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Bernanke's
Character Test: Pre Fed Meeting Jitters, Indeflation and a
Prediction
By
Michael Nystrom
BullNotBull.com
Depression2.tv
April
30, 2008
The Wall Street Journal - the
mouthpiece of Business itself - had some stingingly harsh criticism
of the Fed on its Monday Opinion page. An editorial titled "The
Fed's Bender" begins:
So Federal Reserve officials are
whispering to reporters that they will consider a
"pause" after another interest-rate cut this week.
Perhaps we should be more respectful, but this sounds like the
alcoholic who tells his wife he'll quit drinking next weekend,
after one more bender. What Chairman Ben Bernanke needs isn't a
gradual withdrawal from easy money but membership in Central
Bankers Anonymous.
The Street wants a rate cut, and it is
being pushed heavily in the Media. Bloomberg tells us: Bernanke
May Have to Follow Volcker to Avoid Being Tagged Burns. Today
MarketWatch has a story which lists the many
compelling reasons for the Fed to halt its interest rate cuts.
And the sooner the better! The story ends thusly: "Finally, a
pause could even be taken as a sign that the worst is over for the
economy. Wouldn't that be a nice surprise?" This calls to mind
recent analysis by Dr.
Marc Faber, who has proven himself to be one of the most
thoughtful and level-headed analysts around. In this particular
piece, he demonstrates convincingly that inflation and deflation can
and do occur in different markets and in different parts of the
world simultaneously. Over the past 25 years, as a bubble has
inflated in one market, a corresponding deflation has occured
elsewhere. His conclusion:
The point that I cannot stress
sufficiently is that when a bubble bursts, it is a signal that the
economics of a region or sector have changed, or are about to
change for a very long time, if not permanently. I am, therefore,
surprised by how complacent and optimistic economists and
strategist have remained in the wake of the total collapse of the
CDO market and the widespread damage caused to financial stocks.
Over the last 12 months or so, one sector of the financial
industry after another has been hit, with the latest casualties
being credit card companies such as American Express.
This short paragraph should put
tomorrow's Fed announcement into better perspective than the hours
of MSM (mainstream media) speculation on the minutia of whether the
Fed cut a quarter point or not. What Dr. Faber is saying is that whatever
they decide is irrelevant. The late, great American bubble
economy was built on cheap and easy credit, and regardless of what
the Fed does tomorrow - a quarter point or whatever - that era is
over.
Inflation has no doubt been bad, thanks to a falling dollar and
rising oil and food prices. But let's take a look at what the market
is saying via some visual inspection of commodity charts. Data is as
of midday, Tuesday:
Crude oil, one of the recent inflationary
all-stars, is still in an undeniable uptrend, though it is pulling
back a bit today:

Likewise, corn remains near its recent high. The
recent ethanol craze makes corn a quasi-oil subsitute:

And rice, the subject of global panic, looks like
it might be cresting. (On the other hand, it may just be
consolidating for a further push higher.) The important thing to
note is that the rise has become parabolic, and we know what happens
to all parabolic rises.

But remember just a few short weeks ago? It was wheat
that was the subject of global panic. As I heard it, a form of wheat
rust was threatening the entire global wheat crop! Friends
prone to panic (of which I have many) were calling me up - how to I
buy wheat!? That was right near the second peak of a possible double
top on the wheat chart. Important point: Markets are emotional and
at times irrational.

Soybeans also are well off their highs, and this
chart is starting to get "that look:"

What "look" is that, you ask? That toppy, crashy kind of
look. A new high, a failure to reach the old high, then a collapse,
as seen below in sugar. Don't forget that sugar is also a quasi-oil
substitute. Nearly all of Brazil's cars are powered by ethanol made
from sugar. This leads me to believe that oil may have put its top
in, at least temporarily.

What else has got that "look?" Sad to say it to the gold
bugs, but gold has got the look too, and is down nearly $20 today.
Am I bearish gold? I have been short since the last Fed meeting via
futures contracts. But I am not bearish long term on gold - never
long term. Gold is money, end of story. Buy the bullion - physical
gold and keep it forever. But if you're trading shares or futures,
beware of excess leverage, as you can be wiped out completely if
you're long and fully leveraged. Read Jim
Sinclair's site for good advice.

