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Prosper from the profitable opportunities of the next financial market super boom In 1976, Yale Hirsch predicted a fifteen-year super boom--a move in the stock market of 500% or more. His forecast proved accurate as the market rose and continued upward, eventually posting growth over 1,000% just before the tech crash in 2000. In Super Boom, Jeffrey Hirsch, President of the Hirsch Organization and Editor in Chief of the Stock Trader's Almanac, unveils the next market expansion. Building on his father's research from 1976, Hirsch has discovered that meteoric rises in stock indices are due to specific catalysts predominantly outside of the financial markets. History has a way of repeating itself, especially in the financial markets. The American economy, and subsequently the world economy, has always existed in a cycle of boom and bust: gold, grain, oil, technology, and most recently, real estate, have all bubbled and popped. The key to investing profitably is spotting macroeconomic historical trends and positioning to reap the benefits. Step-by-step, Hirsch puts together the pieces of this puzzle by revealing the central drivers of a super boom. * Examines how new cultural paradigm-shifting technologies, as well as peace between major wars, could fuel a super boom * Discusses how the massive injection of money by the government, in response to the global financial crisis and the Great Recession, as well as wartime spending, will eventually create an inflationary environment * The data and research found here is based on historical information and the boom-and-bust cycle of the past century As markets and economies struggle over the next several years, remember to keep your eye on the future and get ready for the coming super boom and the next 500% move in the market. With this book as your guide, you'll benefit from the insights that only Jeffrey Hirsch can provide.
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Seitenzahl: 206
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Part I: Anatomy of a Super Boom
Chapter 1: The Boom Equation
The Late, Great Technician
Finding the Next Five Hundred
How War and Peace (and Inflation) Impact the Market
Four Basic Tenets of Wartime Markets
Not Your Daddy’s CPI
War: What Is It Good For?
Booms and Busts of the Twentieth Century
Chapter 2: A Strangled Economy
Dot-Com Bust versus 1929 Crash
War on Terror
The Housing Bubble
Four Horsemen of the Economy
We Are Not There Yet
Part II: The Fortune Tellers
Chapter 3: The History of Ignorance and the Ignorance of History
When You Assume
Dow 36,000
Chapter 4: An Argument against Financial Calamity
The Dent Method
Conquering Prechter’s Crash
Depression Averted
Chapter 5: Yale Hirsch and the 500 Percent Move
Part III: Booms and Busts of the Twentieth Century
Chapter 6: Panics, World War I, and the Roaring Twenties
The First Components: World War I
Roaring Twenties
Chapter 7: Depression, World War II, and the Baby Boom
World War II
Why Not Korea?
Consumer Boom
Chapter 8: Vietnam, Stagflation, and the Information Revolution
Rising Conflict, Rising Inflation
The Great Stagflation
The Information Age
Politics Paves the Way
The Lesser Impact of Boom-Time Wars
Longest Bull Market
Part IV: The Prodigal Pattern Returns
Chapter 9: Inflation
Creation of the CPI
A Different Tale
Hedging Inflation
The Coming Boom
38,820 and Beyond
Chapter 10: Investment Ideas and Strategies
Seasonality and the Best Six Months
In the Meantime: A Trading Strategy Preboom
Appendix A: Yale Hirsch’s 1977 Stock Picks
Appendix B: 1977 Smart Money Newsletter Reprinted
Key Terms
About the Author
Index
Copyright © 2011 by Jeffrey A. Hirsch. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey. Published simultaneously in Canada.
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ISBN 978-1-118-02470-6 (cloth); ISBN 978-1-118-07533-3 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-07534-0 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-07535-7 (ebk)
This book is humbly dedicated to Yale Hirsch, my illustrious father and mentor—man of many talents, great thoughts, and big ideas. An iconoclastic market thinker, who made the greatest market call in history in 1976 for a 500 percent move in the market from the 1974 low to 1990. Thank you for giving me the business and all your love and support these past 44 years. Not only did you teach me the market, but you taught me how to appreciate all things in life. I proudly stand on your shoulders and prudently ride the coattails of your life’s work.
To my knowledge, Yale was the first to call the bottom of the last secular bear market in October 1974 and the first to predict the last super boom in March 1976.
Foreword
Nearly every trading desk on Wall Street has a copy of the Stock Trader’s Almanac on it. That’s not an exaggeration—if you travel to the offices of enough Wall Street banks, mutual funds, and hedge funds, you’ll see plenty of dog-eared copies of the Almanac.
That is how I first met Jeff Hirsch—reading the STA. I began my career in finance working as a trader. In my first job on a trading desk, we newbies received very little training. We were thrown into the deep end of the pool, and if you managed to avoid drowning—poof!—you were a trader. It was all very Darwinian.
Those of us who managed to survive learned quickly of the many things that affected how markets traded. Valuation, liquidity, sentiment, technical, and interest rate trends all moved stocks and bonds. But there was something larger at work that we did not see in the day-to-day trading. If you stepped back far enough to observe longer arcs of time, you could see a certain cycle. Indeed, it became apparent that markets moved with a certain rhythm, with variations of specific patterns repeating over and over again.
The Stock Trader’s Almanac was the first source I encountered that quantified these cycles. Whether it was the pattern of triple witch option expirations, or the seasonal best six months of the year, the STA provided a framework to view market history through the lens of repeating cycles.
History repeating (“Rhyming,” according to a quote attributed to Mark Twain) was the spark that sent me hunting for a broader view of how markets work. Why do stocks rise and fall? What factors drive short- and long-term prices? Why do valuations fluctuate so much?
