Permabull? Hardly.

I never thought someone would label me a “Permabull.” This is particularly true of the numerous articles I wrote over the years about the risks of excess valuations, monetary interventions, and artificially suppressed interest rates. However, here we are.

quote 1

I get it. We have been bullish over the last couple of years, but suggesting that we will always be bullish is a misstatement. For example, in January 2020, we wrote two articles explaining why we were reducing risk.

The first chart compared the Nasdaq to the S&P 500 index. Both indices pushed 2 standard deviations above the 200-week moving average. with two things jumping out immediately:

  1. Near-vertical price acceleration in the markets has been a historical hallmark of late-stage cycle advances, also known as a “melt-up” phase.
  2. When markets get more than 2 standard deviations above their long-term moving average, reversions to the mean have tended to follow shortly after that.