Stocks: The Longer-Term View

 | Jul 11, 2023 03:09PM ET

If the S&P 500 made a cyclical low in October 2022 in the context of a secular bull market, when we look back in 2-3 years, ETF leaders will most likely come from the technology sector, with a large cap bias. Even if mid-cap and small-cap stocks continue to lag, they will experience intermittent periods of outperformance (countertrends in the context of a long-term relative downtrend). A bias toward higher interest rates and higher inflation, along with current long-term trends, say bonds may produce disappointing relative performance.h2 Strong Long-Term Trends/h2

A secular trend is a long-term trend that lasts several years or even decades. As shown in the weekly chart of the S&P 500 below, the strongest portions of a secular trend typically see the market hold at or near an upward-sloping 200-week moving average (shown in blue). The secular trend begins in 1950 with the market making subsequent stands in 1953, 1958, 1962, and 1966. Secular bullish trends tend to make a series of higher highs and higher lows.