Is U.S. Bull Market’s Death Imminent?

 | Apr 21, 2015 12:38PM ET

A common refrain from commentators over the last year or so is that the bull market in U.S. equities is “long in the tooth.” The very use of this phrase implies a market which has reached a stage of decrepitude from which only bad things can result. “Long in the tooth,” in other words, implies the imminent demise of the bull and the birth of a new bear market.

But does an old bull market necessarily give rise to a bear market by virtue of its age? Does old age in fact kill bulls? A careful study of market history provides a negative answer to this question. Old age doesn’t kill bull markets; in fact, it’s not uncommon for equity bull markets to last 8-9 years before they terminate. For perspective, the present bull market has only just entered its sixth year.

If anything, age “mellows” a bull market in much the same way that it mellows wine. The early phases of a new bull market are often characterized by wild volatility and uncertainty. As market sage Richard Russell once observed, “The early stage of a bull market…always tests the nerves of the participants. The bull will try to advance while attracting the fewest possible numbers of ‘riders.’” That’s exactly what the U.S. equity bull market did in its infant stages between 2009 and 2011 (remember the infamous “Flash Crash”?) Indeed, there weren’t many analysts who were willing to go on record in those years to proclaim that a new secular bull market was underway; most cautiously referred to it as a either a “cyclical” bull or an extended bear market rally.

The second half of a bull market (prior to the final “distribution phase”) is typically characterized by declining volatility and by a decisive upward bias that is all but impossible to ignore. This what can be termed the “momentum phase” of a bull market. It’s during this phase that retail investors come to accept the reality of the secular bull market and begin participating without the trepidation that characterized the bull’s early years. Low volatility is absolutely necessary, from the standpoint of the insiders, to establishing the bull’s claim and luring the public into the market. Without widespread public participation there can be no culmination of the bull market since the “smart money” has to have someone to sell to.

The proof that a secular (long-term) bull market had been birthed in 2009 wasn’t evident to the majority of investors until 2013. It was during this year that the Dow and S&P 500 finally overcame their previous highs made in 2007. Viewed another way, it was only two short years ago that the U.S. equity market reached the “break even” point from 2007. The gains that have been made since then can be viewed as the “real” start of the momentum phase of the bull market. At only two years of age, the momentum phase of the bull market has a ways to go before it gives way to the final stage of a secular bull market, namely the “distribution phase.”

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