Jobs Or Not, Stocks Are Hot. Will The Euphoria End?

 | Sep 08, 2014 03:36AM ET

Rarely is the disconnect between the stock market and the economy more apparent than in an extreme Bull market. There are times when stock prices rise so far, so fast that the trend becomes self-perpetuating, feeding on the greed of traders who don’t want to miss the rally.

When such a self-perpetuating trend takes hold, it often seems as if the only thing driving stock prices is the prices themselves, while fundamental economic changes seem to be ignored. Here, such a trend has been given the name Lottery Fever; and when it infects the stock market it’s almost as if no news – not declining corporate earnings, not declining employment, not even the threat of war – can bring stock prices down.

Because traders become so focused on rising stock prices that little else matters, there are only three ways Lottery Fever can end:

  1. Stock prices stop going up (consolidate) long enough to make traders look away from the price long enough question the fundamentals, causing prices to fall
  2. Extraordinarily horrific economic developments demand traders’ attention, causing prices to fall
  3. Stock prices rise so high, so fast, that the market runs out of buyers, causing prices to fall

When it ends, and it will end – someday – it can quickly take away unrealized profits from those who own stocks, mutual funds, or virtually any long-equity position. The following analysis explores ways traders can take actions now to help ensure that all those unrealized profits don’t slip away when Lottery Fever ends.

Using history as a guide, the end is no more than 4 months away. That doesn’t mean the current Bull market will end, necessarily, rather that euphoria will take a break. Lottery Fever will take a break, even if the Bull market continues, almost certainly before January 2015 is over. Now is the time to prepare.