Jeff and Yale Hirsch are the father–son duo behind the Almanac. They each spent much of their careers as the editor/publisher of the book—Yale from 1966–2000 and Jeff from 2000 to the present day. But they also have something else in common: They are students of market history. This has led them to rather nonmainstream understandings of the workings of the stock market. Seasonal data, longer-term trends, and historical cycles are part of their repertoire.
Besides the genetics, they have something else in common: Their understanding of secular markets and historical patterns has led each of them to make an outrageous forecast from the depths of a market collapse. The same historical, cyclical, and mathematical analyses underlay each of their predictions, made three and a half decades apart. Postwar peace dividends, excess inflation from war and crisis spending, and rapid adoption of new technologies are the factors that drove the prior secular market booms, and according to Jeff, will drive the next one as well.
Let’s look at a bit of history: In the spring of 1976, in the middle of a terrible decade that saw very little progress in equities, rampant inflation, an oil embargo, several recessions, the end of a very unpopular war, and a presidential resignation, Yale Hirsch made a very unusual forecast. From those dark days of disco and polyester, he predicted a 500 percent move in the markets. Even more surprising, he hit the bull’s-eye.
When you consider the context, it is an unlikely, even absurd forecast. The Dow had kissed 1,000 back in 1966. In 1974, it was still 40 percent below that level. Inflation was rampant, recessions seemed to come along every few years, and the country was still reeling from the double blows of Vietnam and Watergate. Ten years into what would turn out to be a 16-year period of zero market progress (1966–1982), the Dow was flat in nominal terms. Adjusted for inflation, it was down almost 45 percent.
How could Yale make such a forecast? The historian in him noticed something interesting about markets. It seemed that inflation surged during each of the world wars. That was followed by a 500 percent catch-up rally in equities after each war ended. With the end of the Vietnam War, could markets three-peat?
Indeed, that was the basis of Yale’s prediction: In a special report in Smart Money, he estimated that from the 1974 intraday low of Dow 570, the Dow would rise 500 percent by 1990, hitting 3,420. The S&P did gain 500 percent from its 1974 low to high in July 1990. The Dow crossed 3,420 in May 1992—off by a few years, but all things considered, a terrific and money-making call.
Thirty-five years later, Yale’s son Jeff has made a similar forecast. According to the author of this book, the next super boom cycle will follow a decade of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It will send the Dow Jones to 38,820 by 2025.
I certainly don’t need to explain how outrageous this forecast is—but I want to distinguish it from the 1990s dot-com excesses. We saw ridiculous books with titles like Dow 36,000 and even Dow 100,000. These were indicia of bubble mania. Sentiment had run wild; the belief that valuations no longer mattered was becoming increasingly accepted. Out of this mania came some pretty awful—and for investors, money-losing—tomes. They were based on theories subsequently shown to be false, leavened with excess optimism, the recency effect, and a lack of critical analysis.
Numerous factors distinguish this book and its outrageous forecast from those that preceded it:
This book was written in the depths of a bear market collapse and recession—not in the final spasms of an 18-year bull market.
It is based on historical patterns that have held true three times during the twentieth century following each of its major wars.
It is contrary to the conventional wisdom, rather than an excessive extension of it.
When Jeff first announced this forecast, it caused a stir. Several media pundits dismissed it out of hand; they had already been burned by Dow 36,000, and they were not going to make that mistake twice.
However, of all these books that made seemingly ridiculous market forecasts, I would not be too quick to dismiss this one. It is based on a sound methodology, from a student of market history. It forecasts that the secular bear market that began in March 2000 continues for a few more years, than gives way to technological innovation and ensuing prosperity. But it’s not all roses, as Jeff also identifies the risk of our crisis-managed economy. Inflation, which accompanied the prior three periods of postwar prosperity, is a major risk factor over the next two decades.
It is thought-provoking stuff. I hope you find it as fascinating as I have.
—BARRY RITHOLTZ January 2011
Acknowledgments
Writing a book is an adventure. To begin with it is a toy, an amusement; then it is a mistress, and then a master, and then a tyrant.
—Winston Churchill
In addition to the groundbreaking work Yale Hirsch has done over the past four decades, especially in the mid-1970s, this book draws heavily on the work of Judd Taylor Brown while he was vice president and director of research at the Hirsch Organization from 2000 to 2009. Judd and I resurrected Yale’s 1974 “BUY!” recommendation in 2002 and developed the three-part series in our Almanac Investor Newsletter on how war and peace impacts the market in late 2004 and early 2005. We collaborated on the first manifestation of the current 500 percent super boom move forecast on page 42 of Stock Trader’s Almanac 2006. The research, analysis, and writing Judd produced while employed at the Hirsch Organization was relied upon profoundly in this book. I wish him all the best in his new culinary pursuits.
This book would not have been possible without the herculean efforts of Christopher Mistal, who tirelessly brainstormed with me, researched, edited, cajoled, and supported me in this project in every way conceivable. It is his calm demeanor, critical thinking, and software development that is the glue of the Hirsch Organization.
I’d like to thank the editorial team at Wiley for their enthusiasm about turning this forecast into a book: Pamela van Giessen, Kevin Commins, Peter Knapp, Cristin Riffle-Lash, and most of all, my new editor, Evan Burton, who diligently guided this project to completion in an incredibly short period of time.
I’d also like to thank Barry Ritholtz for agreeing to write the Foreword and always being a candid voice of reason and inspiration to me personally and to the world through his ever-salient financial blog, The Big Picture.
And last but certainly not least, my wife, Jennifer, and our two boys, Sam and Nate, my muses. Thanks for understanding my tight deadline and letting Daddy write on countless nights and weekends. I owe you big time.
—JEFFREY A. HIRSCH
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