This Week Is Do or Die for Market Bears

This Week Is Do or Die for Market Bears · Daily Ticker

The bears have been successively tempted, taunted and trapped throughout 2013. It’s now looking as if the debt-ceiling brinksmanship in Washington will serve as the bears last obvious chance to eat this year.

On its way to a 20% gain at the recent market highs, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (GSPC) has offered market skeptics a series of fleeting and frustrating setbacks, bending as some crisis or another flared only to quickly rebound with a bear-singeing rally.

Even before the year began with a deadline fiscal agreement and relieved surge in stocks, a deep reservoir of investor anxiety was in place. Still shaken by the 2008 financial crisis and its aftershocks, exasperated by Congressional dysfunction, and suspicious of the “reality” of the bull-market gains amid unprecedented Federal Reserve money-pumping, the public and Wall Street pros alike have been prone to flinch at any unwelcome headline all year.

Related: Stocks Could Fall 20-30% if Shutdown Isn’t Resolved Soon: Barry Ritholtz

The list of potential bull-slaying financial and policy snafus since January include:

  • a messy Italian election that imperiled European debt-service pacts

  • the de facto insolvency of Cyprus

  • Fed's surprise move to continue its heavy asset-purchase commitment at current levels

  • a potential “hard landing” in China

  • capital flight from emerging markets

  • a threatened attack on Syria

  • the impending expiration of the U.S. Treasury’s borrowing authority amid a government shutdown

These episodes – which seemed daunting and fully capable of derailing the upward run in risk assets – led to a half-dozen 2% to 5% pullbacks in the equity market, none of which lasted long and all of which gave way to a new high. As a result, the pool of bearish sentiment has been partially, but nowhere close to entirely, drained away.

Gold, which many view as doomsday insurance, is in a bear market, evidenced by the steep drop from $1,700 per ounce to a summertime low of $1,200. And the public has begun sending fresh money into stock mutual funds in recent months, after years of shunning the market in favor of bonds.

Last Thursday, when stocks rallied hard on hopes that a debt-ceiling breach would be avoided and a short-term budget deal accomplished in Washington, one could see signs of some bears beginning to make tracks away from their downside trades. Gold fell 2.2% on the day to a three-month low. And, as I discussed with Yahoo Finance Editor-in-Chief Aaron Task in the attached video, bets that stocks would become increasingly risky and volatile were unwound.

The CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index (VIX), a gauge of expected skittishness in stocks, collapsed by more than 20% from midday Wednesday through Thursday, from above 21 to around 16. These days, this index is not a mere abstract statistical curiosity, but something that one can virtually buy and sell. VIX futures and options and exchange-traded baskets such as the iPath S&P 500 VIX ST Futures ETN (VXX) are among the most popular new trading instruments launched in recent years. Despite the fact that buyers have consistently lost money betting on sustained higher volatility, they are heavily traded and owned.