Showing posts with label dollar bull market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dollar bull market. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Tax Receipts Down, Government Jobs Up...This Won't End Well

Bernanke - man of
the year. Did he earn it? Or
pushing on a string?

Markets Strong Out of the Gates...But How Much Conviction is Left?

The broader indices continued to climb higher in the first week of trading in 2010. But how much buying power is behind these moves?

Moves straight up usually don't end well.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Since the correct in early November, stocks have climbed just about everyday, without much of a blip of a correction. Meanwhile, upward momentum and volume continue to look anemic, indicating that the rally may finally be running out of gas.

But thus far, warnings of a potential turndown have either been early, or wrong. So which is it?

While I am not a huge chartist in terms of reading into patterns (head and shoulders, etc), I do notice that the chart of the S&P above is tracing out an ascending, contracting triangle. These are usually proceeded by sharp moves either up or down. Obviously a move down would appear to be the more likely scenario, so it will be interesting to see what the S&P does over the next couple of weeks.

It very well could continue to move higher, so I am going to hold off on shorting until we see a definite break in the uptrend. The mistake I make in early November was shorting too early, under the (incorrect) assumption that the uptrend HAD been broken.

So we'll chalk that up to a learning experience, and try to be a little more patient on pulling the trigger.


Tax Receipts Continue to Decline

It's hard to get excited about this "economic turnaround" when tax receipts continue to fall across the board. Tax receipts may be the least manipulated of all economic stats, so are worth paying attention to.

Here's a smattering of tax receipt data from around the nation...and little to none of it is positive. For a fun exercise, type "tax receipts" into Google News, and see what comes up!
It seems that a lot of the "news" about the economy bottoming is nothing more than pundits projecting the bounces in the DOW and the S&P onto Main Street. In reality, that hasn't happen.

The markets have bounced since last March because that's what markets do. They never travel up or down in straight lines. All we've done thus far is mirrored 1930's stock market retracement - nothing more, nothing less.

From a technical standpoint - wake us up when we've surpassed the usual Fibonacci retracement levels.

From a fundamental standpoint - wake us up when tax receipts start to turn around...because we know there's only one reason for people to pay more taxes, and that's because they are making more money!

Now as to the ethics of taxation in the first place...we'll leave that libertarian rant for another day.


Evans-Pritchard Sees Japanese Hyperinflation

If you think this column is a ball of sunshine, you'll love Ambrose Evans-Pritchard's take on the 2010 financial markets:

The contraction of M3 money in the US and Europe over the last six months will slowly puncture economic recovery as 2010 unfolds, with the time-honoured lag of a year or so. Ben Bernanke will be caught off guard, just as he was in mid-2008 when the Fed drove straight through a red warning light with talk of imminent rate rises – the final error that triggered the implosion of Lehman, AIG, and the Western banking system.

As the great bear rally of 2009 runs into the greater Chinese Wall of excess global capacity, it will become clear that we are in the grip of a 21st Century Depression – more akin to Japan's Lost Decade than the 1840s or 1930s, but nothing like the normal cycles of the post-War era. The surplus regions (China, Japan, Germania, Gulf ) have not increased demand enough to compensate for belt-tightening in the deficit bloc (Anglo-sphere, Club Med, East Europe), and fiscal adrenalin is already fading in Europe. The vast East-West imbalances that caused the credit crisis are no better a year later, and perhaps worse. Household debt as a share of GDP sits near record levels in two-fifths of the world economy. Our long purge has barely begun. That is the elephant in the global tent.

As if this wasn't enough, he also sees quantitative easing in Japan as finally getting "over the hump" in terms of deflation, and achieving what so far has been an elusive goal - hyperinflation!

Finally, Evans-Pritchard also pokes some good fun at Europe's economic prospects.


The Worst Trend of Them All

Take a look at this chart of public vs. private sector employment, and tell me this chart isn't the most damning of them all!

This is the type of "breakout", or rather "breakdown", that you short 100 times out of 100.

(Hat tip to friend and fellow Austrian economic believer Carson for sharing this link).


Diversifying Your Life

Earlier this week, our local Casey Research "phyle" met up to discuss our usual cheery topics, including what to do if the US completely melts down.

Doug Casey recommends having your whole self diversified - ie. citizenship in one country, your business in another, real estate in a third, and even some savings in a forth. So, if it really hits the fan in your homeland, you're not completely screwed!

So our group chatted about the logistics of moving savings, including bullion itself, abroad. If you are interested in pursuing these types of options, here's a good interview conducted by the "Sovereign Man" Simon Black about storing gold in Panama.

