Still Smells Like a Correction to Me

October 2, 2015 Wyatt

Market Sentiment Life Cycle

When you are looking at the markets, always, always remember that you could be wrong. Never get arrogant, and always try to think about what would happen to your portfolio and your life if everything you think will happen goes in the other direction. Thinking about things that way is how you determine your asset allocation. That is a another discussion for another time.
The issue at hand is that with the strong market performance today Friday 10/2/15, relatively flat performance yesterday, and the strong performance on Wednesday, the V formation of the market correction might have just formed.
On August 21st after the worst week for stocks since 2011 I said that it looked like we were moving into a market correction and that the right course of action for investors was to hold on for the bumpy ride.
At the time I felt that the economic data was boring, but positive. The data that has come out over the last month has been overwhelmingly positive as well, all be it nothing to throw a party over.
Market corrections are a normal and natural occurrence in the midst of a bull market. They are sharp, sudden, and come about for reasons that don’t make any sense… like Ebola or no reason at all. No one to my knowledge has ever had a consistent track record of sidestepping corrections.
Overwhelmingly panicked investors see the correction, fear that it’s a bear, and whipsaw their own portfolios by selling at the absolute worst time.
Bull markets tend to run until they are knocked off by some unforeseen thing or they run out of steam. In the second scenario, the market runs until investor sentiment becomes overly enthusiastic, even euphoric. The corporate data and the overall economic data doesn’t warrant such a drastic run and their is a rollover effect.
I do not think we are there yet, and if we are currently in a market correction, it should only help the bull market continue to run in the long-term.
“Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism, and die on euphoria.” Sir John Templeton
 – Wyatt Swartz
– 10/2/2015