Showing posts with label great depression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label great depression. Show all posts

Sunday, November 08, 2009

Comparing the 2008-09 Stock Market With the Great Depression's 1st Leg Down

This epic stock market rally has done exactly what it was supposed to do - it's retraced about half of the losses from the previous crash. It's got folks feeling comfortable again - while maybe not outright enthusiastic about things, they now believe the carpet is not going to be pulled out from under them.

That's exactly what buying stocks now is a more dangerous proposition than it has been anytime this year thus far.

So can big rallies, following big crashes, be sustained?

I did a little bit of digging through historical data, to see if there was a case where a severe crash was isolated - that is, it retraced back up, and there was nothing more to it. Typically, crashes occur in three legs down (five "waves" in total, counting two countertrend bounces) - at least this was my belief, which I wanted to double check.

I'm going to compare this market crash/rally with the crash/rally from 1929/1930, and only that, because I was not able to find another market crash, and subsequent rally, as severe as what we've experience over the past year or two (severe being 50%). I wish we had another example to look at, but I wasn't able to find one since 1900 in the US that met this criteria!

The Great Depression's first leg down, and the 2008-09 markets, are in rarified air that meets these stomach churning guidelines:
  1. A ~50% stock market drop
  2. Followed by a ~50% stock market rally
Astute traders and investors, no doubt of which our readers here are, know full well that 50% down, followed by 50% up, does not get you back to break even!

First, let's take a look at the first leg down of the Great Depression, using the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) as our measuring stick.

Source: StockCharts.com

Date DJIA % Change # Days
09/03/1929 381.17
11/13/1929 198.69 -48% 71
04/17/1930 294.07 +48% 155

You have to love the symmetry of the 1930 rally! 48% down, then 48% up...before turning back down. Eventually the DJIA bottomed in 1932 at 41 - shedding an awesome 80% from the Dow's 1929 high.

Now, let's check out the newly minted Crash of 2008:

Source: StockCharts.com

Date DJIA % Change # Days
10/09/2007 14164
03/10/2009 6547 -54% 518
10/19/2009 10092 +54% 223


Oh the symmetry is fantastic! This time we retraced 54%, after giving up 54% initially - again roughly 50%.

Now, the million dollar question is: "Where to next?"

It's hard to make an argument for stocks continuing their rally from here. They are expensive by all traditional valuation measures, the economic recovery is not robust (maybe even non-existent), and until proven otherwise, this rally has been nothing more than a standard retracement.

The stock market doesn't just drop 50% for no good reason. Something more is usually amiss. Judging from the only recent historical analogy we have to use, caution is still the order of the day!


Positions Update - Even Shorter the S&P

A disappointing week for us dollar bulls/S&P bears. But, after 5 consecutive up days for stocks, we are not yet at new highs - nor are we at new lows for the dollar.

So, until further notice, I am classifying last week as a countertrend bounce, which could reverse as soon as tomorrow.

I did short another S&P contract on this rally - currently underwater on that position - so we shall see if that was a wise move in the weeks to come.

The dollar continues to muddle along - with strong support at 75.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Was last week a countertrend bounce for the S&P, or the start of a rally to new highs?
(Source: Barchart.com)

Open positions:

Thanks for reading!

Current Account Value: $22,947.03

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $42,947.03
Weekly return: -11.6%
2009 YTD return: -54.8%

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

Initial trading stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Is 2009 A Repeat of 1930? Why Depressions May Rhyme

As financial pundits and common investors breath collective sighs of relief that "the worst is over" and "the bull is back", let's explore the possibility that 2009 may be following a script that was originally penned in 1930.

After the initial crash in 1929, the markets staged a powerful rally that retraced 60% of these losses...

Images source: Mywealth.com

Since the March 6 lows, the 2009 S&P has also retraced a significant portion of its losses - rallying over 50% in the last 5 months - one of the sharpest rallies ever!

By the summer of 1930, just as the markets were peaking, Herbert Hoover and his team were declaring:
  • "The worst is over without a doubt." - James Davis, Secretary of Labor
  • "The Depression is over." - Herbert Hoover
We are seeing the same types of self-congratulatory talk from our modern day heros in the summer of 2009:
  • "We have avoided the worst." - Ben Bernanke
  • "I can tell you, without question, the Recovery Act is working." - Joe Biden
What "solutions" were being heralded in 1930 as saving economic graces? "The coordination of business and government agencies in concerted action," according to Hoover.

Sound familiar?

