Lethargy Bankrolls U.S. Stock Bull

 | Jul 17, 2015 12:19AM ET

Over the past century, the U.S. stock market typically turned down prior to the onset of a recession. You did not need to predict economic contraction; rather, you monitored the Dow and the S&P 500 because the benchmarks acted like leading indicators of bad times ahead. (Investors checked the market internals to get a sense for whether or not stocks themselves might “roll over.”)

Stocks demonstrated their predictive powers as recently as October of 2007. The bear market eroded 20%-30% of value before the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) even acknowledged the recession’s inception date (12/07) in October of 2008.

On the flip side, U.S. equities in today’s world do an atrocious job at recognizing economic sluggishness. The skepticism of chief financial officers at the largest corporations just hit two-year lows. Small business optimism registered its worst reading in 15 months. Meanwhile, you’d have to travel back to November of 2014 to find the sort of pessimism that exists today on the part of the American public.