| HighlightsBull and bear market trends over the past 63 years reveal that  the current environment is most like that of the 1950s, when stocks  were in a bull market while bonds and cash were in bear  markets. Two Bears and a BullThe month of August has not been friendly to investors in any of  the major asset classes. Stocks have dipped and bond yields have  climbed, pushing bond prices lower. And, with the rise in inflation  to 2.0% (as measured by the Consumer Price Index), there is greater  purchasing power loss associated with holding cash or money market  investments. The stock market is likely in the midst of another temporary  pullback in a continuing bull market. However, other traditional  asset classes may be suffering from a bear market that may linger.  Many investors may not be sure how to proceed, since it has been a  long time since we have seen the current combination of bull and  bear markets among the three major asset classes. Bull and bear market trends over the past 63 years reveal that  the current environment is most like that of the 1950s, when stocks  were in a bull market while bonds and cash were in bear markets  [Figure 1]. 
 So while the current market combination is rare, it is not  unheard of. Nor has it been a fleeting or fragile one. For nearly  the entire decade of the 1950s, stocks remained in an  upward-trending secular bull market while bonds and cash were  mainly in a bear market. That is potentially an encouraging sign  that this pullback in the stock market may offer an attractive  buying opportunity as the bull market resumes. The Federal Reserve's (Fed) communications on tapering their  bond purchases has resulted in bonds entering a bear market. This  may continue in the coming years as the Fed ends the bond-buying  program. At the same time, the Fed is likely to keep cash yields  pinned down with no interest rate hikes likely for at least a year  or two, maintaining the bear market for cash. However, we are  likely to avoid the ugly triple-bear markets of the late 1970s,  where soaring inflation weighed heavily on all markets. Inflation  remains tame and stock market valuation (measured by the  price-to-earnings ratio) is below all prior bull market peaks over  the past 63 years, suggesting the potential for further gains ahead  along with modest economic and profit growth.
 
 
 
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