Two contrarian signs that a market bottom is approaching have raised their heads. The first is the always somber Marc Faber, the famed proprietor of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, who said late last week that the current down-drift in stocks is the beginning of a global bear market.The second is the increasing chatter that the massive U.S. budget and trade deficits are going to come back to haunt the U.S. economy.
Mr. Faber's bearish pronouncements and the general call by economists and other pundits saying this is the time that the trade deficit is going to crush the U.S. economy almost always coincides with a bottom of the US market.
For the most part, virtually every indicator suggests the U.S. market is approaching a bottom. However, a good contrarian indicator, the AAII Index that measures individual investor sentiment, has stayed stubbornly high. Actually, bullish sentiment has been increasing during this market's decline.
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Let's look at some numbers. The Dow Jones Industrial Average started the year at 12,459 and then set a record breaking slam through the 14,000 barrier. At that point it was up about 12.3%. Then we had a dip from 14,000 to 13,211. At which point the DJIA suffered one of its worse weeks in a year. The DJIA hit bottom on July 31 at 13,211 (still up 6% for the year) the DJIA is now up to 13,600. (up 9.1% for the year). Just mid-way through today the DJIA gained 127 point going from 13,504 to 13,641. That means that today the market rose from up 8.3% to up 9.4% for the year. We are well on our way to a comeback.


