This Is ‘Not’ The Reagan Stock Market

Via Global Macro Monitor,

Facts do not matter anymore.  Opinions are now facts.  We truly live in dangerous times.

Reagan And Trump Stock Market

We were stunned by an article posted on the CNBC website over the weekend, The Trump stock market looks a lot like Ronald Reagan’s, Ralph Acampora says – and that may mean trouble.

Are you fricking kidding me?  Nothing could be further from the truth.

The Reagan market looks like the Trump market?   The Trump S&P500 is almost 40 percent above the Reagan S&P after 365 trading days from the election.

We do agree on the last part of the headline that stocks are headed for trouble, however.

Presidents And Stock Markets

We pride are ourselves as students of presidential stock market cycles.  We have posted several pieces on stock market returns during presidential terms over the many years. See here and here and here.

JFK-Trump S&P500 Analog

Our latest venture  has been constructing and tracking the stunningly tight JFK-Trump S&P500 analog.  We did not just stumble upon the analog with a feeling or a religious epiphany, randomly deciding to “overlay two charts on top of each other” (a common criticism of analogs)  but we crunched 70 years of data searching for similar volatility shocks to the one the market experienced in early February.

We found three:  1) The Eisenhower heart attack in 1955; 2) the 1987 stock market crash, and 3) the 1962 “Kennedy Slide” or bear market.   We dismissed the Eisenhower shock as it did not even lead to an official correction, and the 1987 bear market — peak to trough — was over in just 39 days.

Is The Trump Market Similar To The Reagan Market?

Absurd. Take a look at the data in the first analog and you decide.

The JFK-Trump analog is only 84 bps points apart with respect to price-performance 365 trading days after the election whereas the Reagan-Trump analog illustrates an almost 40 percent divergence.

(Click here for interview)

We love Ralph, but we are having trouble reconciling his comments to CNBC.

“In fact, if you look at the chart you will see Ronald Reagan had a six-month honeymoon.  It lasted…I think the percentage gain was roughly about ten percent.” – Ralph Acampora

Ralph seems to refer to the Dow instead of the S&P, so we included it in the analog.

As the chart illustrates, Reagan’s S&P500 peaked 18 days after election day, rising 8.9 percent bolstered by the surprise November 4th electoral landslide.  The S&P then fell 27.15 percent over the next 430 trading days, bottoming on August 12, 1982.

The Reagan bull market ignited that August day, taking the S&P500 up over 61 percent through 1983 and 179.86 percent by the end of his two terms.

Much of the stock volatility during the first 18 months of Mr. Reagan’s first term was due to very tight monetary policy, a deep recession, and volatile interest rates.

On election day, for example, the yield on the 10-year was 12.46 percent.  The yield continued to rise, finally peaking at 15.84 percent on September 30, 1981, almost a year before the economy emerged from recession and the August 1982 stock market bottom.

Reagan’s Tailwinds, Trump’s Headwinds

We posted a piece in December 2016 comparing the macro initial conditions between the Reagan and Trump administrations on the eve of their presidencies,  Reagan v Trump Macro Initial Conditions, listing several indicators,  including monetary, oil prices, and demographics.  Our conclusion was a Reagan-like bull market is very unlikely during Trump’s tenure.

President Reagan also got his recession out of the way early in his administration

Segue To North Korea

Finally, this exercise reminds me of conversations I have had with friends about the upcoming U.S.-North Korea summit.  As you have probably read, we are worried the U.S. is going to be played by the NorKo’s and Chinese like the dueling banjos in Deliverance.

What always comes up is whether President Trump’s hardline and bluster toward Kim Young Un has worked and brought North Korea to the table.   I have tried to present the facts, as, say, a CIA desk officer at the U.S. embassy in South Korea (still without an U.S. Ambassador, BTW) would.

Sure, I have my biases and confess I’m not a big fan of President Trump’s policies or his behavior.

But here are the facts:

In the first eleven months of the Trump Administration, the North Koreans engaged in twenty missile tests, some nuclear,  compared to only eight during the entire two terms of President Obama.

During Trump’s first year in office, North Korea conducted more than twice as many ballistic missile tests (20) as it did during the first year of Barack Obama’s presidency (8).  – Foreign Affairs

I maintain the president’s bluster and the painting of many red lines baited Kim into mocking and ultimately crossing them, twenty times, to be exact.  Two of the six missiles fired by the North Koreans over Japan occurred in 2017.

It was during these last missile and weapons tests,  North Korea probably obtained their big nuke and ICBM delivery system.

Kim is now finally prepared for nuclear chastity.  That is after the hermit kingdom has lost its thermonuclear virginity.

North Korea has promised to end all its atomic and missile tests – but experts warned last night that the dramatic pledge may mean the rogue state has already perfected its nuclear weapons system.

Dictator Kim Jong Un’s surprise announcement comes prior to a planned summit with President Donald Trump next month.

But while some have greeted the offer as a welcome sign of peace, a leading ex-CIA analyst said the Communist despot may have already achieved his ambition of creating a weapons system capable of hitting any target in the US. – Daily Mail

North Korea now comes to the table stronger than ever and most likely with some sort of secret deal in pocket with the Chinese.

Without equivocating, it’s fair to say that both the declarations on nuclear testing and on halting the tests of ICBMs are significant concessions. Specifically, Kim announced that North Korea will “discontinue nuclear testing” and that the Punggye-ri site will be “dismantled to transparently guarantee the discontinuance of the nuclear test [sic].” On ICBMs, Kim simply said that no “inter-continental ballistic rocket test-fire” would take place after April 21, 2018.

While significant, we shouldn’t be fooled into thinking that these concessions are being made out of a position of weakness or as a necessary show of bona fide goodwill to South Korea and the United States before the upcoming summits. Kim’s rationale for doing away with the nuclear test site was to underline that North Korea had already successfully come up with the nuclear weapons designs it needed. – Daily Beast

There were many articles over the weekend on the wisdom of even holding the summit.

 White House privately skeptical of North Korea’s plans to freeze nuclear testing  – Washington Post

Mr. Kim’s moves are also unsettling officials in the U.S., Japan and China. Some suspect he is merely posturing in advance of the meeting, as well as before a separate one with South Korea’s president. Others worry that his gestures could put Mr. Trump on the defensive in the grinding negotiations over the future of North Korea’s nuclear weapons.  – NY Times

Trump tempers expectations on North Korea  – Politico

Both leaders go into the meeting leader that are impulsive, unprepared, and the U.S. is way understaffed in its expertise and professional diplomatic corps.

Moreover, both sides don’t even seem to be in the same zip code in terms of perspective, motive, and expectations.

The North Koreans seem to believe that their nuclear breakthroughs forced Mr. Trump to accede to a leaders’ summit meeting, something they have long desired as a way to prove themselves a peer of the major powers.

But American officials have said Mr. Kim was the one forced to the table, compelled there by American sanctions and military threats.

North Korea’s statements suggests that the country sees itself as on the verge of forcing the world to accept it as it is, finally securing its long-term survival.
– NY Times 

Let’s just say we are not expecting a Reagan-Gorbachev breakthrough.

By the way,  our friends seem to think Trump deserves the Nobel Prize based on their feelings, fantasies,  and the spin that is swirling about the ether and Twittersphere.

We sincerely hope they are correct,  but we fear disaster based on our observation of the facts.  Both sides are about to engage in a high-wire act without a safety net.

Has the market priced the risk?

And the Reagan stock market is the Trump stock market.

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