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Eyes
Wide Open
By
Gary Tanashian
http://www.biiwii.com
January
20, 2008
Well,
it has been a long time since our last letter, Eyes
Wide Shut? and it is good to have more time, post-blog,
for the main website. This letter will not focus so much on the disaster in progress that is the consumer
driven, debt
levered economy and associated financial markets because the major
media, presidential candidates (only one of the
would-be leaders, Ron Paul appears to have any clue about how a
healthy economy is supposed to run, where inflation really comes
from and how we can begin to get on a path to secure
a future for our children), talk radio and of course the
Decider-In-Chief and his SecTreas are on the job. The public's
eyes are indeed finally wide open with fear and the time for
taking precautionary measures was before the panicked herd began
looking for answers. Now those who have suddenly 'come to the
lord' need to get in line. Sensible measures like paying off or down
your debt, having exposure to gold and for liquidity, short term US
Treasuries can still be undertaken but the 'ask' has risen on the
trade. While I do not agree with Robert
Prechter's EWI on all counts, I found his 'Conquer the Crash'
invaluable and have followed many of its suggestions, including
keeping cash in short term treasury instruments, since
2002. A review of our past
articles shows a heightened level of caution throughout the
'inflation bull' that is now wrapping up. I guess the one that
said it in the most colorful manner was Abbott
and Costello Meet FrankenMarket. There is nothing wrong
with a little entertainment while chronicling the fundamentals of
disaster. So all that said, on to the state of various
markets. The
Good Gold
climbed to the 900 target off of a weekly symmetrical triangle laid
out in the previous letter and in fact came within $4 of our refined target
of 920 off of a subsequent daily symmetrical
triangle/consolidation. Because our focus has changed from
cautionary preaching to trading/investing in a market that is ever
more volatile, I am not focused so much on the metal for the
purposes of this letter. The focus is as it has been since
mid-summer 2007 on the precious metals miners and a stance of always
holding significant exposure to favored miners. That was in
spite of a nagging propensity of oil to outperform gold, which was
not helping the miners' bottom lines. But the yield curve,
credit spreads and gold outperforming most other commodities
relevant to miners' costs have long since turned favorable for the
gold sector. Now, the gold-oil ratio joins the other
fundamentals in presenting a bullish picture. 
Gold/Oil
has finally broken out on the weekly chart and may have a bit of
resistance short term, but indicators like MACD, PPO and TRIX
show a move in its infancy. Gold miner CEO's (at least the
smart ones) prepare for good times ahead when they see an oncoming
economic contraction because their costs will decline as their
product declines less than most other assets, if it declines at
all. Gold has been and will continue receiving the monetary
bid, but at this point there are likely many 'commodity bull'
speculators still to be wrung out. It is painful suffering
through events like last week, but my discipline has been that no
matter what the technicals say - and they surely called for a
correction/consolidation - I must maintain core positions.
That has been the stance ever since precious metals miners'
fundamentals began falling in line like dominoes last summer.
The stance also calls for having substantial cash percentage
available at all times to take advantage of these events. I am
doing so all in and around this process. 
The
chart of HUI shows some parameters. We have already 'fibbed'
to 50% and while bottom picking can be fun, it is wise to save
powder and discreetly buy quality stocks at logical support
levels. HUI definitely has the potential to go lower, but so
too has it satisfied enough levels to call this a solid
correction. If the stock market does not catch a bid in here
soon, the HUI could see the 400 level again, but since that is
nowhere near a given and since there is no crystal ball in my
possession, I hold with the realization that "it don't come
easy". A caveat however; make no mistake that the gold
and silver miners are stocks and if the markets have a genuine
'liquidity event' (see below), the woodshed awaits we holders of
paper derivatives of gold. The
Bad Santa came
to Wall Street and delivered wonderful bonuses as usual and as
expected. Then he grudgingly went to Main Street and emptied
his bag of all the leftovers, mainly a bunch of crappy toys made in
China (just yesterday my daughter asked me to put a battery in a
little blow dryer for her doll and the battery housing had no
contacts in it, just a raw plastic compartment). Somehow I do
not feel all is lost for American manufacturing. Not by a long
shot. But back to
the paper pushers on Wall Street. They have created, brokered
and marked up all manner of vehicles for overly trusting investors
to buy in to. Despite the warnings found on this
website along with several other excellent sites that publish
independent financial writers, most investors have chosen to follow
the piper, ride out the rough patches and keep that stiff upper
lip. This has always worked in the past and while moral
hazards have become strikingly apparent today, in the long run it
may well continue to work as long as inflation is successfully used
as a tool for Ponzinomic growth. That does not help folks
caught in the short to medium term however. 
The
chart of the S&P 500 really needs no commentary. This
thing is snapping support level platforms like balsa wood and it is
doing it on heavy volume. Rats are scurrying to get off the
sinking ship and while I have been very reluctant to use the 'C'
word, especially with so many expecting one, the potential is there
for a crash, if we are not already part way through one. As
astute observers have noted, crashes tend to happen from oversold
levels as the drive toward capitulation becomes overpowering.
