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| A Look at the Upcoming 8-year
Cycle Bottom |
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The past few weeks have seen stocks and
commodities (notably gold and silver) take a beating.
After peaking in May (April in the case of the NASDAQ),
several major indices have declined to lower lows and
most recently hit lows for the year on Tuesday, June
13.
The culprit behind this decline, as we’ll
discuss in this commentary, is the 8-year cycle. This
important cycle is due to bottom in September. Since
we’re less than three months from the next 8-year
bottom it will do us well to examine the path that the
previous 8-year cycle took back in the spring and summer
of 1998 (commensurate with our current position within
this cycle).
That time frame in 1998 has a lot in common
with 2006. In the first half of 1998 a number of stock
market indices made new all-time highs as the late ‘90s
bull market was entering its final peak stage before
ending in 2000. For instance, the Russell 2000 small
cap index and the S&P 400 mid cap index both made
a new high in April ‘98. So did the Dow Jones
Transportation Average. Fast forward to this year and
we find that once again the Russell and the Transports
made new highs earlier this spring. In ‘98 several
major stock market indices made their highs in April
or May of that year. Perhaps not coincidentally the
new highs of this year in several indices were also
made in the April-May time frame.
Some interesting comparisons can be made
to this present market with the comparable time frame
during the 8-year cycle bottom year of 1998. In May
of ‘98 the Dow topped out just as it did in May
of this year. It slid off in May and then had a mini-collapse
in the early part of June which took the Dow down to
touch its 144-day moving average (Fibonbacci significance).
This in turn was followed by an oversold rally beginning
by the middle of June ‘98 which took the Dow back
up to its May high and even slightly above it. This
was followed by a reversal in July followed by the August
collapse into the 8-year cycle low in September.
Below you will see a replay of the 8-year
cycle bottoming process as experienced by the S&P
400 Midcap index (MID), which is an important broad
market benchmark and often serves as a leading indicator
to the larger cap indices.

A word about the 8-year cycle itself is
in order. The 8-year cycle is a composite of the 2-year
cycle, which bottoms in even numbered years. It’s
a component of the Kress 120-year cycle series with
a total of 15 of these 8-year cycles within a given
120-year cycle (the most recent 120-year cycle began
in 1894 and is due to bottom in 2014). The 8-year cycle
tends to bottom sharply but usually gives way to sustained
rallies in the months following the bottom (as in the
months following 1998).
If we extrapolate the previous May-September
time frame heading into the 8-year cycle low of 1998
and apply it to the May-September time frame of 2006,
we can already see many similarities to the way the
market pattern is unfolding. After already falling more
than 7% from the May highs, most major indices have
reached deeply "oversold" internal readings
commensurate with at least previous short-term bottoms
and technical rally attempts. As in June of 1998, will
the market be able to reverse off the most recent lows
made the week of June 12? That remains to be seen but
it would be surprising if there wasn’t at least
a token attempt at reversing from here. A rally up to
test the overhead 90-day moving average resistance in
some of the major indices (the Dow at roughly 11,200
and the S&P at the 1270-1275 area) would certainly
go a long way toward working off the oversold position
that has built up and would also be in the spirit of
the previous 8-year cycle period of June 1998 when there
was a temporary rally.
Looking beyond the immediate present,
the July-August period this summer is the time frame
that has the greatest interest to us comparable to the
final two months of the 8-year cycle low of 1998. Back
in July-August ‘98 the market was hardest hit
and fell almost continuously (along with several major
commodities) until the bottom in early September of
that year. From the spring peak that year until the
September lows the market had fallen in excess of 20%
in just a few weeks, making it one of the shortest bear
markets on record. With numerous interim bear market
signals having already been given, it’s looking
like a repeat performance of the ‘98 experience
is a good possibility before the current 8-year cycle
bottoms, i.e., a short-lived but potentially sharp bear
market.
What about gold and silver mining stock
sector? The XAU, much like the Dow, had a similar experience
heading into the 8-year cycle low of 1998. The XAU peaked
in late April ‘98 and declined sharply in May
before posting a bottom in June and rallying feebly
into July, then collapsing to its low for the year by
the beginning of September. After the 8-year cycle bottomed
in early September ‘98 the XAU roared ahead, making
a "V-bottom" reversal off the August lows
and retracing most of its previous loss from May-August
in just a five week period! (Note the chart below for
a picture of this volatile period from 1998 in the XAU).

The coming 8-year cycle low due around
the early part of September this year should allow for
a similar opportunity to buy the lows of this important
longer-term cycle, and hopefully ending what has been
an extremely volatile period for stocks and commodities.
***
Clif Droke is the editor of the daily Durban
Deep/XAU Report, a technical forecast and overview of
several leading gold stocks, including DRDGold and the
QQQ available at www.clifdroke.com.
He is also the author of numerous financial books, including
"Gold Stock Almanac 2006".
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