We see prices continue to rise in a few areas: oil, rice, corn and
copper (not shown). Dr. Copper is near its high, but appears to be
having second thoughts about it. Elsewhere, we see corrections in
beans, wheat, sugar and gold. More commodities are correcting than
are rising. In my opinion, this is the effect of the global
deleveraging that we hear so much about. Commodity speculators
speculate with borrowed money. Borrowed money is getting harder to
come by, so the number of commodities still rising is shrinking.
The global deleveraging is also starting to be reflected in the US
Dollar, the currency in which all the above are priced. Yes, the
chart is ugly, but it may just be starting to turn up. Keep
your eye on the buck, which everyone has given up for dead.

Its pattern mirrors the 10-year Treasury yield. The Fed does not set
interest rates. The market sets rates - the Fed simply follows
along. And whatever the Fed decides tomorrow, the market has already
decided that it is time for interest rates to rise.

A global credit bust means - recession or not - less business
activity overall. Rising interest rates lead to a rising dollar,
which in turn leads to lower prices for anything priced in dollars.
This includes US stocks. The SPX has been unable to break through
1400 on the upside. Currently it is sporting what appears to be an
inverted head and shoulders pattern that projects an upside target
of around 1550. But patterns are not certainties - they merely
represent probabilities of what might happen next. A failed
head and shoulders is an excellent contrary indicator. Keep your eye
on the 1400 level on the SPX in the coming days. Sign
up here for updates.

A couple shorts in my portfolio:
The Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG). Do you like spending $7.25 on a
rice and bean burrito? I don't. I don't like overpaying to feel like
a peasant. I can do that for free. This chain is a fad, beans and
rice are expensive (even though they may have seen their highs),
people are eating out less, and when they do, I don't think they
want to pay $7.25 for a rice and bean burrito. And at least in my
area, there are several mom & pop burrito places that are both
better and cheaper. And the chart also has "that look."

Whirlpool. Housing bust means Whirlpool should continue down the
drain:

One to keep an eye on as an indicator that stocks really are in the
tank: Apple (AAPL). I got a newsletter this week that just put Apple
on their buy list. I read an article by Jim Cramer about how he
loves Apple. Everyone loves Apple. And their products are
affordable. Anyone can go to the Apple Store and buy a new laptop
for $1,200, or an iPod for $250. Affordable? Yeah, just put it on
your credit card and the payments work out to about $25 - $30 per
month. Easy. But what if you don't have a card, or any more room on
your card? Then Apple's shiny products cross into the realm of
"I wish I could afford one of those."
How long will it take the average worker, making $12 per hour, to
save up for Apple's cool gadgets, after paying his rent, gas, food,
other living expenses - and don't forget, taxes? The time is not yet
right to short AAPL, but keep your eye on it. As one of the leading
stocks of the past decade, this stock's direction should act as a
leading indicator for the economy. Apple is not yet ripe as a short.
Sign
up here to stay updated on when (or if) to short AAPL.

If the credit bubble has indeed burst, and Dr. Faber is correct that
the economics are now changed for good, we are in for a massive
deflation that will be reflected across all sectors of the economy
for a long time.
The Fed will announce its interest rate decision tomorrow at 2:15PM
ET. The WSJ article that I quoted above states:
The Fed's problem has been both
political and intellectual. Politically, Mr. Bernanke has been
unwilling to say no to Wall Street and the Beltway political
class, which reflexively demand easier money in a crisis. This
demand has become almost Pavlovian since Wall Street came to
believe during the late 1990s in what was known, fairly or not, as
the "Greenspan put." It takes character to resist this
political pressure, but that is what Fed chairmen are supposed to
have.
Will Bernanke show character tomorrow?
Not that it matters, I predict that he will. No rate cut. Markets
will react in shock. Stay
tuned for followup analysis.
Comments
welcome here.
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