By the same token a sharp snap back rally is possible at any time
but it is unlikely the usual hope filled news will do the trick
given the failure of Ben Bernanke's jawbone and President Bush's
money drop plan; no, the Fed will need to deliver a larger than
expected rate cut. The trick for Mr. Bernanke will be to
determine whether a cut before the scheduled meeting will inspire
more confidence than continuing to jawbone and delivering upon
meeting with the FOMC and pretending that there is really any debate
on the matter. Note the MACD back in bear market territory
with Trixy about to follow. Here is the same
chart going back to 2000. The breakdown of MACD should
leave little doubt what kind of market we have in the big picture,
especially so if the TRIX confirms. In the near term, at the
very least another 'C' word may come into play; capitulation. The
Ugly Deflation.
In a word, this is the condition nobody wants to see happen, where
dollars are bought up and held like a security blanket. Least
of all do public officials want to see this (see Mr. Paulson's
telling quote on the front page
of the website). If the US economic system was actually
grounded by productivity a deflationary impulse would be well and
good as it cleans the excesses out of markets and decides the
winners and losers. But as the inflationary game of hide the
bubble morphs into musical chairs, casino patrons rush to find a
place to sit this one out with the knowledge that untold levels of
debt and derivatives are unable to find real markets. In fact,
the US is now in the midst of a 'bailout' (buyout) to some degree
from the likes of USD cash
rich supposed allies (Saudi) and vendor financiers (China).
The same patrons, the same funny munny that had to have stocks,
commodities and resources of all kinds may now seek out the US
Dollar in a rush out of assets. I will be surprised if the
Dollar sees north of 80 for a long while if ever, but in a world of competitively
inflated munny, anything is possible. Again, how long does
confidence hold sway? Meanwhile, if the USD rallies, will gold
bugs go scattering back down Hamburger Hill? Has the
correction already led a Dollar rally? Or is the Gold-Oil
ratio noted in the lower panel of the chart going to continue to
lead the Dollar? If that happens, the miners may experience
continued USD rally pressure even as their fundamentals get stronger
with gold outperforming oil as it should most assets in a
deflationary impulse. 
In
my bias toward strengthening long term rates I previously saw the
potential worst of all worlds with pressure on the short end with
long rates in an uptrend, but as the monthly chart of the 10 year
yield shows, that bias was wrong... or at least too early. The
bond market's message that inflation is not a problem, while totally
ridiculous is actually good news to a system built to function on
just the sort of stimulus that our leaders are currently cooking
up. We would not be hearing so much talk about rate cuts and
stimulus if long rates were crying INFLATION. So it is quite
possible - especially if gold remains in a correction/consolidation
- that policy makers will have the cover they need to reflate this
mess once again and one day the bull touts are again bullhorning the
wondrous elasticity and flexibility of the US economy and its
ability to weather a storm. But of course, this will just be
the next (and more severe) round of inflation manifesting itself in
assets. Wash, rinse, repeat. 
The
Speculative I
currently hold gold and silver miners and explorers of the highest
quality I can find. There is also exposure - at least for the
short term - to copper, which looks bullish for a continued short
term bounce. Note that copper is in a daily uptrend, weekly
downtrend and in the big picture still hanging on to a bullish trend
on the monthly. So the picture here is murky beyond a
trade. Also cash and equivalents are at 60% with the majority
in short term treasury instruments. After
the gyrations of the last two weeks, I currently own a grand total
of one stock that does not fit the description above. That
stock is Fuel Tech (FTEK) and it is speculative for at least a
couple reasons. First, in the current environment most stocks
are speculative and dependant on a 'no crash' scenario
unfolding. Secondly, FTEK is a stock I consider to be somewhat
over-valued despite the hard correction thus far. Therefore I
am speculating on a technical condition that cannot even be called a
set up, as I usually like to see, where there are at least some
indications of reversal evident such as bullish
divergence. FTEK
is an old favorite that I patiently held for months on end in the
4's and 5's as it did nothing but had a great story unfolding
(cleaner coal for utilities). I took profits as an investor at
around $10 and $13 as Wall Street and its number one TV barker got a
hold of the story, but I have traded it a time or two since.
This is a trade and the leash is very short (if the green trend line
breaks we will book what is hopefully a small loss). I bought the
angst on Friday at 16.30 and if I do not like what I see this week,
it will be gone in an instant. 
If
I do like what I see, I will hold for a possible upside
resolution to the falling wedge (which has wrestled the stock down
to that important uptrend line) that has wrung out the investor
base and may, repeat MAY be preparing the stock for a nice upside
trade. But make no mistake, this is a trade in a bear market
(of some sort) and is very high risk. Most definitely NOT a
recommendation of any kind. It is more of a chart study and
'let's see how it works' out sort of thing. There is also
another 'let's see how it works out play going on here,
where we are entered in a stock picking contest. So far so
good. I used technical analysis for all three picks, two
long, one short. Note that PAL was a replacement for my
original pick, YNG.TO which was not allowed due to its Toronto
listing. We would have been positive on all three positions
during this most violent bear impulse since 2002. The
Pitch If
you would like prompt technical analysis on the stock(s) or market(s)
of your choice, give us a try at Biiwii.com's TA
onDemand. Whether the trend is bull or bear, TA is
very useful tool when trying to gauge the short term (daily),
intermediate term trend (weekly) and big picture (monthly). Post
Script We will
try to write a new letter each month or at least as time
allows. Blogging was cool but it also made it too easy to
write too often. Market related time will now be devoted to
research of individual stocks for my own purposes and macro events
for this space. Be
well, stay safe out there and keep your eyes open!
http://www.biiwii.com
© 2004-2008 Biiwii.com
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