I think this chart is scarier, though it suggests we've got a bit more time with another year plus to go (and I'm not making bets on anything related timing, I'm trying to prep like it's tomorrow. while praying it never happens at all).
I had started this last night and was almost done with the data scaling when I got distracted by my server going down, and accidently blew the file away, so I lost interest last night. Came back to it this morning, started over, and here's a somewhat interesting plot that illustrates my point above. I've done this type of thing from time to time over the several years, and in front of me now I have the paper plot of the one I did in mid 2010 when I thought we were at the dead-cat bounce point and about to spiral down into 1932 (and we would have done so had it not been for the extreme intervention of the time - few people appreciate how close to the edge we were in July 2010 - in that sense they were successful in kicking the can down the road a few more years, but in so doing they just made both the bubble and the resulting crash that much worse).
Taking this month Dec 2013 as an arbitary starting point (month 60 in this plot), I plotted +/- 5 years (obviously there is nothing after this month in the "current" line) and then went back to the 1920s, grabbed that data, and plotted +/- 5 years from there. I didn't explicitly account for inflation, other than to scale each data line to a local peak. For current data I used this month. For historical data I used the local peak before the start of the blow-off as that scaling point, which was May 1928. To cut back on the quantity of data I used the monthly data instead of the daily.
I arbitrarily scaled the two periods in time so that Dec 2013 aligns with May 1928 - there is no rationale for that other than the slopes roughly match to that point. I believe the historic data shouldn't be moved further to the left, though we might find that it should be moved further to the right (i.e., maybe we aren't yet at the point equal to May of 1928). But the changed slope of the 1928-29 blow-off hasn't been seen yet in the 2010s.
Regardless of where the equivalent time scaling should start, the scaled data is extremely useful for comparing then to now. We can observe that the successes of the late 1920s were impressive but in mid 1928 the "irrational exuberance" was yet to start. From May 28 to Sep 29, only 16 months, the market soared 60% from 217.20 to 364.93, then in the following two months it "crashed" back to what would have actually been a fairly realistic value not for the "bubble", of 232.6. A 5-month dead-cat bounce followed back up to 288.17, but attempts to restore the bubble couldn't overcome the damage done by the bubble and the market crash continued from that point until there was full capitulation two years later (yes, it took another two years, almost three years from the bubble peak to hit bottom) in July of 1932 at 46.19 - only 20% of the pre-bubble high, and at a value that was only 12.7% of the bubble high.
As I said, I don't put much stock in a literal interpretation of then to now, but it is a perfect scaled illustration of what happened then, and anyone that says that what happened then couldn't happen in some fashion now is dreaming. The world is - economically - in a far more perilous state than it was in 1928-29. All the hubris of the big dog economicists who think they know what is going on and can keep kicking the cans down the road indefinitely will come crashing down soon enough. It might be exactly like this illustration, or not. It might be slower; or faster. It might not be quite as bad, or it might be worse. But keep in mind that if we truly have yet to see the big crash (as I believe), that there is no reason that the level of asset destruction would be any less severe than it was during 1929-32, and there are many reasons to consider that it might be worse. Also keep in mind that the government was not at that time as fully leveraged as they are now; they really don't have any democratic runway left to fix this, short of martial law and imposition of a facsist isolationist dictatorship which largely reneges on its collective debt for a period of several decades during which it keeps the "national collection agencies" (e.g., Chinese) away by means of its military. [Sorry, that's an editorial comment/prediction.] The previous recovery took nearly 20 years to accomplish and in the middle of it - and influenced by it - was a massive world war which took the lives of millions. Will it be any less bad in the coming several decades? Other than those who are irrational optimists, I'm not sure why anyone would expect anything less.
- DJIA scaled.jpg (52.21 KiB) Viewed 1607 times
In the game of Woke, the goal posts can be moved at any moment, the penalties will apply retroactively and claims of fairness will always lose out to the perpetual right to claim offense.... Bret Stephens
The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it. George Orwell.
We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality. Ayn Rand.