Bull or Bear? It’s Complicated…

In This Article:

Are we starting a bullish consolidation or a deeper bearish leg down? … making both bull and bear arguments … why a focus on the Fed in September might be wrong

Are we watching the beginning of a brief, healthy pullback within a new bull market…

Or did the bull we’ve been riding for the last two months suddenly take off its mask to reveal a growling bear that never actually went away?

Last Friday, we looked at a market forecast that’s shared by Louis Navellier, Luke Lango, and our technical team of John Jagerson and Wade Hansen.

In short, it’s “near-term weakness followed by longer-term bullishness.”

Between the second half of last week and today, it appears that weakness is here.

But the question is whether it will be just a reset rather than something more sinister. Luke highlighted this tradeoff in last week’s Early Stage Investor Daily Notes:

If we pull back 5% and then shoot 10% higher, taking out critical technical levels by mid-September, then a new bull market will be confirmed.

If we pull back 5% and then keep dropping (10%, 15%, etc.), then this will go down as the greatest bear market rally of all time.

We are crossing our fingers for a mild pullback followed by a much stronger bullish surge. But today, let’s look at the other possibility.

After all, wise investors focus more on what can go wrong than what can go right. It’s the old idea of “play great defense, and the offense will take care of itself.”

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Recapping the bullish case

Just about everything hinges on inflation, and as an extension, monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.

If inflation is largely conquered, things fall into place:

Earnings won’t be as negatively affected by inflationary erosion… employers won’t have to batten down the hatches and lay off workers… the U.S. consumer will have more disposable income in his/her pocketbook to support the economy… and the Fed won’t need to keep the pedal to the metal on rate hikes.

Now, in good news, July’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) number was down from June’s. Even better, it came in below forecasts.

On top of that, gasoline prices, which make up nearly 5% of the CPI, continue to fall dramatically.

According to GasBuddy, the average retail price of a regular gallon of gas is about $3.85. It hasn’t been this low since the beginning of March.

Plus, we’re finishing a Q2 earnings season that hasn’t been as dire as feared. Yes, businesses are feeling inflation. But we haven’t seen the across-the-board earnings-cuts that many expected. And as corporate managers looked toward the end of the year, there haven’t been cries of “the sky is falling.”

We could also point toward any number of smaller pieces of bullish evidence.

For example, last week, the Business Outlook Survey from the Philadelphia Fed unexpectedly rose to 6.2 in August from negative 12.3 in July. Economists had expected the number to come in at negative 5.0.

There’s more we could highlight, but for the sake of brevity, here’s the takeaway: At this moment, the economy is not crumbling under the weight of inflation. And as importantly, inflation’s direction appears to have turned south.

Tying in stocks, regular Digest readers know that the stock market is forward-looking in nature. Given this, if Wall Street believes that economic conditions 12 months from today will be good based on the positive factors we just touched on, then that’s what it will price into the stock market.

Translation – we’re in a healthy pullback today, which will be followed by a rally.

But are economic conditions going to be so rosy in 12 months?