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All You Need to Know: It's SimpleBy Dr. Steve SjuggerudWednesday, June 9, 2010 I don't know why everyone doesn't get it.
Let's see if you do: When the stocks are above the blue line, it's a bull market, and you want to own stocks. When stocks are below the blue line, it's a bear market.
Is that hard to get? Take a look:
![]() If you'd followed an investment strategy based on this simple idea, your portfolio would have beaten the best fund managers in the world. Even better, it would have taken you only two hours a year to follow (just 10 minutes a month).
Since the start of that chart above, the main stock market index (the S&P 500) has risen 4% per year. If you'd bought when the stock market was below the blue line, you'd have lost money at a rate of over 11% per year. If you'd bought when the stock market was above the blue line, you'd have made a 12% profit per year – not including dividends.
Since bull markets are longer than bear markets, you'd be "in" about two-thirds of the time and "out" one-third of the time.
This little system works even if you look further back...
I ran the numbers going back to the early 1970s. And the results are similar... Stocks rise 12% a year when they're above the blue line. And you lose money when stocks are below the line. Also, similarly, you're "in" stocks about two thirds of the time. So the strategy has worked for 40 years... at least.
This "blue line strategy" is nothing fancy by the way...
It's the 10-month moving average of the S&P 500 index. You just take the closing prices of the stock market at the end of the each of the last 10 months and average them. If the current price is above the average, you buy. If it is below the average, you step aside.
There's nothing special about the 10-month average. This system works with the eight-month average, nine-month average, 11-month average... whatever. It's not far off from the 40-week average or the 200-day average. These are typical things that traders look at.
My point is, I'm not doing some sort of mathematical gymnastics. It is simple.
I'm bringing this little strategy up today because important things are happening with it right now...
For the last year, stocks have been above the blue line. We've been in a bull market. But that appears to be ending right now. If June ended today (as I assumed in the chart above), the stock market would be below the line... and it would be time to be "out."
The great thing about this strategy is the blue line doesn't care about housing bubbles, wars, dot-com booms and busts, or government spending. The blue line does no analysis at all.
With the blue line strategy, you spend two hours a year (10 minutes a month to calculate the average), and you beat the stuffing out of the best fund managers in the world.
The blue line strategy has only issued two recommendations since late 2006... It said "sell" stocks back in 2007. And it said "buy" in mid-2009.
Don't you wish you would have ignored everyone and everything else in that time and simply gone with the blue line strategy?
After a year of saying "buy stocks" if things stay as they are, the blue line strategy looks like at the end of this month it could be issuing its first "sell" recommendation since 2007. The blue line strategy has a great track record... What are you gonna do?
Good investing,
Further Reading:
Tom Dyson's research is turning up the same kind of story as the "blue line strategy" is showing today. "If the recent market action is anything to go by," Tom writes, "almost every investment asset you can imagine is going to fall in price for the next year or two." Read more here: Why Middle-Class America Is About to Get Slaughtered.
Mebane Faber developed a kind of "blue line strategy" for gold, too. Following this indicator since 1968 would have turned $10,000 into $1.28 million, beating a buy-and-hold strategy with gold by about $1 million. Check out the chart and get the details on the strategy here: The Best Simple Gold Indicator Around.
ANOTHER DANGEROUS BREAKDOWN First, it was copper. Now, it's Home Depot...
Longtime DailyWealth readers know we monitor a handful of "real world" indicators to get a read on the global economy. In addition to key assets like copper and transportation stocks, shares of Home Depot (HD) are high on our list. As America's largest vendor of things to spruce up the basement, bathroom, kitchen, roof, and garden, HD's profits and share price rise and fall with the ability of the country to spend money on the American dream.
In Saturday's chart of the week, we noted the dangerous breakdown in the price of copper. Today, we must also note the dangerous breakdown in HD. As you can see from today's chart, the uptrend in Depot shares has been shattered... Just yesterday, the stock hit its lowest low in over two months. This is what's called a downside breakout.
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