Finally, I find it very interesting that during these times, the Fed's actions were viewed as wildly inflationist. From Murray Rothbard's America's Great Depression:

If the Federal Reserve had an inflationist attitude during the boom, it was just as ready to try to cure the depression by inflating further. It stepped in immediately to expand credit and bolster shaky financial positions. In an act unprecedented in its history, the Federal Reserve moved in during the week of the crash—the final week of October—and in that brief period added almost $300 million to the reserves of the nation’s banks. During that week, the Federal Reserve doubled its holdings of government securities, adding over $150 million to reserves, and it discounted about $200 million more for member banks. Instead of going through a healthy and rapid liquidation of unsound positions, the economy was fated to be continually bolstered by governmental measures that could only prolong its diseased state.

President Hoover was proud of his experiment in cheap money, and in his speech to the business conference on December 5, he hailed the nation’s good fortune in possessing the splendid Federal Reserve System, which had succeeded in saving shaky banks, had restored confidence, and had made capital more abundant by reducing interest rates.

Bottom line: While history may never exactly repeat, it certainly has a tendency to rhyme (to quote Mark Twain). Cast a skeptical eye on folks who believe that we're through the worst - we're not through anything yet!

Right now, we're exactly on pace with 1930. While we can't be sure that history will repeat (or rhyme) - it's too early to rule out this possiblity as well. Proceed with caution!



Quick Market Hits for the Week Ahead

Positions Update

No new trades this week...I am less than thrilled with cotton's weak performance. With oil and the S&P index hitting new 2009 highs, I would have liked to have seen cotton confirm these highs.

I don't think it bodes well, but with cotton prices appearing to be at solid points of resistance, I think it's a hold for now.

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

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


Current Account Value: $24,378.91

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $44,378.91
Weekly return: -4.4%
2009 YTD return: -52.0% (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

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

What Stage is This Depression At? Some Fantastic Graphs and Charts...

Came across this stellar piece earlier in the week via John Mauldin's excellent Outside the Box publication.

Authors Barry Eichengreen and Kevin H. O'Rourke lay our current depression side by side with the Great Depression to see how we measure up...and let me tell you, it's pretty foreboding!

This piece is republished with permission from VoxEU.org...and here's a link back to the original article: http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/3421

***


This is an update of the authors' 6 April 2009 column comparing today's global crisis to the Great Depression. World industrial production, trade, and stock markets are diving faster now than during 1929-30. Fortunately, the policy response to date is much better. The update shows that trade and stock markets have shown some improvement without reversing the overall conclusion -- today's crisis is at least as bad as the Great Depression.


Editor’s note: The 6 April 2009 Vox column by Barry Eichengreen and Kevin O’Rourke shattered all Vox readership records, with 30,000 views in less than 48 hours and over 100,000 within the week. The authors will update the charts as new data emerges; this updated column is the first, presenting monthly data up to April 2009. (The updates and much more will eventually appear in a paper the authors are writing a paper for Economic Policy.)

New findings:

  • World industrial production continues to track closely the 1930s fall, with no clear signs of ‘green shoots’.
  • World stock markets have rebounded a bit since March, and world trade has stabilised, but these are still following paths far below the ones they followed in the Great Depression.
  • There are new charts for individual nations’ industrial output. The big-4 EU nations divide north-south; today’s German and British industrial output are closely tracking their rate of fall in the 1930s, while Italy and France are doing much worse.
  • The North Americans (US & Canada) continue to see their industrial output fall approximately in line with what happened in the 1929 crisis, with no clear signs of a turn around.
  • Japan’s industrial output in February was 25 percentage points lower than at the equivalent stage in the Great Depression. There was however a sharp rebound in March.

The facts for Chile, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Sweden are displayed below; note the rebound in Eastern Europe.

Updated Figure 1. World Industrial Output, Now vs Then (updated)

Updated Figure 2. World Stock Markets, Now vs Then (updated)

Updated Figure 3. The Volume of World Trade, Now vs Then (updated)

Updated Figure 4. Central Bank Discount Rates, Now vs Then (7 country average)

New Figure 5. Industrial output, four big Europeans, then and now

New Figure 6. Industrial output, four Non-Europeans, then and now.

New Figure 7: Industrial output, four small Europeans, then and now.


Start of original column (published 6 April 2009)

The parallels between the Great Depression of the 1930s and our current Great Recession have been widely remarked upon.Paul Krugman has compared the fall in US industrial production from its mid-1929 and late-2007 peaks, showing that it has been milder this time. On this basis he refers to the current situation, with characteristic black humour, as only “half a Great Depression.” The “Four Bad Bears” graph comparing the Dow in 1929-30 and S&P 500 in 2008-9 has similarly had wide circulation (Short 2009). It shows the US stock market since late 2007 falling just about as fast as in 1929-30.

