Category Archives: NBER

The Dow and Recessions

The following is raw data on the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) versus the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) call of a recession from the peak to trough from 1900 to 2018.

Our aim is the determine if there is any coincidence or correlation between the two.  We’d also like to emphasize that it would be especially ideal if there is confirmation of the idea that the stock market is a leading indicator for the economy.

Simple Coincidence

Below is the simple coincidence of the DJIA and NBER.  This takes the date when the NBER calls a recession or an expansion and registers the level of the DJIA for the first trading day of month that an NBER call takes place and registers the level of the DJIA when the next NBER call begins.

The times when an recession was called but the DJIA was instead higher is indicated in red.  As an example, On August 1, 1918, the NBER indicated that there was a recession until March 1, 1919.  In that same period, the Dow increased from 80.71 to 85.58.

There was no instances of an expansion period being called by the NBER that was followed by a lower level in DJIA.

Date NBER DJIA
December 1, 1900 expansion 66.43
September 1, 1902 recession 66.55
August 1, 1904 expansion 52.73
May 1, 1907 recession 83.87
June 1, 1908 expansion 74.38
January 1, 1910 recession 98.34
January 1, 1912 expansion 82.36
January 1, 1913 recession 88.42
December 1, 1914 expansion 56.76
August 1, 1918 recession 80.71
March 1, 1919 expansion 85.58
January 1, 1920 recession 108.76
July 1, 1921 expansion 91.26
May 1, 1923 recession 97.40
July 1, 1924 expansion 96.45
October 1, 1926 recession 159.69
November 1, 1927 expansion 181.65
August 1, 1929 recession 350.56
March 1, 1933 expansion 52.54
May 1, 1937 recession 174.59
June 1, 1938 expansion 110.61
February 1, 1945 recession 153.79
October 1, 1945 expansion 183.37
November 1, 1948 recession 189.76
October 1, 1949 expansion 182.67
July 1, 1953 recession 269.39
May 1, 1954 expansion 319.35
August 1, 1957 recession 506.21
April 1, 1958 expansion 445.47
April 1, 1960 recession 615.98
February 1, 1961 expansion 649.39
December 1, 1969 recession 805.04
November 1, 1970 expansion 758.01
November 1, 1973 recession 948.83
March 1, 1975 expansion 753.13
January 1, 1980 recession 824.57
July 1, 1980 expansion 872.27
July 1, 1981 recession 967.66
November 1, 1982 expansion 1,005.70
July 1, 1990 recession 2,899.26
March 1, 1991 expansion 2,909.90
March 1, 2001 recession 10,450.14
November 1, 2001 expansion 9,263.90
December 1, 2007 recession 13,314.57
June 1, 2009 expansion 8,721.44
December 1, 2018 recession 25,826.43

There were 8 instances (17%) where there was no coincidence with the call of a recession or expansion and a commensurate decline or increase in the DJIA.

The above coincidence data is graphically represented below.  The areas in red includes the the divergence of the NBER call for a recession and the DJIA along with the period that immediately followed.  This is basically showing that any recession indication that is followed by an increased in the DJIA, and the subsequent expansion calls, are not considered to be coincidence until after the last expansion and the next coincidence of a recession call.

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Naturally, this puts the coincidence level at 65% instead of the previous 83%.  This is a literal take on whether there is a coincidence between the direction of the DJIA and when the NBER actually calls a recession or an expansion.  It could be said that the DJIA follows the directions of the NBER except that the call made for the economy usually takes place at least a year after the fact.

Recession Length and Coincidence

Another method for measuring the coincidence of the DJIA and the official NBER definition of a recession is to rank the recession by length.  In this case, we take the beginning of a recession and end of a recession and use the first trading day of that month and measure to the first trading day of the month when the recession is considered to have ended. Below is the ranking of the length recessions from shortest to the longest compared to the DJIA.

