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A description of the content follows : In light of Thursday's disappointing (though unsurprising) GDP figure following Tuesday's record low in consumer confidence, it would be easy to get discouraged as an investor. And, we have little doubt the echoes of said news will be heard and felt for a while among the investing community. However, we'll also remind you of something we verified last week - that some industries do well in a recession.

 
 
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The Micro Cap Press - Discover the Power of Early Stage Growth
Thursday, October 30, 2008 @ 1:01 pm PDT Volume II : Issue 46
Don't Confuse 'Economy' With 'Stock Market' 

In light of Thursday's disappointing (though unsurprising) GDP figure following Tuesday's record low in consumer confidence, it would be easy to get discouraged as an investor. And, we have little doubt the echoes of said news will be heard and felt for a while among the investing community. However, we'll also remind you of something we verified last week - that some industries do well in a recession

You may also recall we've long been an opponent of the conventional interpretation of really poor confidence. Indeed, we've seen that market bottoms are often made when confidence is worse than awful.

The media, however, never seems to be able to come up with those facts or data. Add it to the list of things the media just doesn't quite 'get'

The straw that broke that camel's back came today though. A couple of different AP stories regarding the 0.3% contraction in the country's gross domestic product was the "strongest signal yet the country has hurtled into recession". Furthermore, the weak GDP number was "sure to buttress the belief of many economists that the nation is on the throes of a painful downturn." 

Seriously?Can there be any question at this point? Whether it fits a technical definition or not, we're in a recession. To belabor the argument now is just a waste of time. 

That's not exactly what we wanted to talk about today. Our message is a little more broad in its scope; the media's empty banter is just a symptom of the problem

Our message: Don't confuse the economy with the stock market. More than that, don't let the media (or anyone for that matter) feed you information and tell you what the outcome will be without at least validating their theory.

Two specific sets of data support our advice. The first one is the idea of defining when a recession has officially begun. The second set has to do with unemployment... a matter mentioned in one of the AP stories that prompted this op-ed.
 

Economic Data Is History

We're not sure who made the National Bureau of Economic Research (or NBER) the final arbiter of when recessions begin and end. Whoever did may want to rethink things. It's not that they're wrong - it's that they're months late in doing so.

Take a look at their more recent announcements regarding when the U.S. fell into - and came out of - recessions.

A not-entirely-rhetorical question....does it do you any good to be told we're in a recession 6 to 12 months after it's started? That's not even the head-scratcher though. Take a closer look at the data again...at 2001 specifically. Does it do you any good to have the NBER tell you in November that a recession began in March when the expansion/recovery started in the very same month they got around to announcing the recession?

That's not even the ridiculous part though. 

Like we said above, if you've mentally synchronized the economy and the market, you may have done yourself a disservice. Check out this chart (click the link). The red, downward arrows are where recessions started. The blue, up arrows are where recessions ended. If you invested based solely on the NBER's data, you would have been very late (or way early) getting out, and very late (or way early) getting back in. 

Bottom line - don't get too consumed by any recession discussion. It means little to investors, and it's misleading anyway. 
 

Unfounded Unemployment Forecast

In the very same AP articles we keyed in on above, one of the analysts interviewed suggested the unemployment rate could move to as high as 8.0% by the middle of next year. Great, but why?

We're not saying it won't happen; unemployment may well be as high as 10% next year. But, what data and model was the interviewee looking at that would suggest 8.0% was a reasonable inflation forecast? Our suspicion is there was no real model or basis - it was just an opinion based on what's been going on over the last two months.

By and large, the one reality most forecasters, analysts, and reporters don't seem to grasp is the economy's cyclical nature. Most assume the current trend or the status quo will remain in place forever more. If it did though, it would be the first time it's ever happened.

No big deal - most investors know deep down that nothing lasts forever and that all things are cyclical. However, an unwillingness to ignore these uninformed forecasts may mean missed opportunities.

Just for the record, similar forecasts were being made back in June of 2003 when unemployment was as high as 6.3%. The so-called experts were talking about unemployment reaching or even surpassing 7.5% over the following 12 months. As it turns out, unemployment had fallen to 5.6% by June of 2004. The market gained 17% during that time frame. So no, these guys don't always know what they're talking about. 

That's not to say we're always right either, because we're not. However, there is one thing you can always count on from the staff of the Micro Cap Press - all of our forecasts are data-based or history-based. 

In fact, we've been crystal clear about how we view and interpret unemployment data. It really is one of the best tools we've ever found to time the longer-term market. However, we use it in a way nobody else does. (See our September 10th, 2007 edition for the full details.)

In short, rising unemployment is bad for the market, and falling unemployment is good for the market. That's not a novel concept, yet many prognosticators still seem to struggle to make good use of the data. They're overly-consumed with trying to figure out where unemployment is going, and they overlook the current trend. The trend, however, is what's so telling.

But isn't unemployment data just history like GDP or consumer confidence? Yes, in a sense. However - though not by design - unemployment is also a leading indicator. That's right ...unemployment tends to shift before the market (or the economy) does.

The nearby chart tells the tale. When the unemployment rate started to trend upward, we marked the S&P 500 with an up arrow. When it started to trend lower, we marked the index with a down arrow. It's not perfect, but following this simple system would have kept you out of the 1990 debacle, out of most of the 2000/2002 bear market, and would have gotten you out of stocks in July of 2007...a few months before the selloff began. (Click here for a longer-term chart.)

As it stands right now, the unemployment trend is technically bearish. To assume where it's going though, that's a dangerous game ...a game not won by very many. We'll not try and make the information more than what it is. 

That said, we've also been relatively confident that stocks are closer to a bottom than not. Yes, this is in partial conflict with the unemployment figure/trend. We're not saying this is the time to go 'all in'. We're just saying this is a time where it makes sense to start testing the waters. There will still be plenty of gains left to be made when unemployment turns the corner. 

Anyway, back to the original point... don't confuse the economy with the stock market. Stocks may become more or less valuable because of the economy, but the two aren't synchronized. Stock prices tend to reflect what investors think they'll be worth 6 to 12 months in the future. That's a big opportunity if you can out-think the masses.

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