Quote from Locutus:
I actually don't need to search for reasons to be bearish, I just don't mind adding some for timing purposes. After all, a bunch of people were (correctly) bearish throughout 2007, saw the crash coming yet lost a load of cash due to being too early and not persistent. Hence my questions if anyone has experience with breadth indicators. Now since you started on the fundamentals, I am happy to provide my arguments.
Have you noticed that the participation rate is going down while unemployment is going up (slightly)? Not to mention that long-term unemployment is going down. There is no doubt this indicates that people are simply giving up. Have you noticed the exponential increase in deficit spending? I wouldn't argue US federal debt is "out of control" at this time, but with rising interest rates and another year (god forbid another term) of Obamanomics and then we will see what happens to the Federal budget, which has been using essentially free money for the last year or so. I find that the unemployment is way less volatile and more trend-like than industrial production indices, which can reverse quickly.
To recap, the unemployment rate has not moved significantly from the bottom of the crisis whereas stocks have. I think expectations priced in the stock asset class are wrong, both on the inflation expectation and recovery expectation.
I'm really not such a big fan of corporate earnings because:
a) They're not inflation-adjusted (inflation-adjusted corporate earnings are not that impressive, see P/E)
b) Balance sheets don't look very attractive (Though I have been long some stocks which I liked. I'm only actually short on AAPL as a matter of principle)
c) P/E is nowhere near all-time lows and currently well above average (by over 30%). Would you say economic conditions in less than five years are going to be 30% over average?
d) deleveraging cycle for consumers is not yet near complete, consumer credit still unsustainable
e) Several critical markets are not recovering (Housing)
f) Inflation in food prices will mean, especially for the poor, less money to buy stuff (from your loved tech stocks). Considering they're already absurdly leveraged I doubt they will be really willing to take on much more debt (although consumer credit increased again, ridiculously)
Further reasons would be state-side problems, where California is actually going to use IOUs next year and New Jersey got a downgrade from one of the rating agencies. The market has conveniently ignored these issues, by way of focussing on the EU crisis which isn't nearly a problem of equal proportion.
The only real chance of a recovery is that the messed up western fiscal policy is actually going to work and for the rich and powerful (who as a group are still doing really dandy actually) to save the day by spending us out of the dip.
I don't know whether we might test the old lows, form a new bottom or just have another correction (which would confirm sideways trend, which would imo be much more suitable for current economic climate)
I also don't exclude the possibility for the stock market to keep increasing for several months, perhaps years. I just find it very unlikely.