ECB Ready To Act
In a familiar theme of words and little in the way of action, the head of the European Central Bank was jawboning again Monday. From The Wall Street Journal:
“The European Central Bank is willing to take additional easing steps including purchases of government bonds if needed to keep inflation from staying too low for too long, ECB President Mario Draghi said Monday. Mr. Draghi’s remarks, in testimony to the European Parliament, underscored the central bank’s commitment to expand its balance sheet—the value of assets it holds—and if necessary widen its stimulus efforts to ensure that inflation rises back to the ECB’s target of just below 2%.”
The theme of ongoing “easy money” ties in nicely with what history says about the current stock rally in the United States.
Rare And Unprecedented
Since numerous rare occurrences, including the massive V-type rally in stocks, could skew the current landscape from a historical perspective, it is important we remain open to all outcomes (bullish, bearish, and sideways). However, it is also prudent to ask:
Can we learn anything from similar rallies in the last 10 years?
Weather Analogy
Just as meteorological conditions shift slowly over time between the middle of summer and the dead of winter, markets experience observable changes as a bottom is formed after a correction and during the subsequent rally. The market was weak (temperature of roughly 13 degrees) just prior to the October 15 low. Since then, conditions have improved relative to the market’s profile (temperature of roughly 83 on November 7, 2014). How has the market performed in the past after moving from a profile of 13 to 83? That question is explored in this week’s video.
The table below is described in the video above, along with charts showing numerous examples from recent history.
Investment Implications – The Weight Of The Evidence