Gold storage in Panama is a hot item. Banks have long waiting lists for safety deposit boxes, and as I’ve discussed before, many Panamanian banks are even starting to eliminate this service, reducing the available supply of boxes on the market.

Personally if I had meaningful investment capital, I'd probably be inclined to get some bullion stashed in another country...just in case. But as is, I've got most of my hopes, dreams, and prospects tied up in our small time tracking software company.


What it Means to "Turn Japanese" Economically

Stratfor, a "personal CIA" service of sorts, released some engaging forecasts for regions around the world in 2010. Here's Stratfor CEO George Friedman discussing Japan's economic outlook:


I find his take on Japan very interesting. If the US is indeed "turning Japanese" economically, you would expect to see an increased emphasis on full employment, rather than return on capital, for the economy.

While I'm sure our politicians have the same DNA as their Japanese counterparts, I'm not yet convinced that American citizens do. Are the characteristics Friedman identifies cultural? Or, will we see Americans follow in the footsteps of their Eastern counterparts?

The next couple of elections in this country should be VERY interesting, as we'll see how asleep the citizens of this nation really are. I'm not yet sure if the tea parties and "libertarian roots" are the tip of a larger iceberg, or one-off types of events.


Trading Positions - Looking for Dollar Re-Entry

My January S&P puts are going to expire worthless - as mentioned earlier, I jumped into that trade too early.

I am looking for a re-entry point into a long US dollar position, and I'll probably look at picking up some UUP for my equity accounts as well. I think we'll see a further pullback in the dollar here, before it resumes it's march above it's previous highs from 2008-09.

We've got small, but top notch, company in the short-term long dollar trade. First we saw our hero, Jim Rogers, take a short term position in the buck. And earlier this week, Tom Dyson wrote that a major uptrend is just getting started in this hated asset.

The buck, everyone's least favorite asset, quietly bottomed in November.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Another way of playing the dollar rally would be to short currencies primed for a fall, such as the Euro or the Australian dollar. Both have started to turn down sharply.

Have a great week in the markets! Comments are always welcome and very much appreciated.

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Does News Drive the Markets? A Closer Look at This Old Wive's Tale

With the markets at a potential inflection point (an inflection point down, in my humble opinion), I thought it'd be fun and instructive to revisit a topic we've noodled on a bit lately.

Does News Actually Drive the Financial Markets?

It's common knowledge that increasing earnings drive stock prices - with the only caveat being that there's no evidence of this being true. A couple of weeks ago, we posted a short guest article that challenged this assumption, making the case that stock prices actually drive earnings, not the other way around.

Since I'm becoming more and more sympathetic to this outlook of the markets driving the news, I thought it'd be a fun exercise to take a closer look at this hypothesis.

To be as objective as possible, I conducted a few searches using the Google News search function, so that we could count up the number of stories that contained my search phrase. First up...

Bear Market Rally

Stories about the bear market rally have tapered off - it's a new bull market!
(Source: Google News)

How ironic that the number of news stories about a "Bear Market Rally" peaked in March...the month the rally was just beginning! Being a somewhat disparaging term, I find it fitting that the use of this phrase in news headlines has dissipated as the markets have rallied.

I'd imagine the reason is this rally no longer viewed as a mere bear market rally, but a new bull market! Probably just in time for the markets to turn down once again.

The grand prize goes to the Financial Post, for their March 5th article Talk of a 'bear market rally' may be premature. It sure was - by about 24 hours!

Bond Vigilantes

Why do interest rates rise and fall? It's a complex question - one that appears to be too complex for the news headlines to adequately explain!

In June, the return of the "bond vigilantes" was a popular reason for soaring yields on long dated US government bonds. The bond markets were pissed, and ready to raise hell about soaring government deficits.

The only problem about investing based on the "news" that the bond vigilantes had returned, ready to drive up yields further, is that your timing would have been exactly wrong.

Yields topped along with this news, and both have quietly rode off into the sunset since.

2009 news about the "Bond Vigilantes" peaked in June.
(Source: Google News)


Right along with yields
(Source: Yahoo Finance)

Dollar Reserve Currency

Here's one near and dear to my heart - the overblown reporting of the dollar's reserve currency status being in imminent danger. You'll notice there was a low, steady hum of stories - up until March of this year, when the dollar topped out (for the time being).

