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Bob
Hoye
By
Bob Hoye
Institutional
Advisors
June
11, 2009
The
following is part of Pivotal
Events that was
published for our subscribers June
4, 2009.
Signs Of The Times:
Last
Year:
It
seems like it was ages ago, but it was only a year ago when
"Peak Oil" was the focus of fashionable research:
"To
be sure, a crash in the oil market seems improbable."
–
Bloomberg, June 3, 2008
"How
to Profit From Peak Oil?
–
Doug Casey, June 5, 2008
Steel
prices were also impetuous as U.S. Sheet-steel prices rose 20% in
May, which amounted to a 76% gain since January 2008.
"OPEC
has already done what OPEC can do and oil prices will not come
down."
–
OPEC President Chakie Khelil, Breitbart, June 24, 2008
Almost
without significance on June 22, Shadow Government Statistics noted
that "Annual
contractions in Industrial Production do not happen outside of a
recession." It
took until December 2008 before the NBER decided that the recession
started in December 2007.
Our
view then was that the credit contraction that started in May-June,
2007 would eventually break all commodities. (More below.)
*
* *
* *
This
Year:
"Given
the Fed's inability to cut rates further, the Fed should pledge to
produce significant inflation."
"I'm
advocating 6% inflation for at least a couple of years. It would
ameliorate the debt bomb."
–
Bloomberg, May 19 2009
The
first quote was by Gregory Mankiw, and the second by Kenneth Rogoff.
Our readers will recall
that in December 2007, Mankiw boasted that nothing could go wrong
because of the "Dream Team" of policymakers.
"U.S.
To Suffer 'Hyperinflation' Approaching Levels in Zimbabe"
"I'm
100% sure that the U.S. will go into hyperinflation."
–
Bloomberg, May 27, 2009
"The
financial crisis hit commodities; otherwise the uptrend would have
continued. China is not in a recession and commodities will continue
the long-term bull market."
–
Donald Coxe, BNN, June 2, 2009
"Commodities
looking very good; will outperform equities. Uncle Sam has the
biggest printing press – ever!"
–
BNN, June 3,2009
*
* *
* *
STOCK
MARKETS
The
old saying in salesmanship is "When the going gets tough, the
tough get going." This was in mind when advising, over the past
two weeks, to be selling all equity sectors. As noted again last
week, market conditions and the establishment had become just as
excited as their counterparts were in May of 1930. Two key phrases
we have quoted were "difficult
to quench the fires of enthusiasm" and that the stock
market was providing a "cheerful
augury of a [business] revival
in substantial proportions some months hence".
Last
year's financial shock will bring more careful research to the
forefront. Yesterday Credit Suisse noted: "Risk appetite has returned to levels not
observed since November 2007, and equity-only risk appetite has
reached euphoric levels."
Our
review covered stock market dynamics, which some sectors generated
momentum seen at important tops. Market sentiment also reached
dangerous levels, as did establishment confidence, or perhaps hubris
could be used.
On
the later, the policy crowd is certain that its shopworn nostrums
really did end the crash, and prompted the "recovery" in
business, or as they now call it--the economy. As we have been
arguing, this is a fairly typical post-fall-crash rebound. This also
has been accompanied by revival in some items the establishment
dwells upon. As the WSJ reported on Monday:
"Better-than-expected
data on personal income, manufacturing and construction propelled
the S&P to a new 2009 high."
However,
the salient thing about the end of a great bubble is that the
economy turns down virtually with the stock market. That was the
case, using NBER data, in 2007, 1929 and 1873. It stands to reason
that the big rebound out of a classic crash would be accompanied by
an increase in business activity. The next step will be this
declining, almost right away as stocks, corporate bonds and
commodities roll over.
The
next phase of the overall contraction has been expected to resume by
mid-year. With the hit to the long bond, and now the hit to the
popular gaming items, this seems inevitable. Also supportive is the
rebound in the dollar, which become the focus of much derision, or
concern. We really enjoy pointing out that the worst thing that
could happen to speculative policymakers and markets is an outbreak
of sound currency.
There
is little point abiding with modern portfolio drivel about buying
"defensive" sectors. It is doubtful that any equity sector
will resist the next part of the bear and it is the epitome of folly
to buy a "defensive" stock on the assumption it will go
down slower than benchmark indexes.
Near
term, this week's reversal could roll over into an intermediate
decline, which is current analysis.
Historically,
we have had a count going beyond the big rebound out of a crash,
such as to April 1930 and May 1873, which was an important step on
the path to a lengthy contraction. The next key step has been the
failure that began some twenty months after the climax of the
bubble. Following the peak in September 1929 and September 1873, the
serious turn to another phase of illiquidity began in May 1931 and
May 1875.
Regarding
the latter date on May 29, 1875, The Economist wrote:
"A
sudden change has passed over the money market since last
[week].
Discovery of unsound business in quarters where no such discovery ought
to have been made. The evil is not extensive, however, it may have
the effect of inducing bankers to raise their [cash] balances to a degree."
