Shares: Can The US Learn From Australia?

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

US shares may be close to regaining their losses for 2010, but the AMP’s chief strategist, Dr Shane Oliver says the US today appears to resemble the performance of the Australian economy and share market following its early 1990s financial crisis and recession.

The second 12 months after a bear market ends is often rough, compared to the big rebound that normally occurs in the first year.

This has certainly proven to be the case this year.

However, it is interesting to note the parallels between the weakness in the key direction setting US share market this year and the experience of Australian shares in 1992, when Australia was struggling to recover from its worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and worries about a double dip back into recession were intensifying.

But if the Australian experience 18 years ago is any guide, US shares are likely on track for much better conditions next year.

Bear market recoveries

The tables that follow show the experience following post war bear markets in US and Australian shares.

While the first 12 months typically sees strong gains – 39% on average in US shares and 28% on average in Australian shares – the next 12 months are often much tougher – with 8% average gains in US shares and 6% average gains in Australian shares.

The tougher performance in the second year usually reflects either worries about a tightening in monetary policy once the economic recovery is underway or worries about a double dip back into recession.

In the US, Europe and Japan this year it has largely been a case of the latter, with concerns about a “double dip” back into recession intensifying in the last six months or so.

Double dip worries in the US along with policy tightening have also weighed on share markets in China, Asia and Australia.

Parallels with Australia in the early 1990s

However, it’s interesting to note that the US economy and share market seems to be going through something very similar to what the Australian economy and share market went through in the early 1990s.

Back in the early 1990s Australia was struggling to throw off the effects of a severe recession that in part had its genesis in excessive corporate lending by the banks in the late 1980s.

The share market fell 32% from a high in September 1989 to a low in January 1991, which ushered in a recession through 1990-91.

While the share market rose by 39% between January 1991 to January 1992 and the economy started to recover from September 1991, through 1992 worries about a double dip back into recession intensified as:

  • The recovery was initially anaemic – with growth averaging around 2.8% in the first year – and jobless;
  • Unemployment continued to rise, not peaking until it reached 10.9% in December 1992, nearly 18 months after the economy had started to grow again;
  • Commercial property prices continued to collapse (office values fell around 50% over 3 years) and corporate failures threatened the financial system, with the failure of numerous financial organisations – eg, Estate Mortgage, Pyramid Building Society, all the state banks in Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria – and concerns that two of the top four banks might go bust. This was Australia’s equivalent of what the US has been going through over the last few years; and

As a result of the financial crisis private sector credit continued to fall in 1992, even though the recession had ended the year before.

Reflecting worries about a double dip back into recession, the Australian share market fell sharply into a low in November 1992 and its weakness is evident in the 9% fall evident over the January 1991 to January 1992 period in the second table above.

There are numerous parallels between Australia in the early 1990s and the US today: the size and scale of the financial crisis, the collapse in property markets, the anaemic jobless recovery and the continuing contraction in bank lending.

The chart below shows a comparison between the Australian share market over the four and a half years from July 1989 and the US share market from July 2007 to the present.

So far the US share market is tracking the experience of the Australian share market back in the early 1990s quite closely with a sharp bear market, strong gains in the first year of recovery, followed by weakness in the second year on the back of “double dip” fears.

And since the short term swings in the Australian share market are (irrationally) heavily influenced by the US share market, it has been following the US today even though its economy is in far better shape now.

Interestingly, if the relationship continues to hold then, while further weakness is possible in the next few months, the Australian experience of the early 1990s would suggest strong gains over the year ahead if double dip fears fade and the recovery continues as occurred in Australia back then.

Of course the US today is more fragile than Australia in the early 1990s, which had much lower levels of public and household debt and was a much smaller country so gained immensely from a global economic recovery.

So the US recovery is unlikely to be as strong as seen in Australia in 1993 and the returns from US shares are likely to remain c

About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

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