NBER peak NBER trough previous expansion (months) DJIA
January 1, 1920 July 1, 1921 10 -37.16%
January 1, 1913 December 1, 1914 12 -35.81%
July 1, 1981 November 1, 1982 12 3.93%
January 1, 1910 January 1, 1912 19 -16.25%
September 1, 1902 August 1, 1904 21 -20.77%
August 1, 1929 March 1, 1933 21 -85.01%
May 1, 1923 July 1, 1924 22 -0.98%
April 1, 1960 February 1, 1961 24 5.42%
October 1, 1926 November 1, 1927 27 13.75%
May 1, 1907 June 1, 1908 33 -11.32%
November 1, 1973 March 1, 1975 36 -20.63%
November 1, 1948 October 1, 1949 37 -2.97%
August 1, 1957 April 1, 1958 39 -12.00%
August 1, 1918 March 1, 1919 44 6.03%
July 1, 1953 May 1, 1954 45 18.55%
May 1, 1937 June 1, 1938 50 -36.65%
January 1, 1980 July 1, 1980 58 5.78%
December 1, 2007 June 1, 2009 73 -34.50%
February 1, 1945 October 1, 1945 80 19.15%
July 1, 1990 March 1, 1991 92 0.37%
December 1, 1969 November 1, 1970 106 -5.84%
March 1, 2001 November 1, 2001 120 -11.35%

In this perspective on the coincidence between recessions and the performance of the DJIA, we can plainly see that there is a 63% coincidence.  Overall, not a bad amount of coincidence.  However, we think that we can generate an outcome that is closer to 100% coincidence if we twist the data to fit our agenda.

There is a saying that “the stock market is a leading indicator for the economy.”  We promise we didn’t make this up. Furthermore, we have quoted the venerable Richard Russell of Dow Theory Letters fame to prove our point.

"The stock market is an indicator for the economy, a leading indicator (Russell, Richard. Dow Theory Letters.  October 4, 1967. page 2.).”

"Just as [Elliot] Janeway senses new leading indicator of the business-market condition, I too, often sense an index which I feel should be accorded great authority. Right now I would say it is world stock exchange averages (see last Letter). The leading stock markets of the world are now heading down in earnest (statistics in Barron's each week), and this has an ominous ring to it (Russell, Richard. Dow Theory Letters.  August 29, 1973. page 6.)."

"...if you believe that the market is its own best leading indicator then you have to believe what this market is saying (Russell, Richard. Dow Theory Letters.  September 19, 1984. page 2.)."

"I continue to remind my subscribers that the crucial issue here is NOT whether the CPI turns up or down next month, it’s NOT whether the leading indicators blip up or down in July. No, the critical issue here is the direction of the primary trend of the stock market (Russell, Richard. Dow Theory Letters.  June 8, 1994. page 2.)."

For nearly 6 decades, Richard Russell impressed upon his readers that the market leads the way when it came to understanding the direction of the economy.  Naturally, William Peter Hamilton, fourth editor of the Wall Street Journal, had the following to say about the insights of the stock market:

“The market is not saying what the condition of business is to-day. It is saying what that condition will be months ahead (Hamilton, William Peter. The Stock Market Barometer. Harper & Brothers. 1922. page 42.).”

Not to be outdone, Charles H. Dow, co-founder of the Wall Street Journal, has the following to say about the stock market as a leading indicator:

“The stock market discounts tendencies. Stocks went up before the improvement in business became pronounced.  Stocks will discount depression before depression actually exists, but this discounting quality in stocks make them run to extremes.  They discount shadows as well as substances and often anticipate that which does not occur (Dow, Charles H. Review and Outlook. Wall Street Journal. May 10, 1900.).”

We have spanned over 100 years of claims that the stock market is a leading indicator for the economy.  If this is true then we can then surmise that any of the years where the NBER called for a recession, the stock market had already embarked on a meaningful decline and if the data somehow shows a gain in stocks from a peak to trough period then it is because the decline and subsequent recovery was already in place.

Let’s see if the years when the DJIA registered a gain in the period from peak to trough of a recession was already preceded by a decline in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Evidence of Market Coincidence preceding Economic Reality

NBER peak NBER trough DJIA date DJIA peak DJIA date DJIA trough % change
July 1, 1981 November 1, 1982 4/27/1981 1,024.05 8/12/1982 776.92 -24.13%
April 1, 1960 February 1, 1961 1/5/1960 685.47 10/26/1960 566.05 -17.42%
October 1, 1926 November 1, 1927 2/11/1926 162.31 3/30/1926 135.20 -16.70%
August 1, 1918 March 1, 1919 6/8/1917 98.58 12/19/1917 65.95 -33.10%
July 1, 1953 May 1, 1954 1/5/1953 293.79 9/14/1953 255.49 -13.04%
January 1, 1980 July 1, 1980 2/13/1980 903.84 4/21/1980 759.13 -16.01%
February 1, 1945 October 1, 1945 3/7/1945 161.52 3/26/1945 152.27 -5.73%
July 1, 1990 March 1, 1991 7/19/1990 2,993.81 10/11/1990 2,387.87 -20.24%

Of the eight periods when there was a positive change in the DJIA within the defined NBER recession, five of them had already experienced a decline and recovery which explains why there was a positive result in our initial review.