Then
the markets rolled over.
In
May of 1931 the "discovery" was Creditansalt, the largest
bank in Eastern Europe. The run on deposits began in mid-May when
the Austrian National Bank, along with others, provided support. On
June 6 The Economist reported that the Austrian government would
guarantee all credits, and that the BIS, as well as ten leading
central banks would provide credit in foreign currencies and
concluded: "There
is now good ground for hoping that the corner has been turned... and
has a brighter side."
Of
course, the reason for detailing this is to get around the dogma of
interventionist textbooks that central bankers were
"stupid" in the 1930s and deliberately contracted money
supply. When reading actual accounts of that disaster it is
difficult to avoid concluding that policymakers tried very hard to
prevent that contraction.
When
reviewing all five previous post-bubble contractions it is rather
easy to conclude that each has overwhelmed the abilities of
policymakers to re-inflate a bubble. It is not the problem of not
timing the perfect rate cut to restore the phony prosperity of asset
bubbles, but a huge systemic problem.
Indeed,
financial history is a "due diligence" on central banking.
June
is the twentieth month since the stock market high in October 2007
and this season's joy may soon be dispelled by the
"discovery" of some bad banking.
We
have been selling bank stocks while yearning that central banks were
listed. Our proprietary Bank Trading Guide has become volatile which
often signals change, but has yet to give the "sell".
INTEREST
RATES
Credit
Spreads responded, along
with other orthodoxies, to the change in currencies we called on
March 9. On the bigger picture, the US dollar was likely to decline
with the wave of asset re-inflation out to around May. The DX
declined from a high of 89.1 on March 9 to 78.3 on Tuesday.
Within
currencies, Monday's ChartWorks noted that the pattern on the
Canadian suggested a reversal. Yesterday's hit to asset prices and
the jump in the DX from 78.5 to 79.5 could be the first step towards
a reversal – as was the 2-cent drop in the C$.
Obviously,
it will take some work to accomplish the reversal and it seems to be
starting at the right time. In which case, currency reversals will
have bracketed both ends of the move. This makes sense as it is a
world of asset deflations and then inflations.
The
latter has been likely to run from the crash to around May. This
would be within the massive credit contraction that started in
May-June 2007. At the moment the street is convinced that the Fed
has arranged for "hyperinflation" to repudiate debt. We
think that "bond vigilantes" are back in slamming the long
bond down in price. This, and the next leg down in all other classes
of bonds will shut the door on the Fed's ambition to destroy the
dollar.
For
hysterical analysts who have been calling for a Weimar inflation –
there was virtually no credit market in Germany in the early 1920s
and policymakers could go directly to real printing presses. It is
likely that continuing contraction of our unsupportable debt will
deny policymakers most evil intentions. Mainstream theories depend
upon the notion that the Fed's expansion of credit forces a business
expansion. The problem is that this is a primitive syllogism whereby
cause and effect is concluded when there is none.
Yes,
credit does expand during a boom – just as roosters crowing in the
morning "cause " the sun to rise. The best way to consider
it is that credit and business expand and then contract together. At
the top aggressive employment of leverage will guarantee that when
the contraction starts power shifts from central bankers to margin
clerks whose job description is vastly different to your basic
central banker. Ironically, it seems that the Fed's job has been to
get the accounts leveraged, or out of line, while the margin clerk's
is to get them in line.
This
came into force with the turn in the credit markets in mid 2007, and
it is worth emphasizing that the reversal to disaster was on
schedule. We noted at the time that the Fed had virtually no
influence on the curve or spreads and that no amount of cuts in
administered rates or "stimulus" would prevent the
contraction. Last summer we expected a classic fall crash, like 1929
or 1873 and even if policymakers knew it was coming their efforts
would be futile.
However,
history then called for a fabulous rebound out to around May that
would, briefly make the Fed look good. This is now in the market
and, sadly, the establishment really believes it. Well, they have to
– don't they?
Generally,
prices have reached momentum levels that could turn them down. In
which case, monetary power will return to margin clerks. Always a
corrupt remedy, hyperinflation in dollar terms seems improbable.
Back
to the numbers, on March 9 the BBB spread was 582 bps, and now it's
at 280 bps which is a remarkable, and we would add, speculative
decline. Junk has gone from 3800 bps to 1904 bps.
With
this the yield has declined from 42% to 23.49%. One measure on
momentum that we have is JNK which, with only brief history is at a
level that ended two earlier rallies in price. Another is XCB on
Canadian corporate bonds and with data back to late 2006, the RSI is
at "stop" levels.
A
price-rally with narrowing spreads has been expected on our
historical work as well on the seasonal "good stuff" into
May. Our advice is to get out, while the getting is good.
Link
to June 5, 2009 ‘Bob
and Phil Show’ on Howestreet.com:
http://www.howestreet.com/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1236
Link
to June 8, 2009 BNN (Business News Network) interview:
http://watch.bnn.ca/#clip180994
bobhoye@institutionaladvisors.com
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