I still remember December 2012 and how CNBC was trying to make people petrified of the fiscal cliff. They had a fiscal-cliff countdown for an entire month, as if when it expired the stock market would explode. Everyone on there was scared and telling you to sell stocks because of the uncertainty surrounding the fiscal cliff. I remember one of their analysts got on and proclaimed that for the first time in his television career, he didn't own any stocks. I thought this was pretty telling considering he always had a stock to tout and tell you how awesome it was. But even he succumbed to the fear of the fiscal cliff emanating from CNBC. Funny thing is, it was the exact wrong thing to do to be scared of the market coming into 2013.
See, the S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX) didn't really do much from early 2011 to the end of 2012. It did a sideways grind for all of 2011, basically. By the middle of 2012, it still hadn't gone anywhere. Then it had a rally into around October of 2012, followed by a pullback to the end of the year. That made the entire two-year span mostly a big consolidation, which really is what set up the potential for what we've seen in 2013.
Now recently we got a headline from CNBC titled "Embrace the Sell-Off." Remembering what they were saying back in December 2012, I thought this was pretty funny.
This all boils down to psychology and how people react given what has happened in the recent past in the markets. Back in December 2012, they were scared of the fiscal cliff, not only for the fiscal cliff's sake, but really because the market had barely gone anywhere in two years. So the fiscal cliff represented another reason for the markets to go down and make everyone miserable, and the financial media hopped on that bandwagon and made sure everyone felt the fear.
Now that the S&P 500 has gone up 400 points, people are much more comfortable with it, which is why we get headlines talking about embracing pullbacks or talk of the Fed tapering. Instead of fear, they are saying "bring it on" because we've got profits, and this market is still going higher. This is all nonsense, though, because in reality, the higher an asset class goes in price, the more risk is built into it.
Which brings me to everyone's favorite asset class to hate: gold. What's ironic about gold is that most of the risk in gold has probably now been removed from its price after over two years in a cyclical bear market. Yet hardly anyone will believe that, because all they remember right now is pain.
But bear markets remove risk, which is why you need to embrace the panic.
Of course you can't take advantage of a bear market until its over; that's the key problem with thegold market It looked for a second like the gold bear market was over in 2012, but that didn't turn out to to be the case. Now that we're ending 2013, it's more likely the gold bear market is over, but maybe it still isn't.
The best thing we can say about gold is it isn't going down as fast as it was earlier in the year. Ironically, people are about as or even more bearish on it now than they were then. Gold is starting to set up a base, which is what you want to see for a market to bottom and transition back into a bull market. We could even make a new low on gold here and have a positive divergence in momentum, and still have the type of basing pattern necessary for a real bottom.
Gold stocks, on the other hand, are still trading horribly. The only positive thing you can say is even though they've made another new low, there is a positive divergence setting up. If they do get a rally from here it will also re-establish the base that would eventually then usher in the next bull market in gold stocks.
More than likely CNBC and the media will go into 2014 looking for more reasons that the stock market will go up and shake off bad news. But their optimism was only gained because stocks had a great year in 2013. Eventually the pessimism in thegold marketwill be just as ill-founded as the pessimism in stocks was to start 2013.
Editor's Note: This article was originally published on NextBigTrade.com .
Twitter: @nextbigtrade
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.