The remaining three periods declined after the NBER recession had already started.  However, each of the three DJIA troughs occurred before the end of the NBER trough.  In this respect, even in failure, the stock market managed to fulfill half of the market bromide.  This means that 93% of the dates provided by the NBER since 1900 for both recessions and expansions were led by stock market changes in conformity with the later call in the economy.

Conclusion

In our simple coincidence evaluation, we found that only 17% of the periods did not conform to the idea that stock markets coincide with recessions and expansions.  Somehow, all available data suggests that expansions in the economy are perfectly aligned with stock market increases.

When ranked by the length of the recessions, there is a clear majority of recessions that align with declines in the DJIA.  However, the minority of recessions that show DJIA gains is somewhat confounding.

However, when we recognize that the stock market is a leading indicator for the economy, we find that the remaining 17% that don’t conform to the theory that the stock market is a leading indicator for the economy shrinks to 6.52% when accounting for the fact that market gains during a recession result from the market having recovered in advance of the recession low.

Dow Declines in Recessions

Below is the data of Dow Jones Industrial Average declines in the period indicated as a recession according to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) from 1902 to 2009.  The percentage change is arrived at by taking the first trading day of the month indicated as the beginning of a recession and the last trading day of the month indicated as the end of the recession.

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Industrial Production Index In Decline

As of November 2014, the Industrial Production Index* has been in a declining trend.

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The beginning of the rising trend was established in June 2009.  When looked at from the percentage change over the previous year, there has been been only six out of 17 times when the Industrial Production Index had a negative declining trend AND a recession was not called by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).

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Our Call on the 7-Year Recovery

On August 21, 2009, we said the following:

“Based on the combination of the Dow Theory confirmation of July 23, 2009 and the IPI turning up from the June low, I will have to guess that the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is going to proclaim June 2009 as the official end to the recession. The end to this recession will be lackluster and questioned from all corners.

“Additionally, the stock market will only follow the pattern of a cyclical bull market (bear market rally) within a secular (long term) bear market. I doubt that the general public will agree that the recession is over since jobs will not be as plentiful as the past.”

Below is the September 20, 2010 announcement from the National Bureau of Economic Research that the recession had officially ended in June 2009:

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In addition, the jobs data has been lackluster as is par for the course but was anticipated in our August 2009 review.

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Many claim that the employment data is rigged to reflect favorably for whichever politician that is in power at the time, so we have included the U-6 TOTAL unemployment data to verify if the economic environment really did turn around at or near the same period in time.

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From all appearances, the turn in the economy did arrive at the time that we thought that it should.  There are critics who say that the U-6 TOTAL unemployment data isn’t as low as it was at the 2007 period and therefore we aren’t in a recovery.  However, to achieve a low in the U-6 TOTAL unemployment you would need the clearly obvious bubble economy that we experienced at the peak of 2007.  Anyone who wants the same U-6 TOTAL unemployment as the 2007 period also wants the subsequent bust that is required of such a period.

We haven’t had as much luck calling a top in the economy as we had in calling the bottom.  On two occasions we had Dow Theory bear market indications which turned out to be false and in one instance, we’ve had the Industrial Production Index in decline.  However, we haven’t had both occur at the same time allowing us to make the call that the economy was entering a recession.

What are the odds that such a coincidence (saying that the recession was over a year before the NBER, that no one would believe it, that unemployment would be lackluster and that a bull market was in effect) could occur?  Got lucky is all we can say.

Industrial Production Index

Below is a table with the number of instances when the Industrial Production Index declined at least five months in a row.  We have also noted whether or not there was a coincidence with the period of decline in the Industrial Production Index with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) definition of a recession.

Is a Recession Coming?

Review

On August 23, 2009, using Dow Theory and the Industrial Production Index [IPI], we predicted that the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) was going to say that the recession ended in June 2009 (article here).  We specifically said the following:

“Implicit in my discussion of the IPI [Industrial Production Index] is that we are at a turning point for the economy. Based on the combination of the Dow Theory confirmation of July 23, 2009 and the IPI turning up from the June low, I will have to guess that the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is going to proclaim June 2009 as the official end to the recession. The end to this recession will be lackluster and questioned from all corners.”

As has been the case historically, the announcement that the recession had ended came 1-year and 3 months after the fact (NBER announcement found here.)  Additionally, few have been satisfied with the definition of a recovery especially if it means that job growth and income increases have not been exceptional.