News of the dollar's demise really picked up AFTER it started to decline.
Source: Google News

Since then, the dollar has been declining, and stories of the dollar being replaced as the world's reserve currency have been all over the financial media. My favorite was a recent story in London's Independent entitled The Demise of the Dollar, which may have coincided with a significant bottom in the dollar index, which has rallied steadily since!

Bottom line: Using the news to trade is a losing proposition...you'd be much better off using the charts to predict the news. The financial news media is a fantastic example of groupthink at it's best, or worst, depending on your perspective.

You can always count on financial news stories to break after the market has already tipped it's hand!


The Start of a Larger Decline?

Many of the technical indicators I follow appear to be signaling a shift is taking place in the markets, in which the dollar will once again reign supreme, and everything else should roll over. In other words, an instant replay of the last bit of deleveraging, though probably worse.

To get the "average investor" sentiment after Friday's big decline, I pulled up one of our favorite contrarian indicators, the Wall Street Journal, to see what they were recommending. It's said that bull markets often climb a "wall of worry", so my thinking was that if they displayed a "run for the hills" sentiment, that may indicate that this is just a correction on the way up.

Much to my delight (because I'm short the markets, as you see below), the article I pulled up from the front page expressed optimism that this pullback represents a nice buying opportunity.

Even some of the optimists think it would make sense for stocks to fall as much as 10% before they resume their gains.

The bullish tone and level of confidence being exhibited by investors is truly awe inspiring, given that most investors lost 40% of their porfolios in the previous crash. That says to me that this bear market rally has completed it's mission, and we should prepare for the next leg down.


Positions Update - Long the Buck, and Now Short the S&P

At last - a positive week for the dollar! And no coincidence that, meanwhile, stocks got slaughtered. A sign of things to come? I think so!

On Thursday, I shorted the S&P, thus far successfully. I think over the coming months, you may be able to short just about anything and do pretty well. Long the dollar, short everything else - that's my recommendation until further notice.

The dollar - gearing up for another megarally?
(Source: Barchart.com)

Open positions:


Thanks for reading!

Current Account Value: $25,969.68

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $45,969.68
Weekly return: 8.8%
2009 YTD return: -48.9%

Prior yearly returns:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial trading stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Inflation Investing - A Historical Perspective on What To Do

On Friday I was having a discussion with my friend about inflation, speculating about what may happen to stock prices if inflation were to take hold. Both of us are big fans of Marc Faber, so we were discussing the scenario that Faber has been predicting - that if cash is about to become trash thanks to government money printing, you want to get into tangible assets, including stocks, to protect yourself.

But what really happens to stock prices during inflationary times? You could slice and dice the discussion many different ways from an academic perspective...but the more I thought about it, the more interested I became in digging out historical examples.

Then I remembered that Faber himself had a great chapter in his book Tomorrow's Gold that is entitled The Economics of Inflation.

So, I reread the chapter today.


The Paradox of Inflation

Faber discovered that stock markets of countries that are experiencing very high rates of inflation can become very undervalued in real terms, creating tremendous buying opportunities for the astute and courageous investor.

The reason, Faber says, is that currency depreciation, due to "massive capital flight", overcompensates for domestic inflation, creating stock market values that are truly outstanding. When inflation subsides from extreme levels, equities can realize substantial gains in real terms.

Everyone knows the common playbook for investing through inflation is to buy metals and short bonds. But according to the data Faber presents, it can also be a great time to buy stocks for cheap.

And the higher the rate of inflation, or the worse the hyperinflationary scenario, the greater the buying opportunity generally is. Faber takes a look at examples from Argentina 1977-1987, Germany from 1919-1923, Latin America in the 1980s, and Russia after the fall of communism. And all four examples revealed tremendous buying opportunities for stocks - especially if you bought during the height of the inflation.

Interestingly Faber also cites the opposite case - that countries with low rates of inflation tend to have richly valued equity markets. Such as Japan in the late 1980s, or the Western world in the late 1990s. Goldilocks is not so kind to buy and hold investors.

Overall these findings seem to jive with the old investing adage that you should buy when there's "blood in the streets" - and conversely be cautious when the sun is shining.

I'd like to add that Germany's hyperinflation is often blamed for the rise of Hitler and, ultimately, World War II. However Faber says that hyperinflation in Germany actually ended in 1923, with the institution of a new currency. Thereafter, Germany boomed for the rest of the decade, and was quite prosperous up until the depression.

I think history shows that governments can put the breaks on inflation real quick, if they have the stomach and motivation to do so. Germany did it in 1923. Paul Volcker slayed the inflation dragon in the early 1980's.

