IMPORTANT AND TIMELY READING
It’s amazing sometimes how much difference a year can make on investor
psychology. For most of last year investors worried incessantly about a
potential “double dip” U.S. recession and the possibility of another
worldwide credit crisis beginning in Europe.
Fast forward to 2012 and those worries have mostly evaporated from
investors’ minds. The consensus now is that the economy has improved
and corporate earnings will continue to increase. The biggest worry for
most investors is where they can achieve the biggest dividend yield
while the Fed continues to artificially hold down bank interest rates.
They further believe that the bull market that began in March 2009 will
continue to achieve higher stock prices into 2013.
One analyst who doesn’t share this consensus view is Samuel “Bud” Kress
of the SineScope advisory [15 Phoenix Ave., Morristown, NJ 07960]. Mr.
Kress, whose namesake Kress cycles have presciently forecast many of the
important turning points in the market over the years, recently
published his annual Special Edition forecast for the years 2012-2014.
Entitled “Special Edition XII: A Comprehensive Perspective,” the report
provides insights on what investors can expect heading into the final,
fateful years of the 120-year cycle.
In his previous Special Edition XI, Kress discussed the likelihood based
on the yearly cycles that a major stock market high will occur in 2012.
The assumption is that in 2013 a severe, potentially historic decline
will begin to last until later 2014 when the Grand Super Cycle of 120
years bottoms.
The numeric time cycles which comprise the 120-year series include the
60-year, the 40-year, the 24-year, the 20-year and the 12-year. The
120-year is the primary composite cycle according to Kress. It includes
three 40-year primary bias cycles and five 24-year primary direction
cycles. The 60-year secondary composite cycle (which is analogous to
the “K Wave”) includes three 20-year secondary bias and five 12-year
secondary direction cycles. As Kress points out in his latest report,
“Excluding both composite cycles, this leaves four cycles which
determine the market directional behavior for the three designations of
time – years, quarters and weeks.” In total, there are twelve cycles
comprising the Kress cycle methodology.
The 120-year primary composite cycle is the Grand Super Cycle. Kress
points out that the first 120-year cycle began in the mid 1770s
following prolonged depressed conditions and the Revolutionary War which
transformed American from an occupied territory to an independent
country of the United States which we know today. The 120-year cycle is
also known as the Revolutionary Cycle since its bottom is always
accompanied by a major revolution. The first 120-year cycle in the
1770s created a political revolution.
The next 120-year cycle bottomed in the mid 1890s after the first major
economic depression in the U.S. Following the 120-year cycle bottom of
the 1890s the U.S. transformed from an agricultural to a manufacturing
based economy, hence the U.S. Industrial Revolution was born. The
latest 120-year cycle bottom is scheduled for later 2014, which in the
words of Kress, will complete the “institutional triad [and will be] a
social revolutionary low.” According to Kress, a major war cannot be
ruled out following the bottom of the 120-year cycle in 2014, just as
the previous 120-year cycle bottom in the 1890s was followed by the
Spanish American War. Ominously, he believes that the 2014 cycle bottom
holds the potential for a third major depression and the completion of
the trend toward socialist government in the U.S., possibly leaning
towards totalitarianism.
No discussion of the 120-year cycle would be complete without reference
to its half-cycle component, the 60-year cycle. This cycle is most
famously known to long-term investors as the “K Wave,” or Kondratieff
Wave, and correlates to the underlying economic super cycle in the U.S.
Accordingly, Kress refers to this as the Economic Cycle. “The time
position of the 60-year cycle identifies where we are in the overall
economic scheme of things,” writes Kress. “This second 60-year cycle of
[the current] 120-year cycle peaked in 1984. The third and final
20-year secondary bias cycle [component] peaked in 2004, and the fifth
and final 12-year secondary direction cycle peaked in 2008 at the time
of the ‘credit crash’ at a high in the S&P 500 of 1,425. At that
time, all the yearly cycles were in their declining phase, thereby
relying on the quarterly cycles to achieve higher highs.”
Kress points out that just as a year has four seasons – spring, summer,
fall and winter – the 60-year cycle has four economic seasons, each one
lasting 15 years. The fourth 15-year “season” began in 1999 and
coincided with the beginning of economic winter. This “winter” season –
the effects of which are obvious – will end in late 2014.
Unlike past Special Editions, Kress discusses the little known quarterly
cycles in Special Edition XII. He reveals, for example, that the
fourth and final 120-quarter/30-year primary composite cycle which began
in 1984 and peaked in 1999 formed the historic “terminal high” in the
S&P at 1,535 and began the economic winter season previously
discussed. “The secondary 60-quarter/15-year cycle peaked in 2007 at an
effective double top terminal high in the S&P at 1,570 to begin the
severity of economic winter.”
He added that the third and final 40-quarter/10-year primary bias cycle
peaked in 2009, and the fifth and final primary 24-quarter/6-year cycle
peaked in 2011, leaving only the two secondary quarterly cycles in the
advancing phase. The fifth and final 20-quarter/5-year cycle peaked
around late March this year, says Kress, leaving the fifth and final
12-quarter/3-year cycle of all the combined twelve yearly and quarterly
cycles in its advancing phase until its scheduled peak one year from the
present in March 2013. He writes, “No doubt its upside effect will be
limited, and its price peak should be well before its time peak and its
price peak below current levels.”
Kress believes that the interaction between the briefest of the yearly
cycles, the 12-year, and the composite 120-quarter/30-year cycle affords
a macro perspective. According to Kress, this can be accomplished by
comparing the market’s current level with the levels at the peak of the
current 120-quarter/30-year cycle and comparing this relationship for
each of the previous three 30-year levels of the 120-year cycle. He
writes, “For each of the three previous 30-year periods, the market was
higher thirteen years later. However, for the current period, the
market is lower. Clearly, economic winter is causing the Industrial
Revolution to falter.”
Concluding his Special Edition, Kress observes: “The culture and the
mindset of the federal government is that it can control economics and
create value. Who do you believe will prevail – ‘big brother’ or
‘mother nature and father time’?”
Article from smart predictor
No comments:
Post a Comment