A Glimpse Of The Future?

 | Feb 06, 2018 08:35AM ET

The one trait among investors that is most “everlasting” is the tendency to extrapolate current trends ad infinitum into the future. Until very recently, an entire generation of investors has no idea what a bond near market looks like – or how to prepare or react for that matter. Despite the fact that interest rates have demonstrated a tendency to rise and fall in roughly 30-year waves, too many investors have never given much thought to the possibility that rates might rise again someday even though rates had been declining steadily since the early 1980s.

And don’t even get me started on the stock market. The stock market had been on such an unprecedented run (the longest in history without so much as a 3% pullback) until recently that it seemed that no one wanted to even raise the possibility that the market could do anything other than rise indefinitely. Never mind that the stock market by many measures is (or at least was) as overvalued as before the 1929 crash and the 2000 dot com bubble. It is OK to be upset about the recent action in the stock market. It is OK to wonder if this is simply a pullback in a larger ongoing uptrend or the beginning of something much worse. But if you are absolutely stunned that the stock market declined with a bit of ferocity – I hope I am not being indelicate but – WAKE UP! You need to set aside sometime to peruse a 100-year stock market chart and reacquaint yourself with the reality that “the market fluctuates.”

A lot.

h3 Commodities Rising?/h3

Another “thing” that “everybody knows” – or more accurately has become conditioned to believe – is that “stocks are investments” and that commodities are for the “inflation whackos.” The problem of course is that “everybody” doesn’t know squat.

Figure 1 displays a very enlightening chart that displays the ratio between the Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) Commodity Index (GSCI) and the S&P 500 Index. As you can see this ratio clearly “goes to extremes”. And does so on a fairly regular basis. For a period of years commodities vastly outperform stocks and the ratio rises to a peak, and then everything turns and stocks outperform commodities for years at a time. Forgetting even trying to actually time these swings for the moment, note the current reading.