Where The Market Goes From Here

 | Aug 27, 2015 12:17AM ET

"The risk is that we have all of a sudden a very quick and sharp decline because what happened in China resembles in some degree what happened in the late-1990s in Asia... If the markets realize that this could be a big problem, we could have a big wave of selling."

-Felix Zulauf speaking to Financial Sense listeners on August 18th, days before the recent market crash

Given the recent sharp decline in the market, the overwhelming question from clients is whether this is the beginning of a new bear market similar to 2000-2002 or 2007-2009. Though I don’t think we are quite there yet, here is the big picture outlook as I see it with possible risks laid out further below.

If I am correct and this is not yet the beginning of a new bear market, then we are likely to see a recovery rally (which is underway as I write this) with further volatility heading into year-end. A possible scenario could be something similar to what we experienced in 2011 (see below - keep in mind, past performance does not guarantee future results). In this case, it took several months for the S&P 500 (2015 in black, 2011 in red) to stabilize and digest new information before ultimately heading higher.

In 2011, several significant events served as the catalyst for a market bottom: a Greek bailout to arrest European debt fears, the U.S. Congress voting to raise the debt ceiling, and the Fed’s Operation Twist.

What might cause the market to stabilize and/or bottom in the months ahead this time around? There are several things we should anticipate for this to play out: U.S. economic data justifying a short-term Fed rate hike in December, continued rate cuts and other stimulatory measures out of China and a pickup in global growth.

According to a wide range of leading economic data, near-term risks of a major slowdown or recession in the U.S. are still low. Also, market strategists and China watchers recognize that Chinese officials have yet to exhaust their full arsenal of policy tools should uncertainty arise. However, it is the last point — a pickup in global growth — that probably seems the most unlikely to investors currently.

In response to the current economic slowdown, countries around the globe have cut interest rates at a swift and dramatic pace. Almost every central bank except the U.S. Fed and Bank of England are now easing, which means global monetary policy has become highly stimulative. With such a dramatic and coordinated effort, there is good reason to expect this will provide a tailwind for global markets and help arrest deflationary pressures.

Another indicator I often cite that is widely followed by many macro-oriented strategists and research firms is the relative performance of early cyclicals (i.e. global consumer stocks) to late-stage cyclicals (i.e. energy, industrials, and materials), which leads the OECD leading economic index by six months. This too is arguing for a pickup among global OECD countries.

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