Why It’s (Not) Different This Time in 401k Investing

Don't repeat the mistakes of the past.
Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past.

As a student of history, I’m amazed by how much perspective we can learn from the past. In this case, I’m talking about the anatomy of full market cycles, including both the cyclical bull markets and how the ensuing corrective bear markets take shape.

In short, every time we have experienced a run-away bull market, the cyclical corrective bear market that follows has had three or more distinct down legs or secular bear markets. When looking at a chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average since its inception in 1884, this pattern is apparent. The length and time between them varies but the premise of three or more down legs is clear.

In two scenarios, there are more than three large draw downs, including post 1929 when there were four and during the 1966-1982 cyclical bear where there were five. There was only one instance where there was less than three secular down legs…and that was today.

Time Period        No. of Down Legs

1890-1896                          3

1899-1903                          3

1906-1914                          3

1916-1923                          3

1929-1946                          4

1966-1982                          5

2000-present                     2 …

Do we have to have three or more down legs? No. But does the weight of history and the preponderance of common sense tell us that sometime reasonably soon we are likely to have another bear market? Yes! We live in a cyclical market system within a cyclical economic system. Predicting another cycle is not pessimism, it is realism. All that is left to chance is the timing.

To wit, it has been seven years since the end of the last economic recession and significant bear market of 2007-2009. Post World War II, the average length between recessions in the U.S. is ~5 years. In addition, the historical average period from the start of one bear market to the start of the next bear market was 9.2 years. We currently are over 9.5 years from the start of the last bear market.

Historically, the third leg down is usually the secular bear that makes us forsake stocks and swear off the markets. I grew up in the 1970s and my father was in the investment business. He would often come home and complain about how he couldn’t sell a stock, a bond or even a CD.

After so many periods of market failure, the appetite for investments of all types had evaporated. The average bear market has lasted ~1.4 years and the average loss has been 35.7 percent. Bear markets create fear. They frustrate, anger and worry investors, advisors and portfolio managers alike. Where is the fear today? Certainly some fear lingers, yet despite two significant periods of large losses (2000-2002 and 2007-2009), there has not been enough financial pain to create a sufficient level of fear, worry and loss to mark the true bottom of a cyclical bear.

We are still buying stocks in droves. Many market prognosticators are predicting low single digit returns for the markets for the next seven to ten years. The markets have never had ten years of low, single digit returns. Is it more likely that we will go up 3 percent, 1 percent, 2 percent, etc. or that we will endure a much more volatile +10 percent, -35 percent, +20 percent, etc. type scenario that averages low single digits? Or will the markets just go up forever? Think about it.

What does this mean for you?

This is an opportunity. Now is the time to find investments that are designed to help protect you from the next secular leg down. Now is the time to educate clients, adjust expectations, and prepare. Don’t be afraid to sell high. Don’t worry about taxes…long term capital gains are the marquee of investment success. Help protect your portfolios by investing in rules-based, tactical systems that remove emotion from investing.

These types of strategies seek to provide growth in normal markets but also strive to avoid the majority of the losses typically associated with bear markets. It’s up to you. Why not ask your clients what they want?

David M. Haviland is managing partner and portfolio manager with Beaumont Capital Management.

John Sullivan
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With more than 20 years serving financial markets, John Sullivan is the former editor-in-chief of Investment Advisor magazine and retirement editor of ThinkAdvisor.com. Sullivan is also the former editor of Boomer Market Advisor and Bank Advisor magazines, and has a background in the insurance and investment industries in addition to his journalism roots.

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