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By Mike "Mish" Shedlock | 9 July 2009
Minyanville Professor Tony Dwyer posted an interesting chart yesterday about recessions and payrolls that is worth a look.
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
Professor Dywer commented:
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Everyone it seems is waiting to buy the dip. Can it be that easy? Perhaps it can, as the herd is often right. However, recessions since 2000 don't exactly seem to be playing out like other post WWII recessions.
Please consider the following chart from Calculated Risk on Job Losses In Post WWII Recessions.
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
The above chart shows that this recession is not comparable to other post WW2 downturns. (Indeed, neither are modern day payroll nor unemployment stats directly comparable with any of the data prior to 1990 [[guess which way they've been doctored, …er, 'adjusted'!?!: normxxx]])
Perhaps the recession is over soon, but given the shape of the curves above, can we expect a typical recovery in the stock market and/or the economy? There certainly may be a recovery that will show up in stock prices by the end of the year, but being sure of a rally is a bit overconfident. The bottom could indeed be in, even though it fundamentally does not feel like it should be. [[Well, we could always have a double dip, like 1980-82: normxxx]]
The model I think we may be following looks more like this.
Nikkei Japan Index 1980-Present
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
Technically there is room for huge rallies, but there is also room for plenty of misery (for both bulls and bears). The key will be to stay nimble as the opportunities that present themselves may not follow traditional post WWII recovery patterns.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
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