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George
Soros & the Worst Financial Market Crisis in 60 Years
By
Clif Droke
ClifDroke.com
March
12, 2008
“Blood
in the streets” is the central theme of the financial news lately.
Barely a day goes by without a barrage of bad news hitting
investors like a runaway freight train.
In just the past few weeks in the Financial Times newspaper
we see the following headlines:

These
are a mere sampling of the bearish media sentiment out there right
now.
My
favorite of these headlines as shown in the above “fear collage”
is the one that says, “The worst market crisis in 60 years.”
It was written by George Soros of Soros Fund fame.
I consider this a key sentiment indicator, for whenever the
mainstream financial press trots out the big dogs like Soros,
Buffett, et al, to remind us all of the obvious – after the trend
has pretty much played out – it’s time to start looking in the
other direction.
This
time is no exception as Soros has told us nothing that virtually
everyone has already has been told by the media ad nauseum, namely:
the credit expansion got out of hand and resulted in a real estate
bust, “market-neutral hedge funds turned out to be not
market-neutral and had to be unwound,” credit expansion “must
now be followed by a period of contraction,” “Investment
banks’ commitments to leverage buyouts became liabilities,”
“the U.S. Federal Reserve…may no longer be in a position to
[avoid a recession],” “If federal funds were lowered beyond a
certain point, the dollar would come under renewed pressure and
long-term bonds would actually go up in yield,” “a recession in
the developed world is now more or less inevitable,” “China,
India and some of the oil-producing countries are in a very strong
countertrend,” and finally, “The danger is that the resulting
political tensions…may disrupt the global economy and plunge the
world into recession or worse.”
(I like his use of the term “recession or worse.”
Kind of remind me of the famous phrase, “We could all be
killed…or worse!”)
Well,
Mr. Soros, are there any other media-propagated myths and clichés
you’d care to throw our way to enlighten us poor peasants?
I couldn’t help but chuckle after reading this editorial:
it’s like reading every bearish editorial and article of the past
year all rolled up into a single unit.
If any of you would like a re-cap of the past year’s fears,
I highly recommend reading Mr. Soros’ editorial.
(Who knows, you may even become a convert to the Financial
Armageddon Now! cause yourself.)
Of
course it would be foolish to suggest that Soros is less than
informed on the true state of affairs within the
U.S.
financial system. One
doesn’t become a billionaire by being financially inept.
What I am suggesting is that Soros is being less than
truthful. A poker
player doesn’t reveal his hand for all to see.
A financier doesn’t make is billions by telling everyone
what he’s betting his money on.
Poker players are masters of the art of bluffing and so is
Soros. If Soros is
telling the world that he’s taking the bearish bet, you can bet
your bottom dollar he has a bullish ace in the hole he’s not
telling you about. This
is how the game is played, my friends.
Fundamental
and technical analysts and financial pundits of all stripes are busy
wracking their brains trying to analyze the deluge of negative news.
Yet the single most reliable method of news analysis is being
grossly ignored by almost everyone.
The analysis I’m referring to is what I like to call
“Granville analysis.” Granville
analysis is based on Joe Granville’s classic observation, “The
obvious is obviously wrong.”
It’s
so simple to perform Granville analysis that anyone with a modicum
of common sense can do it. Here’s
how it works: simply
make a list of all the bearish or super pessimistic news headlines
concerning the economic and financial market outlook.
Instead of taking these headlines at face value, make a
cumulative index and add together all the headlines from the
mainstream media that agree with each other.
Then apply Granville’s Golden Rule to each one.
Each time you see a super bearish headline, remind yourself
that everyone else already knows and believes this to be true and
the value of commonly believed information is exceedingly small.
Remember at all times Granville’s Golden Rule, “The
obvious is obviously wrong.”
Another
way of phrasing this observation is found in Laszlo Birinyi’s
famous “Cyrano Principle,” which states: “If the concerns of
the market are as obvious as the nose on your face, the market and
monetary policy makers will have an amazing ability to adapt and
adjust.”
Next
we have the weekend edition of the Financial
Times, dateline Jan. 27. The
front page proclaims, “The week that shook the world: How the
markets went to hell and back.”
This immediately brings to mind the same exact terminology
used during the last major correction low on August 16, 2007.
I remember reading an article in the Times
from that correction bottom in August and a New York floor trader
was quoted as saying, “It’s like the market went screaming into
hell, then turned back after it didn’t like what it saw.”
It would seem then that whenever the use of the highly
emotive term “hell” is used in connection with a financial
crisis, an internal market low has been reached.
Here
are some more headlines from recent editions of the Times
to underscore the emotional nature of this panic bottom:
“Five days of turmoil and more volatility to come,”
“’It felt like the market had fallen off a cliff’,” and
“Potential for more thrills and spills.”
Several
super bearish headline stories have already appeared on the front
covers of the major
U.S.
news magazines. These
are the type of stories that appear only once every few years, not
just at short-term lows. They
mark significant intermediate-to-longer-term lows.
One
of the best measures of contrarian sentiment I’ve seen yet is
found in a recent issue of Business
Week. It shows page
after page of cartoon graphics featuring a bear, implying that
we’re in a bear market. On
page 24 the feature article begins, “How real was the
prosperity?” It shows
a picture of an over-inflated Uncle Sam character, representing the
U.S.
economy and stock market, being attacked by an angry bear with his
claws bared.
On
page 28 the headline reads, “What could cage the bear?”
The graphic depicts Uncle Sam trying to push the defiant bear
into a cage. On page 32
we are greeted by the headline, “Too big to fail” in reference
to the banks. The
cartoon shows Uncle Sam trying desperately to keep a bank building
from being toppled by the angry bear, who has the upper hand in the
struggle.
The
headline on page 36 is “Looking for a quick fix” and shows Uncle
Sam grappling with the bear. In
reference to this question, BW responds “What would
Washington
’s consumer stimulus package buy?
Not much more than a little time.”
Last
week I received the following e-mail:
“He
was just spotted by me on the cover of CBS Marketwatch homepage Fri
523P CST. Will he make
to the cover of Time, Newsweek , or Biz Week for Monday?”
The
reference was to this growling grizzly shown below.
It couldn’t have come at a better time (from a
contrarian’s perspective)!

So
there you have it, mainstream media sentiment in microcosm.
The sentiment couldn’t be any more bearish right now.
Everyone is talking about recession and more financial
turmoil as if it’s inevitable. That by itself is an indication
that the stock market has already priced in the worst and an interim
bottoming process is well underway.
Clif Droke is the editor of the three
times weekly Momentum Strategies Report newsletter, published since
1997, which covers U.S. equity markets and various stock sectors,
natural resources, money supply and bank credit trends, the dollar
and the U.S. economy. The
forecasts are made using a unique proprietary blend of analytical
methods involving internal momentum and moving average systems, as
well as securities lending trends.
He is also the author of numerous books, including "How
to Read Chart Patterns for Greater Profits."
For more information visit www.clifdroke.com
© 2004-2008 Biiwii.com
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