Can "Devastating
News" Actually Be Bullish for Stocks?
Market Rationality vs.
Irrationality Extracted from EWI
Imagine a
natural disaster so big that the damage equaled 15% of a country's gross
domestic product (GDP).
Would
such a major event affect that country's main stock index? Many people would
say "Yes," and expect the stock index to decline.
This
is not a hypothetical scenario: Recent history includes just such an event, so
we know what direction market prices took after the disaster. Look at the chart
below and try to identify the approximate time when this hugely destructive and
costly (lives and treasure) event occurred:

Did you think the disaster happened around that mid-'90s
top? Or perhaps around the 2007 top? Those would be
rational answers, if outside events really do influence stock market trends.
The April Global Market Perspective
reported:
"On February 27, 2010, the sixth largest earthquake
ever recorded by a seismograph struck
"And yet …
You
can see the price action which followed the historic Chilean quake on the
weekly chart below (wave labels removed):

As you can see, the
Therefore: If external events drive stock index trends,
the rational conclusion is
that devastating news is bullish. (By the way, stock prices also rallied
following the Sept. 2010 earthquake that struck
But, of course, external events do not drive market trends. The truth
is that investor behavior is non-rational.
Let's return to the April Global Market Perspective::
"The Wave Principle...offers a far better way to make
sense of the apparently non-rational responses of stock markets to devastating
events. It shows that exogenous shocks have only short-term effects on a stock
market’s long-term endogenous pattern."
Indeed, endogenous (or internally regulated) stock market
patterns are the key to future prices. Markets are governed not by rationality,
but by collective psychology.