So it appears that purchasing stocks today in anticipation of inflation or hyperinflation may not yet be the right move. While stock prices would increase in nominal terms, they may become undervalued in real terms - at which point you'd want to be a buyer.


Intel - More Big Results, But Stock Sells Off After

On Tuesday, Intel announced good earnings and an upbeat outlook for the second straight quarter. Initially, the stock popped - only to trade lower for the remainder of the week. INTC currently sits below where it was at when it announced earnings.

INTC popped higher after its earnings report, but the rally stalled.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Perhaps all of this good news was already priced into Intel's stock price? If that's the case, I'd imagine there are many stocks that you could say the same thing about.


Some More Good Reading
  • Guru Robert Prechter shares why he believes fundamental analysis is always trumped by technical analysis.

Positions Update - Still Long the Buck

Well I was either early or wrong on the dollar call, and as far as trading goes, that's basically the same thing!

This is why calling a bottom before it's actually put in is indeed a fool's game. And I fell into the trap yet again.

Although I still like this trade, I should have waited for an uptrend. As is, I'll continue to hold the position, and wait for the break up that we're anticipating.


Oops - you want to be short charts like these!
(Source: Barchart.com)

Open positions:



Thanks for reading!

Current Account Value: $24,309.83

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $44,309.83
Weekly return: -1.9%
2009 YTD return: -52.2% (Yikes!)

Prior yearly returns:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial trading stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, October 11, 2009

More Gold Hysteria; The Dollar's Latest Eulogy; The Easiest (Worst) Short Idea on the Planet?

Gold Featured on...Saturday Night Live!?

The latest sign that the gold market may be a little overheated right now...Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update featured investment analysis from Scrooge McDuck!



Shout out and thanks to my good buddy Super Joe for sending this one along!


New Reports of the Dollar's Demise: Greatly Exaggerated?

From London's The Independent comes the latest report of the dollar's impending implosion - in an article fittingly titled The Demise of the Dollar.

In the most profound financial change in recent Middle East history, Gulf Arabs are planning – along with China, Russia, Japan and France – to end dollar dealings for oil, moving instead to a basket of currencies including the Japanese yen and Chinese yuan, the euro, gold and a new, unified currency planned for nations in the Gulf Co-operation Council, including Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Qatar.

Secret meetings have already been held by finance ministers and central bank governors in Russia, China, Japan and Brazil to work on the scheme, which will mean that oil will no longer be priced in dollars.

I've read a few publications jumping all over this story today - the sky is falling, the dollar is doomed!

Have to say I'm skeptical. Governments are the ultimate investment herd! This is another great cue that the dollar has indeed put in a major bottom.

The dollar is showing some resiliency around the 76 mark. Time will tell if this latest "demise of the dollar" story is as ill timed as many from recent history.


Non-Confirming Charts

If you're a trend follower, you love to see something making an all-time high, like gold is today. All bets are off, as who knows how high it will go! Just go long and hang on.

And while I do respect and try to follow trends, the reason I'm not jumping on the gold bandwagon right now is that it seems quite crowded. I could be wrong - it could be like tech stocks in 1998, where the fun was just getting started.

But it seems strange that gold is making new highs all by itself. Check out oil, which is still below its highs for the year:

Crude oil can't break $75 decisively.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Perhaps this is an indictment on the global economy. You know investors are taking a defensive stance when they favor an asset in gold that doesn't really do anything, over the black goo that powers the global economy.

Also of note, silver has not yet confirmed gold's record highs. Silver still sits solidly below its 2008 highs - not to mention it's all-time high in the $50 range.

Silver still hasn't broken its 2008 highs.
(Source: Barchart.com)

But the thing that puzzles me the most - so much so that I wrote a haiku about it on Friday - is the long bond.

If we assume that gold is rallying on inflationary fears and money printing - fine, I can accept that as a plausible explanation. But then why are interest rates on long dated government not skyrocketing? Why are rates on the 30-year not barreling towards double digits?

For the past two plus years, the most obvious short in the investing world has been long dated US government debt. In fact, this short has been such a "sure thing" that it couldn't have worked out any worse for investors who put on this trade - myself included! Though I can't feel too bad when even the great Jim Rogers got burned as well.

Bottom line: If gold is rallying on inflationary fears, then why are interest rates not following suit? Someone please enlighten me!

The most obvious short on the planet...only problem is that it's not going down!
(Source: Barchart.com)


Some More Good Reading

Positions Update - Still Long the Buck

And still waiting to see where the next move will be. With sentiment so low I'm guessing it'll be up.

