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Bull market a year old

One year ago this week marked the low point for North American stock markets and the beginning of one of the most surprising bull markets ever.

Market divided on whether rally can continue

Investors had no way of knowing it at the time, but one year ago this week marked the low point for North American stock markets and the beginning of one of the most astonishing bull markets ever.

Early March last year was a time of widespread selling in both Toronto and New York. The S&P/TSX composite index hit an intradaylow of 7,479.96 on March 6, 2009 its lowest level since 2003. Its low close came three days later on March 9 when it ended the trading day at 7,566.94.

Tracking the bull
Market Now Mar. 9/09 close All-time closing high
TSX 11,964 7,566 15,073 (June 18, 2008)
Dow 10,553 6,547 14,164 (Oct. 9, 2007)
S&P 500 1139 676 1561 (Oct. 12, 2007)

That low represented a stunning dropof almost 50 per cent from its all-time closing high of 15,073 reached just nine months earlier.

The market carnage also reached its trough in New York a year ago. On March 9, 2009, both the Dow Jones industrial average and the S&P 500 hit12-year lows as the globalfinancial meltdown gathered steam.

Since that gloomy week, however,the markets have staged one of the most powerful rallies of all time.

Unprecedented gains

Due in large part to a doubling of the financials index and rising commodity stocks, the S&P/TSX composite index has risen almost 60 per cent in the past year.

The Dow and S&P 500 are up61 and 68 per cent, respectively,from their bear market lows.The Nasdaq composite index is up abut 80 per cent.

Run-ups that large in such a short period of time are unprecedented in North American market history. But even with all the gains of the last year, stock markets in both Canada and the U.S. remain well below their all-time highs, which were reached in 2007 (in the U.S.) and 2008 (in Canada).

Analysts say the markets have been rising on better-than-expected economic data, rising commodity prices and solid earnings, which have suggested that a recovery is finally underway.

Analysts divided

Ian Nakamoto, director ofresearch at MacDougall, MacDougall & MacTier, said that looking ahead, 60 per cent annual gainsare clearly unsustainable. Still,hesees some room for modest growth for the remainder of the year, forecasting a year-end targetof 13,000 for the S&P/TSX composite index about eight per cent higher than where it is now.

"At this point, it's betterto invest in the stock market rather than fixed income vehicles," he says.Nakamoto divides the rally so farinto two phases: the"financial system's not going to collapse" phaseand the "economy is expanding" phase.

"We're moving into a phase where the rally is more sustainable," he says.

Others, however,think the rally is alreadylooking like it's past its "best before" date.

'The market is getting ahead of itself.' Ross Healy, CEO, Strategic Analysis

"A lot of cooling out will be required to bring the market in line with longer-term prospects," says Ross Healy, chief executive officer of Strategic Analysis.

"The market is getting ahead of itself," he told CBC News. "Investors should be cautious."

When he looks at the U.S., he says he sees room formore caution because of the precarious state of the U.S. consumer. "Seventy per cent of the economy isn't booming," he says, referring to the percentage of U.S. GDP that consumers account for.

The most recent figures from the Canadian mutual fund industry show that investors are finally responding to the recent market gains bycautiously wading back into Canadian equity funds.

For 2009 as a whole, however, the industry recorded $6 billion in net redemptions in equity funds, the Investment Funds Institute of Canada said.

Fixed income and balanced funds were the most popular choices of fund buyers last year, as cautious investors showed a preference for funds that had a mix of equities and bonds.