


Has anyone else noticed that the market is a bit bouncy lately? Perhaps "bouncy" is not the most erudite economic expression of my life, but it's descriptive. I remember, way back in the day, when swings of 100 or 200 points in the
All this bouncing nags me with a question: are analysts crazy? How do they manage to value stocks through the roof one day, through the floor the next, and then fly back up to the roof the day after? I have no answer. Analysis, however, I do have.
I recently downloaded the daily close for the
If it's a comfort to anyone, the Great Depression still takes first prize in volatility both in terms of quantity and duration.[3] We also see that the financial scare of the late 80's briefly produced volatility on par with the present. As a further comfort, we see that the
The second figure (center) brings a bit more granularity to our present condition. As of 5/29, the 30 day trailing standard deviation for change in the
So, after a bit of analysis, do I have some idea how to tell when things will calm down? Well, not yet. A comparison would be helpful. The final figure (bottom) shows the bouncy Great Depression, and then some. The volatility of the Great Depression was, well, very volatile. Looking from left to right, you can see that prices got really bouncy really fast and then dropped precipitously for a brief time. Prices then gradually became bouncier until they were almost as bouncy as they had been at their peak. After a tumultuous period, prices finally settled down around the beginning of 1934 and remained stable for over three years. And then World War II broke out. Another story.
What does this tell us about today? Well, our current drop in bounce might signal the beginning of a new, stable financial period. Or—perhaps more likely given its rather precipitous drop—something will slap the ball and make it fly right back up for a while just as it did in the great depression. There's a rally after the bottom of every bear market, and following every post-bear rally, there is a volatile period of price settling as the market digests all of that activity.[5]
When the trailing 100 day SD has remained between 1% and 1.5% for several months, I'll say the crisis has run out of steam. I can't forecast the future, but I at least have a somewhat rigorous way to recognize the present.
[1] This was hard. Lots and lots of coding. I'm kinda proud that it worked so well.
[2] Summary stats for the
[3] Summary stats for the
[4] And, assuming a normal distribution, I have about a 68% chance of being right, for those of you who care.
[5] See this piece by the senior editor of Money Magazine.