Technician Corey Rosenbloom, of AfraidToTrade.com, highlights the stealth bull market he sees secretly strengthening in the US bond market and how an investment in a bond fund—normally something you would avoid if you expected a bullish stock market—could have net a considerable gain.

Pop Quiz: Would you have made more money holding bonds all of 2014 or stocks?

Easy, right? Stocks made many new all-time highs throughout the year and advanced 13% for a great year.

Did you know bonds—at least measured by tradable ETF TLT—almost doubled that gain?  It’s very hard to believe.

But it’s true.

Here’s the chart and the stealth bull market secretly strengthening in the US bond market:

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If you invested $100,000 in the SPY (or rough equivalent US equity ETF) at the beginning of 2014 and sold at the end, you would have gained roughly $12,000 (not including dividends).

That same investment in the TLT bond fund—normally something you would avoid if you expected a bullish stock market—would have gained you almost $23,000.

I believe this to be one of the most fascinating, unexpected, and underreported facts of the markets in 2014.

From the percentage-based chart above, while the S&P 500 had five pullbacks (retracements) in 2014, bonds gained strongly each time stocks pulled back.

The key factor in the strength in bonds was that bonds really didn’t retrace or give much ground all year (except September and October).

In other words, bonds stayed strong almost all year, rallying as would be expected during sell-swings in the stock market…but also rallying right along with stocks during periods of bullish money flow into US equities.

Yet here we are with the TLT at new highs and continuing a strong and enviable bullish trend:

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The end of 2014 saw three small bull flags occur in price, vaulting price to new highs above $130.

Let’s step back and view the larger picture, spanning the 2008 stock market crash and beyond:

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I could ask a different question:

“Given that stocks and bonds often do well in periods of stock market turbulence, is the bond market generally higher or lower than it was at the worst part of the 2008 financial crisis and bear market in stocks?”

Once again, we’ll be surprised to learn that bonds—measured by TLT and related ETFs—are at new highs, well above the temporary spike higher.

With stocks once again near all-time highs in what’s been deemed “the most hated bull market of all time,” you would simply assume that bonds must be making new lows or downtrending as stocks continue their uptrend.

But that would be very wrong.

Again, this is one of the most fascinating facts of 2014 and it could continue as 2015 unfolds.

By Corey Rosenbloom, CMT, Trader and Blogger, AfraidToTrade.com