The Secular Stock
Market Trend
Steve Saville
Below is an extract from a commentary
posted at www.speculative-investor.com on
13th June 2004
Last year at around this time we asked
the question: "Has a bear market started yet?" We thought
this was a reasonable question because the NYSE advance-decline line
had been trending higher for three years and several important sectors
of the market were clearly not in long-term downward trends. And
the question seems even more relevant today than it did 12 months
ago because the NYSE advance-decline line hit an all-time high early
this year, and although the senior stock indices have never looked
like challenging their 2000 peaks many sub-indices have moved to
all-time highs over the past 12 months. The question really doesn't
exist, though, if we make the sensible decision to define the secular
trend in terms of valuations rather than prices.
When we try to define secular stock
market trends in terms of prices we run up against two problems.
First, nominal prices are expressed in terms of a currency that is
constantly changing. Second, when a currency depreciates as a result
of inflation an effect, at least during the early stages of the inflation,
can be higher earnings and higher stock prices.
It is possible, however, to eliminate
the 'smoke and mirrors' effect that massive monetary stimulation
can cause because over long periods the stock market has always differentiated
between real earnings growth and earnings growth caused by inflation.
Specifically, investors have historically paid less for earnings
that stem from inflation than for earnings that stem from real (productivity-driven)
growth. In other words, if earnings are being artificially boosted
by currency depreciation then P/E ratios will trend lower.
Further to the above, if we define
secular trends in terms of the average P/E ratio, as opposed to the
nominal level of a stock-market index, the secular trends will not
be obscured by changes in the value of the currency. For example,
the below chart shows how long-term trends can appropriately be defined
by the trends in the S&P500's P/E ratio.
The logical conclusion is that a secular
bear market began following the major peak in the P/E ratio during
the first two years of this decade and will, if history is any guide,
continue until well into the next decade.

The one problem with defining secular
trends in terms of P/E ratios is that the P/E ratio will sometimes
fluctuate wildly during any given 1-5 year period. As a result it
is really only possible to 'see' the trend in the P/E ratio when
looking at very long-term charts, whereas during a normal investment
timeframe the secular trend in the P/E ratio might not be evident
or even relevant. Fortunately, there is a method of defining the
secular trend in the stock market that gets around the problem of
nominal prices being substantially altered by changes in the currency
AND is of more practical use than the long-term trend in the average
P/E ratio. The method, which we've illustrated on the below chart,
is to let the trend in the Dow/gold ratio define the secular trend
in the stock market.
Note: Gold and the US$ were officially
linked prior to 1971 and this resulted in a very short and very sharp
downturn in Dow/gold during the early 1930s followed by a very lengthy
recovery into 1966, but if the US$ had not been convertible into
gold at a fixed rate we suspect that the downward trend in Dow/gold
that began in 1929 would have been more gradual and would have bottomed
during the first half of the 1940s.

The above chart suggests that a secular
bear trend in the stock market is in its early stages in terms of
both time and price. In fact, if history is any guide the bear trend
will end sometime next decade at a Dow/gold ratio of between 1 and
5. With the ratio presently at 27 this means that it would be reasonable
to expect an investment in gold bullion to perform at least 5-times
better, and perhaps as much as 27-times better, than an investment
in the Dow Industrials Index if both investments were held over the
next 10 years.
Steve
Saville
email: sas888_hk@yahoo.com
Hong Kong
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