The S&P 500 rallied for a seventh straight week—its longest streak since last May. It has shimmied up 91% since early March, 2009, and is 17% from its 2007 peak. The Nasdaq Composite Index jumped 52, or 1.9%, to 2755. The Russell 2000 added 20, or 2.5%, to 808, and is 5.6% from its 2007 record.
Alas, the only thing in life that rises and rises and never comes down is our age, and even that stops rising one day.
The municipal bond market has already grown noisier, and spreads between these and longer-dated treasuries are widening toward levels last seen during the credit crisis. State and local tax revenues are up 5.2% from a year ago, thanks to recovering retail sales and corporate profits, and Michael Darda, MKM Partners’ chief economist and strategist, expects that to continue with economic growth in 2011. That should eventually help states like New York and New Jersey, which have focused on cutting spending. But markets overreact on the way down as well as up, and investors watching the downward swerve of the iShares S&P National AMT-Free Municipal exchange traded fund (MU may not be so quick to agree with Darda.
Add to that lingering unease over Europe’s sovereign debt and China’s continued tightening of credit (including the latest move to raise reserve requirements), and a market looking for an excuse to sell has plenty to choose from.
Economic data has also been mixed, lately. Retail sales ticked up 0.6% in December, but foreclosures are continuing apace. Consumer prices have only risen 1.4% over the past year, but the 0.5% jump in December marked the biggest month-to-month rise since the economy emerged from recession (Source: Barrons Online).