I don’t spend much time looking at market cycles, but it seems there’s an important one that’s peaking out later this year. Readtheticker.com is a site that spends a great deal of time looking at market cycles. One specifically that has been brought up is the Kitchin Cycle.
According to Business Cycles and Depressions:
The Kitchin cycle is a cycle in the level of economic activity with a period of about 50 months or 3.5 years. It is named after Joseph Kitchin, a British statistician who identified both minor cycles of 40 months and major cycles of 7 to 10 years. [….] Kitchin examined monthly statistics on bank clearings, commodity prices, and short-term interest rates in the United States and Great Britain from 1890 to 1922. All three series apparently moved together through 40-month cycles.
I’ve re-created the Kitchin cycle on the chart below. As you can see, the past four cycle peaks have lead to bearish periods of trading. We have the 2000 tech bubble top, the flat/down year in 2004, the 2007 peak, and the mini-bear market in 2011. If history continues to repeat itself, then the next Kitchin cycle peak will be later this year around July to September.
I’m by no means calling for a market top later this year. I’m simply presenting one piece of data and you’re free to make you’re own conclusions. I continue to let price dictate my bias and will watch the market internals for clues to potential weakness in the current equity up trend.
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Enjoy reading posts. With the upcoming midterm election uncertainly political instability and mutual fund managers holding higher levels of cash, it probably is prudent to become more defensive in your portfolios
I think there is a typo, and “about 50 months” should be “about 40 months.”