Stock Market Headed Lower, but No Crash

Rick Ackerman

The stock market is headed moderately lower this summer, but you can expect the worst of it to occur by no later than August.

I am projecting a 10 percent drop in the Dow Industrials over that time and a 12 percent decline in the S&P 500 Index. The actual price targets are 9406 for the Dow, which currently stands at 10500; and 1275 for the S&Ps, now at 1450.

If my forecasts prove correct it would leave the Dow Average 20 percent below January's all-time high of 11750 and the S&Ps 18 percent beneath March's record 1553.

Such a selloff would be mild in comparison with the steep summer decline of 1998, which lopped 21 percent from the value of both averages in just six weeks.

My predictions are based solely on the charts, the simplest way I know of to make objective sense of a fundamental picture that is presently very confusing and greatly stressed by concurrent bullish and bearish influences.

If you want to handicap the averages yourself, here are some of the things that I believe will constrain the market from moving either to record highs or to scary lows over the foreseeable future. First the bullish factors:

Now for a few reasons why equity averages are unlikely to hit new highs any time soon:

A wild card which greatly outweighs any combination of the above is the value of the dollar, whose relentless strength over the last decade has nourished the bull market in stocks while simultaneously creating a credit bubble that must someday be unwound.

My hunch is that the inevitable downturn of the greenback for the long-term will unsettle the stock market, which in turn will drive the dollar lower.

This downward spiral is all but unavoidable although, for the time being, a relatively steady stock market will continue to deflect attention from the by-now pathological excesses of global credit markets.

Be warned, however, that if the stock market's decline significantly exceeds my forecast over the next few months, and if the dollar comes down with it, it will be a long, long way to the bottom.


July 5, 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