Here is part III of our most recent letter to clients.
What Then
Is The Longer-Term Outlook For The Economy?
Stocks?
{If you read
nothing else from these week's posts please read today's and tomorrow's entries.}
The stock market has
made a parabolic move higher in 2018 and so my remarks from here on need to be
recognized in that context. First, I am fairly positive for the next several
years regarding the economy assuming we don’t have an unexpected event wash
over the transom. As such, I believe we
may be about 40-50% through a longer-term secular bull market that potentially
could last at least another five years. The
reason I’m so positive has to do with the pace of technological advancement,
which is increasing exponentially. Pay
attention to almost everything that touches our lives and you’ll realize this
is true. Look at the advancements of
self-driving cars or the continued refinements of safety equipment garnered
from technology into autos. Medicine is
seeing advancements at a rate perhaps not chronicled since the beginning of the
20th century. Space
exploration is entering what I believe may well be it’s 2nd golden
age, rivaling even the days when Americans landed on the moon. Computer science and the technology it is
spawning are taking us into everyday realities that were once the province of
science fiction. Engineering concepts from hyper-drives to desalinization to porous
concrete have the potential to redesign modern cities and the way we live. Renewable sources of energy are becoming
significant sources of power. The coming
ability for example to put photovoltaic cells onto roof shingles is likely to
make solar powered energy more economic efficient even in areas that don’t see
the same amount of sunshine as places like California, Florida or Arizona. Behind all of this is the exponential and
geometric increase in knowledge that is unlikely to be curbed. Today, knowledge can be transferred around
the globe with the click of a mouse. An
idea formulated in London can be reviewed instantaneously in Chicago. You can make a phone call to Australia as
easily as you call your neighbor down the street. Short of some almost unimaginable cataclysm
this is unlikely for good or ill to ever go away. Behind these ideas are business ideas, jobs
and economic advancement. This is why I
believe we aren’t likely to enter into a bear market any time soon. This plus the lack of speculative excess
leads me to think this bull market could continue for years. However, please understand that being in a
secular bull market probably doesn’t mean the stock market will always be a
one-way ticket higher.
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