The appears to be the lynch pin to the markets, so it will be interesting to see, if it does rally, what the other markets do. My guess is that they'll tank in unison. We may find out soon!

Reports of the dollar's demise have, until now, been greatly exaggerated.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Open positions:


Thanks for reading!

Current Account Value: $24,789.83

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $44,789.83
Weekly return: -2.7%
2009 YTD return: -51.2% (Yikes!)

Prior yearly returns:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial trading stake: $2,000.00

Thursday, October 01, 2009

Dollar vs S&P Index - A Near Perfect Inverse Correlation

These days, diversification is pointless. You only need one position in your portfolio - because all the markets are trading together.

To illustrate this point, check out this chart of the S&P 500 vs. the Dollar Index since Spring 2008:

The dollar and S&P - mirror images of one another (click to enlarge).
(Source: Google Finance)

So while we may be in uncharted investment waters, really all you need to ask yourself is - do I want to throw my lot with dollars, or with everything else?

The obvious answer is "everything else" - I mean, what's not to like about gold, oil, and equities? Everyone knows the dollar is doomed anyway!

And that, dear reader, is what gives me great pause about that side of the trade!

Saturday, August 08, 2009

Why the Dollar Probably Bottomed Last Week

It's pretty tough to find investors who are bullish on the US dollar these days. Judging from our dollar sentiment survey results last week, it seems like most dollar bulls probably read this blog!

When I consider:
  • Not a day goes by without an investment newsletter popping into my email Inbox that highlights the dollar's pending demise.
  • There are YouTube videos circling the internet, with guys breaking stuff in their garages while lamenting the dollar's loss of purchasing value since the gold standard was removed.
The dollar may very well be broken, but I can't see this decline lasting much longer with sentiment as negative as it is. Bearishness on the buck probably hasn't been this low since the last time it bottomed - which was even below current levels, by the way.

How is this possible? How could a currency as sick as the dollar rally?

It's not without historical precedent - take Japan's Central Bank, where the old joke is that they are so incompetent they couldn't even destroy their own currency.

Is it possible our Fed is just as incompetent? I wouldn't bet against it.

We're in a period of debt deflation that could be around for some time. It's unlikely that the Fed will be able to "print" enough money to create inflation this period is over.

Because with a credit based economy that peaked around $52 trillion in 2007, printing a few hundred billion here and there doesn't really "move the needle" when credit is getting wiped out at a much faster rate.

Finally, it's interest to note that on Friday, the dollar was up sharply while all major indices were also up big. That strikes me as a pretty bullish move, because the dollar had previously been getting killed everytime stocks were up.

Bottom line: Just because many pundits and experts believe the dollar SHOULD fall, doesn't mean it will. And my bet is that, at least for the next few months, the exact opposite will happen - because markets usually move in directions that frustrate the highest number of investors.


What You Can Learn From Tracking Hedge Funds

Last week we started a fun back and forth interview with Jay from MarketFolly. For those of you not familiar with MarketFolly - please go there now! It's an excellent site for tracking the latest holdings and insights of the greatest investors in the world.

Here's part 2 of our interview with Jay about his investing strategy, and the complimentary piece where he grilled me a little bit.

CBM: What do you learn from the investor holdings you cover?

MF: I think the main thing to take away from hedge fund tracking is ideas. Often times you will see them invest in companies you've never heard of or are less familiar with so it gives you something to look into. It's also good to see what sectors they are leaning towards and what themes they might be playing (at least for some of the macro thesis oriented funds). And, it gets really intriguing when you start to see multiple funds adding the same position. We've noticed this a lot when we track the 'Tiger Cub' hedge funds.



Quick Market Hits for the Week Ahead

Daily Updates

For our weekly subscribers - we now have a daily subscription option as well (check out the upper left corner of the page).

It's powered by Google - they send you one email each afternoon, with a wrap up of posts from the day. They do a nice job with it - so if you'd like to add a daily subscription, you can enter your email address in the box there.


Positions Update

No new trades this week - cotton had a great week, along with just about every other asset class in the world.

Cotton continues to "range trade".
(Source: Barchart.com)

And, as mentioned earlier, I'm planning to "go long" the dollar index very soon.


Current Account Value: $26,388.91

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $46,388.91
Weekly return: 5.2%
2009 YTD return: -48.1% (Ouch, that's gonna leave a mark)

Prior year's results: --> Don't try this at home...this is what is known as wreckless trading
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

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