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S&P500 And Silver Price Similarities – Tops And Bottoms

Market Analyst, Author, and Founder of The Deviant Investor
January 8, 2016

Examine the 30 year log scale chart of the S&P500.  What I see:

  • Tops occurred about every seven years. Tops were usually rounded, followed by intense drops.
  • Tops were approximately Aug. 1987, Jan. 1994, March 2000, Oct. 2007, and May 2015.
  • Once the S&P broke below the red up-trending support lines in 2000, 2007, and (probably) in 2015, the rally was over and large corrections occurred.
  • The next large move in the S&P looks like it should be, based on history, a substantial correction to the 600 – 1,400 range.

Other Considerations:

  • Federal Reserve easy money has helped create the last six years of S&P rally. The Fed has been propping up the stock and bond markets while it has been antagonistic to the silver and gold markets.
  • Investors, Wall Street, pension funds, and more will scream in anguish if the S&P crashes. The upcoming correction/crash could be worse than the 2008 crash.
  • Market breadth, P/E ratios, other fundamentals, crashing commodity prices, and accelerating wars also indicate a likely correction.
  • We have been warned, just as we were in 2000 and 2007.

Shorter Term:

Examine the weekly S&P500 on a log scale for two periods, 2003 – 2008, and 2010 – 2015.  There are similarities.

  • Significant bottoms: 3/14/03, 8/13/04, 8/17/07, 11/30/07
  • Significant bottoms: 7/2/10, 9/23/11, 10/17/14, 8/28/15
  • Major top: 10/12/2007
  • Major top: 5/22/2015

The bottoms and single top line up fairly well.

Note that five months after the 2007 high the S&P500 bottomed in March 2008, rallied back into May 2008, and crashed from there.

Three months after the May 2015 high the S&P500 bottomed in late August 2015, rallied back to November 2015, and — we are waiting to see if a crash occurs in 2016.

WHAT ABOUT SILVER?

Examine the 30+ year log scale chart of (paper) silver.  Note the major lows in silver prices, as indicated.

Silver lows occurred about every seven years in May 1986, February 1993, November 2001, October 2008, and December 2015.  Now compare the silver lows to the S&P500 highs over the past 30 years.

S&P500 Tops                                             Silver Bottoms 

August 1987                                                May 1986

January 1994                                              February 1993

March 2000                                                 November 2001

October 2007                                              October 2008

May 2015                                                     December 2015

 The S&P500 tops line up moderately well with silver bottoms.  The last three S&P500 tops have preceded silver lows.

WHAT DOES THIS PROVE?

In my opinion this proves very little, but the above certainly SUGGESTS the following:

  • The S&P500 has peaked about every seven years and the peak in May 2015 probably marked the end of this seven year cycle.
  • The next big move in the S&P500 will probably be down, based on cycles, the 30 year charts and the five year charts.
  • Silver bottoms occur about every seven years and roughly line up with S&P500 tops. Assuming the S&P500 has topped, that supports the expectation for a silver low in December 2015 or perhaps 2016-Q1.
  • The next big move in silver should be a substantial, multi-year rally to much higher prices. My 5 – 7 year estimate is $100 per ounce for physical silver.
  • Continuing central bank “money printing,” currency devaluations, fiscal and monetary madness, unsustainable debt levels, massive deficits, and accelerating wars suggest higher silver prices.
  • In the long term, silver prices increase along with US government official national debt, deficits, and dollar devaluations. Increasing debt, deficits and devaluations are all but guaranteed, and consequently so are long term silver price increases.
  • Wars, political stupidity, monetary and fiscal madness, and central bank interventions all seem to be in “bull” markets. Expect silver prices to benefit from all the above.

Read:        

Spitznagel:  When’s the Crash Happening?

Summary:  Buy silver, sell the S&P500, rig for stormy weather…and expect a turbulent 2016.

Silver thrives, paper dies!

Gary Christenson

The Deviant Investor

Gary ChristensonGary Christenson is the owner and writer for the popular and contrarian investment site Deviant Investor and the author of the book, “Gold Value and Gold Prices 1971 – 2021.” He is a retired accountant and business manager with 30 years of experience studying markets, investing, and trading. He writes about investing, gold, silver, the economy and central banking.


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