Now we are faced with what we believe could be the defining moment for a sustained stock market and economic decline worthy of being deemed (by NBER) a recession.  The factors that go into this assessment are based on our interpretation of Dow Theory and the vacillations of the Industrial Production Index.

Dow Theory

Starting with Dow Theory, we have the following established indications:

  • On August 2, 2011, Dow Theory indicated that we were in the initial stages of a cyclical bear market (article here).  At the time, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) and the Dow Jones Transportation Average (IYT) fell below their respective June and March 2011 lows.
  • On August 9, 2011, we indicated that a bottom had been reached and that a bear market rally to prior highs was due, within the context of a cyclical bear market (article here).
  • On March 16, 2012, we demonstrated that the divergence between the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Average was confirmation that we’re in a Dow Theory bear market rather than a renewed bull market (article here).

Generally speaking, Dow Theory acts as a leading indicator of the direction of the overall economy, with the Industrial Production Index following behind as confirmation.  In this case, this is the first month that the Industrial Production Index (IPI) has declined after the Dow Theory bear market indication of August 2, 2011.

Industrial Production Index

Historically, the Industrial Production Index has “averaged” a decline of 1.44 consecutive months in periods of an economic growth period.  This suggests that if the Industrial Production Index declines for two full months in a row, it would be enough to give us the all clear as to whether we can consider the economy as having reverted back into a recession after the rise from the June 2009 bottom.  This interpretation relies on Dow Theory also having a bear market indication.  In order for this to be the case, The Dow Industrials and Dow Transports would need to remain below their respective 2012/2011 peaks.

Month IPI data
August 2011 94.1845
September 2011 94.3800
October 2011 94.9389
November 2011 95.0939
December 2011 95.9095
January 2012 96.5705
February 2012 96.5731
March 2012 96.5685
Source: St. Louis Fed

What would the Market Impact Be?

So far, we expect that the recessionary period would have at least four consecutive months of declines in the Industrial Production Index (IPI) and a total of at least  7 non-consecutive months of declines within the period considered a recession.  This would be on par with the recession from July 1990 to March 1991.  At the time of the 1990 to 1991 recession, the S&P 500 (SPY) declined -19.61% and the Nasdaq Composite Index declined –29.90%.

However, The stock market typically leads the call of a recession by topping out first.  this suggests that potentially, the April 2, 2012 high for the Dow Industrials was the top and we're now in a declining trend at least until August/September 2012 to 10,611.59.

Again, our preliminary prediction is that if we see a second month of declines in the Industrial Production Index while the Dow Theory bear market indication is in place, we’ll have what will be considered a recession by the NBER which would be announced from 9 months to a year after the fact.

As a sidebar to the discussion of the possibility of a recession, the long-term gold stock positions that we've recently recommended which includes Agnico-Eagle (AEM),  Gold Fields Ltd. (GFI) and Newmont Mining (NEM) will require reduced exposure or sold off since gold and silver stocks tend to perform worse than the general stock market during a recession.

Note: Industrial Production Index data is subject to constant revisions by the Federal Reserve Bank.  We hope to reassess the Industrial Production Index based on the most updated information that is provided by the Federal Reserve.

New Low Team Beats NBER to the Punch

 The New Low Observer (NLO) team has done it again on the economy, stock market and our “guess” of when the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) would declare the end of the recession that began in October of 2007.

 

First and foremost, the NLO team announced on July 24, 2009 (the initiation of the NLO site) that Dow Theory had indicated that we were definitely in a cyclical bull market. This ignores our article on February 11, 2009 titled “Convergence of Extraordinary Forces” that indicated that there would be a bottom in the market around June 2009. According to Dow Theory, a bottom in the stock market implies a trough in the economy as well.

 

Second, on August 22, 2009, the NLO team indicated that based on the Industrial Production Index (IPI) and the Dow Theory bull market indication the stock market and the economy were headed high.

 

Finally, along with our call to the end of the recession on August 22, 2009, we predicted that the NBER would “…proclaim June 2009 as the official end to the recession.” The headline out of the NBER today, September 20, 2010, is that “…a trough in business activity occurred in the U.S. economy in June 2009.”

 

Some of the articles can be verified with the postings on Seeking Alpha.com; which we cannot alter once published. Just look at the approximate date that the article was published since Seeking Alpha does not publish exactly when submitted.

 

Seeking Alpha Articles:

 

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