COLUMN-As stocks' nine-year bull run fades, a bear market beckons: McGeever

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(Repeats column that ran yesterday; no change in text.)

By Jamie McGeever

LONDON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Wall Street's nine-year bull run may be on its last legs - raising fears of a widening bear market mirroring the length of the historic upswing as 20 percent-plus reversals grip large swathes of the global equities universe.

If a prolonged equity funk feeds back into the real economy via cowed business sentiment, reduced corporate spending and investment, the threat of a deeper global economic downturn and even recession mounts.

So far, so cyclical. For many, it's long overdue.

The big question, and arguably the bigger worry, is just how much monetary and fiscal policymakers can cushion the fall.

Investors are starting to realize they may be at a turning point. A Morgan Stanley client survey of over 100 portfolio managers and chief investment officers shows 80 percent of them cautious or bearish, and only 20 percent optimistic or bullish.

The survey notes a "psyche shift" that wasn't there in February, when a sudden burst of market volatility triggered a 12 pct slide on Wall Street. Then, there was "strong" buying of the dips as clients added heavily to their long positions. Now, they are far more inclined to sell into any rally.

"It's becoming clear after investor feedback and market action that sentiment has taken a significantly bearish turn," Morgan Stanley notes.

BlackRock notes that stocks and earnings growth are already decoupling globally, and that's before the widely anticipated slowdown in earnings growth next year.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs point out that last week marked the first time since 1990 that the S&P 500 fell 13 days in a three-week period. The magnitude of the losses may not be on a par with the dotcom collapse or 2008, but the frequency is "dramatic" and should ring alarm bells.

The S&P 500 has lost nearly 10 percent in October, its worst month since February 2009. It did plummet 12 percent in just two weeks between Jan. 26 and Feb. 9 this year, but the scope for recovery now is much narrower.

POLICY PARALYSIS?

The Fed's ability to control longer-term borrowing costs is diminished. All else equal, a deluge of new Treasury debt sales to fund the government's $1.5 trillion of tax cuts and increased military spending puts a natural floor under yields.

The U.S. budget deficit for fiscal year 2018 was $779 billion, the widest since 2012, and will approach $1 trillion next year. This is a "serious issue" given that the deficit is ballooning at a time of pretty decent growth, the Bipartisan Policy Center warns.