Editor's Note: Jon D. Markman writes a weekly column for CNBC on MSN Money that is republished here on TheStreet.com.
First they assassinate the generals. Then the colonels. Then they lure the captains and foot patrols into a trap and slaughter them en masse. And finally, they grab some pretzels, pop open a beer and light a cigarette. No, that's not a secret Pentagon war plan. It's the typical game plan for a "secular," or long-term, bear market -- which is what a lot of prominent market forecasters believe we have been experiencing, off and on, since 2000. With the broad market averages at four-year highs, this might seem like a very odd time to bring it up. But in the interest of public-service financial journalism, I feel obligated to let you know -- during the week that marks the six-year anniversary of Nasdaq 5000 -- that this view is advancing in popularity among much of the Wall Street intelligentsia. When you are laying out your investment game plan for the year, it helps to know what your enemy may be thinking -- or how you should act if you happen to share their views. And right now, they're shunning growth companies and sticking to the safe stocks of foodmakers, brewers and tobacco companies.




