2013: A Look Ahead

 | Nov 20, 2012 04:31PM ET

In this commentary we’ll survey the intermediate-term to longer-term market terrain. This is especially important since we’re about to enter a new year, which the Kress cycle outlook describes as potentially dangerous from a financial market and economic perspective.

Investors have had no shortage of worries in November, including uncertainty surrounding the presidential race earlier this month, the upcoming “fiscal cliff” on Dec. 31, troubles in the Middle East and the ongoing euro-zone debt crisis. On the European front, Spain has still not asked for the European Central Bank (ECB) to purchase its bonds, while the Euro area finance ministers will not likely to make a final decision to release the Euro 31.5 billion of aid to Greece until Nov. 26.

In a bull market investors tend to ignore worries and focus on the positive news, namely expanding corporate profits. Bull markets on average tend to run about three-to-four years before becoming exhausted. The bull market, which began in March 2009, was accompanied by a major recovery in corporate profits, which was part of a feedback loop that propelled equity prices higher in the last three-plus years. Corporate profit momentum is in the process of revering now, which means investors have one less positive to consider when evaluating equities.

Bearish Conditions Ahead
From an investor psychology perspective, what does it mean when fear and worry feeds on itself and creates downside momentum? It means we’re entering a bear market, which was fated to happen at some point after the four-year cycle peaked in October. On an interim basis it was confirmed when the NYSE Composite Index (NYA) decisively broke below its 60-day moving average.