Finance's Euphoria: The Epilogue -- What Record High Dollar Volume of Trading Says About
Confidence
November 6, 2009
The following article was adapted from the November 2009 Elliott Wave Financial Forecast and
reprinted with permission here. Until Nov. 11, you can read the rest of this brand-new report for free, during Elliott
Wave International's FreeWeek of U.S. forecasts. Learn
more about FreeWeek, and download the rest of this report and others for free here.
By Steve Hochberg and Pete Kendall
When Wall Street’s total value of assets rose to a “mind-boggling 36.6 percent of GDP” in late
2006, The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast published a chart of U.S. financial assets literally rising off
the page.

The Financial Forecast observed that financial engineers had “found a new object of investor affections—themselves” and
asserted that “the financial industry’s position so close to the center of the mania can mean only one
thing; it is only a matter of time” before a massive reversal grabbed hold. Financial indexes hit their all-time
peak within a matter of weeks, in February. The major stock indexes joined the topping process in October 2007 and
in December 2007 the economy followed. Subscribers will recall that one of the most important clues to the unfolding
disaster was the level of financial exuberance relative to the fundamental economic performance.
This chart of the value of U.S. trading volume (courtesy of Alan Newman at www.cross-currents.net) reveals that
the imbalance is far from corrected.

Incredibly, total dollar trading volume is even higher now than it was in 2007 when the economy was humming along.
In June 2008, dollar trading volume also defied an initial thrust lower in stocks and the economy, eliciting this
comment from the Financial Forecast:
The chart of dollar trading relative to GDP shows how much more willing investors
are to trade shares in companies that operate in an economic environment that
is anemic compared to that of the mid-1960s. A basic implication of the Wave Principle
is that the public will always show up at the end of a rally, just in time to
get clobbered. This chart shows that it is happening in a big, big way now because
the market is at the precipice of the biggest decline in a long, long time.
Total dollar volume continues to rise despite further fundamental financial deterioration. Yes, GDP experienced
a one-quarter, clunker-aided uptick of 3.5 percent in the third quarter. But the economy is in far worse shape than
it was when we made the above statement. In fact, its recent performance on top of the decades-long economic underperformance
(which is discussed extensively in Chapter 1 and Appendix E of the new edition of Robert Prechter's Conquer
the Crash) means that industrial production just experienced its worst decade since 1930-1939. Total manufacturing
employment slipped to 11.7 million people, its lowest level since May 1941 when it was 33 percent of all jobs. According
to Bianco Research, manufacturing now accounts for only about 9 percent of the workforce. Finance anchors the economy
now, which makes it far more susceptible to non-rational dynamics.
As Prechter and Parker explain in “The Financial/Economic Dichotomy” (May 2007, Journal of Behavioral
Finance), a financial system is not bound by the laws of supply and demand in the same way that an industrial economy
is. In finance, confidence and fear rule decisions. “In the financial context,” say Prechter and Parker, “knowing
what you think is not enough; you have to try to guess what everyone else will think.”
We do know one thing: When everyone is thinking the same, the opposite will happen.
Right now, record high dollar volume of trading shows that confidence, at least on this basis, has reached a new
historic extreme.
…
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Steve Hochberg and Pete Kendall are co-editors of the Elliott Wave Financial Forecast.