Log out
Please change all images to the following format:
<center><figure class="figure"><a class="lightbox" href="/onlinecourse/images/" data-plugin-options="{'type':'image'}"> <img class="figure-img img-fluid" src="/onlinecourse/images/" /></a><figcaption class="figure-caption"><strong>A caption...</strong></figcaption></figure></center>
(Images in current articles are already changed)
As far back as January 2016, billionaire George Soros went short on the S&P500 index. This means that he thought the S&P500 was going to fall heavily and he took positions which would profit from a major fall in that index. Later in May 2017 he doubled up on those “short” positions and he has been taking more short positions ever since. As recently as final quarter of 2020 he bought 17,000 “puts” on the SPDR S&P500 ETF (SPY) – which is an exchange traded fund specialising in matching the S&P500. Consider the chart of the S&P over the past 5 years:
Since Soros took his first short position at the start of 2016, The S&P500 has doubled from 1925 to over 3850 – which means that Mr Soros and anyone who followed his advice has lost a great deal of money – with the inevitable result that his credibility as a market expert has been very badly damaged. Investors no longer believe that his advice is infallible. He was, perhaps, one of the first famous “bears” to be “eliminated” in this great bull market.
As we suggested in a recent article, The Coming Blow-off, exceptional bull markets, like the one we are in, eventually end with a blow-off of some kind. As a private investor, your problem is to know exactly where you are in that bull market and how close you are to the top. One of the better indicators of the progress of a great bull market is what we describe as the “elimination of the bears”.
A bear is a person who believes that the market is about to fall. Right now, there are plenty of bears proclaiming loudly in all the media that Wall Street is about to collapse into some sort of major downward trend. A cursory look of the current news on Wall Street revealed the following:
What do all these people have in common? They are all relatively well-known in the investment community and they are all staking their reputations on a prediction that the market is about to collapse. Their followers are being urged to sell out of their share portfolios now. As the market goes inexorably higher, those people who followed their advice will lose money and they will stop following the “expert”. One by one these investment “gurus” will be relegated to the scrap heap.
Eventually, in a great bull market, a point is reached where nobody is willing to publicly proclaim that the market is at its peak – even if that is their belief. Investment experts generally will cease to take strong public bearish positions. Too many of their competitors will, by then, have been destroyed by taking a public stand. That is what happened in the great bull market which ended in 1929. Eventually, the so-called experts were saying that modern economics had effectively eliminated recessions and that the bull market would go on forever. They could not have been more wrong.
But as you watch this market go higher and higher you should try to keep an eye on how many bears there still are. You will see their numbers thin out as we get closer to the top. While there are still plenty of bears around, the high probability is that the bull market still has got some distance to run. Once the bears disappear you should know that you are very close to the top.