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How To Recognize a Financial Mania When You're Smack Dab in the Middle
of One
By Susan C. Walker, Elliott
Wave International
November 12, 2007
When you're caught in the middle of a bad storm, you don't really care
whether it's a tropical depression or a full-strength hurricane. You just
know you're hanging on for dear life. The same idea applies to financial
markets. When a market is trending up strongly, it's hard to tell whether
it's just a bull market or a more dangerous financial mania.
The recent tremendous ride up for global and U.S. financial markets,
including the Dow, looks and feels more like a mania than a mere bull,
says Elliott Wave International analyst Peter Kendall. This distinction
is important to recognize in the rising stage, because manias always result
in a crash that takes them back beneath their starting point.
Kendall recently published his research into current financial manias
throughout the world in SFO (Stocks, Futures and Options) magazine. The
article, titled "Financial Manias and the Trade of a Lifetime,"
suggests an even more stunning finish for the current manias: "The
speed and global scope of the unfolding credit crisis suggest that most
of the fast-rising markets of the last decade will crash in unison,"
he writes.
Editor's note: Elliott Wave International invites you to read the full five-page
article with charts from the October 2007 SFO magazine by Elliott Wave International's
Pete Kendall called "Financial
Manias and the Trade of a Lifetime."
As co-editor of The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, Kendall searches for
trends that help traders to move in and out of markets. By comparing other
historic manias with the impressive rise of the DJIA since the late 1970s,
he focuses on the skyscraper pattern that they all have in common. The four
historical manias are the Dutch Tulip mania of the 1630s, the South Sea
bubble of 1720, the U.S. stock crash of 1921-1932 and the dot.com bust of
the 1990s and early 2000s. Once you can see the similarities, you will be
better prepared to face the music when the crash comes. As Kendall writes,
"once the belief that the markets will always rise becomes widespread,
it actually signals the start of a price swing that tends to be a career-breaker
for any trader who tries to oppose it."
He also discusses current manias, such as the Nikkei, which has yet to
return to its start after a manic rise to its all-time high in December
1989, and the Dow, which reversed from its rise in 2000 but made a U-turn
in 2002. The starting point for the Dow's mania as shown in the chart
included in the article is at the 1000 level.
Kendall, who is also writing a book about financial manias, titled The
Mania Chronicles, describes five telltale signs that help an investor
to tell the difference between a regular bull market and a mania. It's
a mania if:
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1. There is no upside resistance, and rising prices seem to be perpetual.
2. Everyone in the market looks like an expert.
3. There is a flight from quality investments to riskier investments.
4. As financial bubbles pop in one area, they bubble up in others.
5. The crash after the peak takes back all the gains the mania made. |
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No. 5 can be viewed only with hindsight. But the first four signs provide
essential clues to what's shaping up in the markets.
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"By studying past mania experiences, traders can gain valuable
insight into the collective emotions that drive their markets,"
writes Kendall. "It's possible to make significant money in the
advancing stages of a mania with no knowledge of its existence. But
there is nothing like recognizing a mania for what it is in real time
to help a trader keep those gains and deal with the relentless crash
after it peaks." |
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In the last part of the SFO article, he asks the key question, Are we
at the peak yet? Find
out his answer by reading the whole article for yourself.
Susan C. Walker writes for Elliott
Wave International, a market forecasting and technical analysis company.
She has been an associate editor with Inc. magazine, a newspaper writer
and editor, an investor relations executive and a speechwriter for the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Her columns also appear regularly on
FoxNews.com.
Posted January 17, 2008.
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