Below are two charts of the Down Jones Index and its similar counterpart in Japan the Nikkei 225. Notice how horrific the Nikkei has been since 1990. In the last 20 years, it is down roughly 70%. In the last 26 years it is flat. Our last 10 years in the DOW were essentially flat.

The steady drop since 1990 in the Nikkei can be described as a debt deleverage cycle. This has happened before all over the world including in the USA, but the last 20 years in Japan is an extreme example. The USA economy is far more dynamic than Japan ever was, which means it will be more difficult to repeat their anemic market performance.
However, we are making many of the same mistakes Japan made in dealing with our current economic crisis and therefore the economy will sputter along for years until we get our act together. What shape that sputtering takes is still in question. Just how bad will it get, and how long will it stay that way is a question that has a wide range of outcomes.
I have studied this situation non stop for years. I knew it was coming and I acted accordingly. I warned everyone on the blog and everyone who would listen to me in person. Here’s the problem…
Every scenario that I give a decent chance of happening going forward is bad. The staggering deficits and low interest rates (free money) from the FED point to serious inflation at some point in the future. At the same time, residential housing still has not bottomed, wages are doing anything but rising, unemployment is still a disaster, and credit has been cut and may still be contracting for consumers which all point to deflation. There is also the possibility that we enter into 1970′s style stagflation where inflation picks up and growth lags. Oh yeah, or the whole ponzi scheme the government calls the economy could just blow completely.
I have worked every number and model I can and I cannot see a good scenario playing out. Now, a less bad scenario could certainly occur, but that is still not good. People in America have gotten used to rising standards of living and luxuries most countries can only dream about, but that is changing due to inept government policies finally blowing up in our faces.
Does anyone believe the DOW would be up the way it has been the last year without the FED’s next to zero interest rate FREE MONEY policies? If you don’t, then what happens when these rates rise?
By the way, lately bond auctions have not gone that great and rates have started to climb.
It is is said that history may not always repeat itself, but it often rhymes.
You think nothing as bad as Japan the last 26 years can happen in America? Remember, it could happen to you.