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Don't
Say You Weren't Warned - Again
By
Gary Tanashian
http://www.biiwii.com
http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
June
23, 2007
From
last month's letter: "But
in an age where debt and leverage giveth, what do you suppose will
happen when it taketh away? The Yen and the USD appear to be
at important crossroads and they hold the keys to near term market
events. Being a natural bottom feeder in my trading practices
I would be buying Yen and USD here, which means I would be selling
stocks, commodities and be guarded on the precious metals. In
a future article I will explain why I do not plan to be without at
least a core of gold stocks and why I will plan to add to existing
positions if they are wood shedded along with most other assets.
I also want to keep a close eye on the US Dollar. But for
today, I would like to present three charts of the Yen, which I
consider the most important potential trigger to what may be radical
changes in the investment landscape to come." Thus
far, obviously the Yen outlook has failed to materialize as policy
from the Land of the Sinking Currency continues in a business as
usual manner. From a risk/reward perspective however, I would
still ask "where's the risk... where's the reward?" and
count an unwinding of the Yen carry trade as a likely afterburner to
the bearish downside should the global liquidity orgy begin to break
up in earnest for other reasons. I
still hold and even trade around the "core of gold stocks"
and as blog readers know keep a close eye on the US Dollar (current
status here). The Dollar is in a bullish falling wedge
although we have been anticipating a possible (probable?) decline to
the bottom of the wedge and blaring bearish Dollar headlines near
long term support before the wedge is broken to the
upside. This is a major reason I currently (and tentatively)
hold more than just a modest 'core' of gold stocks. But
the bond market is making some serious noise and in Mr. Fukui's absence appears to have
said "enough of this, we're outta here" as it begins to withdraw easy liquidity in a flight toward
quality. China's stock market is a certifiable bubble, huge
global traders have used currency carries to such an extent that
liquidity is a lot of things, but one thing it is not is
money. It is munny that is so funny that the bond
market's return toward sound practice has no hope of ultimate
success. They are just denominating themselves in higher
quality munny. It can be argued that many established markets
are not bubbles and that may be the case, but again if it is
denominated in munny created through anything but productive
endeavor how can it be anything but a bubble in the purest
sense? That is the inconvenient truth of the global financial
markets and it is a truth that will eventually see gold reach an
upside that could one day make the dot.com bubble look tame.
When the day comes that the global currency pyramid falls apart...
but we get ahead of ourselves. Gold bugs are right, but when
will the numbers prove them right? We remain guarded on
gold and downright über-bearish on most everything else.
There is a difference between knowing something is a sham and
knowing when the average person will know it is a sham. That
is enough lecturing for today. What I wanted to show are some
charts of the treasury market. On the blog we have been
following the rise
in long term interest rates from short and longer term
perspectives. Today we will present a few charts for you to
consider. With the housing market already on the mat, China in
the stratosphere, hedge funds imploding, seasonality kicking in and bullish
sentiment RISING, rising interest rates, especially on the long
end are definitely not what Wall Street has been looking for nor
what it seems most investors are prepared for. The
near term for 10 year yields continues to paint a picture of
consolidation after an impulsive up-leg. After downside
targets are met, we look for the previous 'over-bought' high to be
taken out. 
The
next chart shows a long term look at the 30 year treasury
yield. This is not a pretty picture and in fact argues
strongly for what what Bill Gross and Pimco have recently resigned
themselves to; confirmation of a secular change in bonds, from bull
to bear. 
The
final chart is a weekly view of another yield curve (we usually look
at 10 year / 3 mo. spread which has wildly un-inverted) showing a
mild un-inversion. There is some resistance there but overall
this is another bullish chart with long rates having bottomed vs.
short rates. 
The
story that the above charts are telling is one of caution. One
where the smart investor will question his or her conventional
thought processes that were born of the 25 year bull market in
bonds, courtesy of the last great fiscal authoritarian at the Fed,
the inflation fighter himself, Paul
Volcker. The story is that with the casino atmosphere that
is a direct result of panic rate policy by the US Fed and other
central bankers (after the 2000 bubble burst) and the good old
dependable BOJ, "moral
hazard is catching" and risk vs. reward has now become
toxic.
© 2004-2007 Biiwii.com
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