Still Time on Wall Street Before the Fat Lady Sings
Rick Ackerman

My most recent jeremiad in this space drew such a savage response from some quarters that I am obliged to consider the bullish case, which may be firming, at least for the near-term.

"With all due respect," wrote one Examiner reader facetiously, "you are just another mosquito buzzing away, frustrated at being wrong so many times."

Indeed, this market has bamboozled me and many other technically oriented gurus for too long, short-circuiting some of our most trustworthy indicators with vexing regularity, and turning charts which at times seemed to warn of apocalypse upside down.

Where might we have gone wrong? According to the investor quoted above, a Californian who claims to have $112 million of his own money invested in the stock market, I have overlooked some powerfully bullish arguments that even an imbecile could recognize.

For one, he notes that baby boomers are approaching retirement age in record numbers and that their nest-egg money will continue to flood the market until 2008, when most will pass 46, the peak age for investment.

Furthermore, he says, investors from around the world will continue to clamor for a piece of Wall Street's once-in-a-lifetime gold rush, stoked by the attendant opportunity to ride a long-ascendant and seemingly invincible dollar.

Factor in the burgeoning Internet, a medium with the potential to enrich us all by making many businesses more profitable, and it's hardly surprising that millions of investors evidently see no end of bullishness.

"That is it, and nothing else," admonishes my critic, the only self-described centimillionaire from whom I have ever received four angry letters in the space of just two days.

These messages ceased abruptly when, later in the week, the stock market took its record-breaking swan dive on April 14, affirming the thesis of my last column -- that many shareholders could conceivably be decimated by a bear market before they even sense that it is upon them.

Still, there are a few reasons why the financial thunderheads of April may soon give way to sunny and mild skies in the months ahead. The arguments are somewhat technical and have little to do with the broadly bullish arguments noted above, but they are nonetheless compelling. To wit:

But there are some important caveats:

Rick Ackerman
May 1, 2000

Author/analyst Ackerman contributes a regular column to The Sunday San Francisco Examiner. He also forecasts stock, index and commodity futures prices for market professionals in his daily newsletter, Black Box Forecasts: www.blackboxforecasts.com


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