Site icon Money & Markets, LLC

Is This an Unprecedented Stock Market? History Says, “No”

investor sentiment inflation home prices gold vs. stocks zombie companies tax receipts TIPS bonds U.S. debt unemployment housing market unemployment Joe Biden stimulus consumer spending palladium Treasurys recovery Sherman Ratio bonds Treasury bond palladium futures junk bonds investing in China k-shaped recovery Biden fracking ban Robinhood economy negative yield bonds Yellen unemployment consumer confidence recession platinum gold debt COVID-19 natural gas shipping cost home prices unemployment durable goods home prices Paul Singer leverage bitcoin mortgage rates retail vaccine stimulus gold GLD yields Japanese bonds bond market commodities market bubble vehicle miles pets afghanistan withdrawal home prices inflation expectations chip shortage employment economics roaring 20s the fed inflation balance sheet money velocity mortgage rates the fed used cars inflation shipping costs Biden's approval student loans China's labor crisis low inventory employment SPACs inflation hedge employment data energy price real estate Fed rate hikes Russia-Ukraine traders China Russia Fed interest rate hike real interest rates Paul Volcker

Earlier this year, every analyst on CNBC, CNN or any other news network relied on the same word to explain the economy or stock market. What happened was “unprecedented.”

Historians know that nothing is truly unprecedented. However, they don’t always have data to back it up.

Market moves during the economic shutdowns seemed unprecedented because governments had shut down stock markets during past crises. That prevented investors from selling and moving capital out of the reach of the government.

When much of the global economy shut down this year, stock markets remained open.

If stock markets had continued to operate at the beginning of World War I, for example, there would have been a precedent.

Researchers at Global Financial Data recreated the market action during that shutdown. They found that “although the NYSE was closed between July 30 and December 12 of 1914, stocks were quoted by brokers and traded off the exchange.”

GFD used this fact to calculate stock market indexes for the time when markets were closed. This is shown in the chart below.

What the WWI Stock Market Might’ve Looked Like

That chart shows prices fell when the crisis began, then rallied, pulled back and roared to new highs. This establishes a possible precedent for what we can expect next.

A chart of recent action in the S&P 500 shows the first three elements of that pattern are in place.

The 2020 S&P 500 Mirrors 1914’s Model

Source: Optuma.

With historical data, we can see that even though traders only saw the horror of war in 1914, the crisis of World War I was bullish for global stock markets.

It’s likely the same dynamic is unfolding today in this “unprecedented stock market.” Investors are looking past the horror of the pandemic and seeing a global economic rebound. That should lead to new highs before another bear market develops.

Michael Carr is a Chartered Market Technician for Banyan Hill Publishing and the Editor of One Trade, Peak Velocity Trader and Precision Profits. He teaches technical analysis and quantitative technical analysis at the New York Institute of Finance. Mr. Carr is also the former editor of the CMT Association newsletter, Technically Speaking.

Follow him on Twitter @MichaelCarrGuru.