The Market Fleeced You Again - and You Probably Do Not Even Realize It

 | Jan 24, 2023 05:04

Before we move into a review of the last few months of market action to learn what most investors did wrong, I think it is important to begin this missive by reposting something written by Robert Prechter in The Socionomic Theory of Finance (a book I strongly recommend to each and every investor):

"Observers' job, as they see it, is simply to identify which external events caused whatever price changes occur. When news seems to coincide sensibly with market movement, they presume a causal relationship. When news doesn't fit, they attempt to devise a cause-and-effect structure to make it fit. When they cannot even devise a plausible way to twist the news into justifying market action, they chalk up the market moves to 'psychology,' which means that, despite a plethora of news and numerous inventive ways to interpret it, their imaginations aren't prodigious enough to concoct a credible causal story.

Most of the time it is easy for observers to believe in news causality. Financial markets fluctuate constantly, and news comes out constantly, and sometimes the two elements coincide well enough to reinforce commentators' mental bias towards mechanical cause and effect. When news and the market fail to coincide, they shrug and disregard the inconsistency. Those operating under the mechanics paradigm in finance never seem to see or care that these glaring anomalies exist."

I sincerely hope you read that very carefully, as we are about to see some real-world examples of how many of you have disregarded some serious recent inconsistencies. And, the only way you will learn is to be able to recognize when and how you may have been wrong.

On October 13, the CPI report came in hotter than most expected. While most then assumed that the market would tank, the market actually bottomed that day and ended up positive by 2.6%. Moreover, it actually kicked off a 17.5% rally off that supposedly terrible report. And, clearly, this had many scratching their heads at the time, since they were operating under the common mechanical cause-and-effect paradigm as to how the market should react to the news. As one commenter on Seeking Alpha noted:

"Am I the only one wondering what the heck is going on with this market? I feel like it makes no sense anymore... Today made NO sense."

In fact, in Barron's article later that day, the author outlined the common feeling in the market that day:

"It was a massive rally, and one that came out of nowhere. And it's left market observers like yours truly wondering what the heck just happened. There wasn't any new data, no headline-making speeches, no event that occurred just after the open to spur such a move. It literally came out of nowhere-and left us grasping for possible reasons. 'Today's market reversal was a head-scratcher,' writes Oanda's Edward Moya. And he's not wrong."

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But, if you were not looking at the market through the common mechanical cause-and-effect paradigm, you were likely expecting a major bottoming. In fact, this is what I wrote to our members of ElliottWaveTrader just the afternoon before the CPI was published and we began that rally:

"Thus far, the market has made several attempts at hitting the blue box support region on the 60-minute SPX chart. And, each time, divergences continue to grow. And, if you look at the 5-minute SPX chart, there is still opportunity to actually strike that support below as long as we remain below the smaller degree resistance noted. . . But, I think we will likely be much higher than where we stand today as we look out towards the end of October, or even into early November, depending on how long it takes the market to bottom out, and how fast the rally I expect takes hold."

I also presented my expectation for a near-term bottom, followed by a rally to the 4100-4154 SPX region: