No, I haven't jumped ship since asking "What's next? Dow 5,000?" I'm still pessimistic. Borderline cynical. The financial industry is still an utter mess, despite Citigroup's (NYSE: C) illusory insistence that it's profitable. Until the Treasury comes out with a financial plan with a backbone, banks will wallow, and stock indices probably won't be too far behind.
I say "probably" because, honestly, no one has a clue. As Warren Buffett recently wrote to Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-A)(NYSE: BRK-B) shareholders, "[He and Charlie Munger are] certain...that the economy will be in shambles throughout 2009 -- and, for that matter, probably well beyond -- but that conclusion does not tell us whether the stock market will rise or fall."
Up, down, sideways, inside out ... no one knows. That's what keeps people intrigued.
Oh, come on! Just don't tell that to the zillions of market forecasters who took Tuesday's 5.8% rally as a sure sign things have bottomed and turned a corner. "This is one fantastic rally," Jim Cramer said (screamed), "that's not over yet!"
Maybe he's right. I can't blame the enthusiasm. After being thoroughly maimed over the past six months, you take what you can get, regardless of size. I'll remind you that Tuesday's "recovery" rally didn't do much more than erase the Dow's losses since, well, last Tuesday.
That last point got me thinking. When people get fired up over the Dow "exploding" to 7,000, you realize how far the goalpost has been moved. I vividly remember the grief of watching the Dow break below 10,000 just a few months ago. Today, the prospect of Dow 10,000 would feel like winning the lottery. Yesterday's terror is tomorrow's utopia.
Now the numbers So how much would it take to get back to Dow 10,000? Using 7,000 as a base, here's how long it'd take to get back into five-figure Dow territory under different assumptions:
Compound Annual Return
Years to Hit Dow 10,000
5%
7.4
10%
3.8
15%
2.6
20%
2.0
If we bottomed today and earned a steady 5% per year going forward, we'd be back into Dow 10,000 territory by ... 2016! The beauty of compound returns are devilish when spun in reverse: lose 50%, and you have gain 100% to get back to par.
Now some good news Admittedly, after falling as ferociously as we have in such short order (on an equal-time basis, we've fallen as hard as during the Great Depression) the odds that we'll eventually rebound in a big way are better than the odds we'll slowly inch higher. To quote Buffett again, "What is likely ... is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turns up."
In fact, time and time again, the biggest market gains come directly after the biggest busts.
Have a look:
Year
Loss
Gain in Following Year
1932 Continued... |