Nothing special. No fit, thus no way (yet) to claim the S&P 500 is ready to jump another 40%. So how do we convert this into a chart showing a 40% rally is on the way. Felix Salmon details:
If the intention was to strip out the local currency, then why did they convert the Nikkei to dollars, rather than the same basket of currencies they converted the S&P 500 to? Probably because the relationship would have been non-existent. But doing so makes for the chart seen here:So it seems that the BofA analysts who came up with this chart first converted the Nikkei to dollars, only to then convert the S&P 500, which was in dollars all along, out of dollars. Hm.
And the details:
The Nikkei doubled between October 1998 and April 2000 in dollar terms, as the chart illustrates. The S&P 500 has risen 34 percent since March when the Dollar Index, a measure of the dollar against currencies in six major U.S. trading partners, is factored in.The analysts claim (via Henry Blodget) that:
A “melt-up” rally in the U.S. may be triggered by central bankers keeping interest rates near record lows, an economic recovery or an undervalued dollar, Bank of America strategists wrote in an Aug. 26 report.
The consensus is usually wrong and that it is always smart to consider the alternatives. And this is certainly one of them.Good point. Alternatives should be considered, but those alternatives should be fully understood. But, in analyzing why the relationship between the Nikkei (in USD) following the Asian crisis / during the Internet Bubble TO the S&P 500 (in a broad currency basket) following the subprime / financial / systemic crisis is strong, these same analysts made the following statement:
We do not know precisely why this relationship has worked.Which is fine if "precisely" didn't mean "at all". But, what hasn't been mentioned regarding the Nikkei within five years (in both USD or Yen) of this supposed 40% rally... new lows.
this comparison is a long shot at best.
ReplyDeletebetter comparison is the 1984-1996 nikkei and the 2000-2008 nasd. forget the dates: they'll never see 39,000ish again and we won't see >5000 nasd (at least in my lifetime)
ReplyDelete