Comparing the Great Depression to now for the world, not just the US

This and most other commentary contrasting the two episodes compares America then and now. This, however, is a misleading picture. The Great Depression was a global phenomenon. Even if it originated, in some sense, in the US, it was transmitted internationally by trade flows, capital flows and commodity prices. That said, different countries were affected differently. The US is not representative of their experiences.

Our Great Recession is every bit as global, earlier hopes for decoupling in Asia and Europe notwithstanding. Increasingly there is awareness that events have taken an even uglier turn outside the US, with even larger falls in manufacturing production, exports and equity prices.

In fact, when we look globally, as in Figure 1, the decline in industrial production in the last nine months has been at least as severe as in the nine months following the 1929 peak. (All graphs in this column track behaviour after the peaks in world industrial production, which occurred in June 1929 and April 2008.) Here, then, is a first illustration of how the global picture provides a very different and, indeed, more disturbing perspective than the US case considered by Krugman, which as noted earlier shows a smaller decline in manufacturing production now than then.

Figure 1. World Industrial Output, Now vs Then

Source: Eichengreen and O’Rourke (2009) and IMF.

Similarly, while the fall in US stock market has tracked 1929, global stock markets are falling even faster now than in the Great Depression (Figure 2). Again this is contrary to the impression left by those who, basing their comparison on the US market alone, suggest that the current crash is no more serious than that of 1929-30.

Figure 2. World Stock Markets, Now vs Then

Source: Global Financial Database.

Another area where we are “surpassing” our forbearers is in destroying trade. World trade is falling much faster now than in 1929-30 (Figure 3). This is highly alarming given the prominence attached in the historical literature to trade destruction as a factor compounding the Great Depression.

Figure 3. The Volume of World Trade, Now vs Then

Sources: League of Nations Monthly Bulletin of Statistics, http://www.cpb.nl/eng/research/sector2/data/trademonitor.html

It’s a Depression alright

To sum up, globally we are tracking or doing even worse than the Great Depression, whether the metric is industrial production, exports or equity valuations. Focusing on the US causes one to minimise this alarming fact. The “Great Recession” label may turn out to be too optimistic. This is a Depression-sized event.

That said, we are only one year into the current crisis, whereas after 1929 the world economy continued to shrink for three successive years. What matters now is that policy makers arrest the decline. We therefore turn to the policy response.

Policy responses: Then and now

Figure 4 shows a GDP-weighted average of central bank discount rates for 7 countries. As can be seen, in both crises there was a lag of five or six months before discount rates responded to the passing of the peak, although in the present crisis rates have been cut more rapidly and from a lower level. There is more at work here than simply the difference between George Harrison and Ben Bernanke. The central bank response has differed globally.

Figure 4. Central Bank Discount Rates, Now vs Then (7 country average)

Source: Bernanke and Mihov (2000); Bank of England, ECB, Bank of Japan, St. Louis Fed, National Bank of Poland, Sveriges Riksbank.

Figure 5 shows money supply for a GDP-weighted average of 19 countries accounting for more than half of world GDP in 2004. Clearly, monetary expansion was more rapid in the run-up to the 2008 crisis than during 1925-29, which is a reminder that the stage-setting events were not the same in the two cases. Moreover, the global money supply continued to grow rapidly in 2008, unlike in 1929 when it levelled off and then underwent a catastrophic decline.

Figure 5. Money Supplies, 19 Countries, Now vs Then

Source: Bordo et al. (2001), IMF International Financial Statistics, OECD Monthly Economic Indicators.

Figure 6 is the analogous picture for fiscal policy, in this case for 24 countries. The interwar measure is the fiscal surplus as a percentage of GDP. The current data include the IMF’s World Economic Outlook Update forecasts for 2009 and 2010. As can be seen, fiscal deficits expanded after 1929 but only modestly. Clearly, willingness to run deficits today is considerably greater.

Figure 6. Government Budget Surpluses, Now vs Then

Source: Bordo et al. (2001), IMF World Economic Outlook, January 2009.

Conclusion

To summarise: the world is currently undergoing an economic shock every bit as big as the Great Depression shock of 1929-30. Looking just at the US leads one to overlook how alarming the current situation is even in comparison with 1929-30.

The good news, of course, is that the policy response is very different. The question now is whether that policy response will work. For the answer, stay tuned for our next column.

References

Eichengreen, B. and K.H. O’Rourke. 2009. “A Tale of Two Depressions.” In progress.

Bernanke, B.S. 2000. Bernanke, B.S. and I. Mihov. 2000. “Deflation and Monetary Contraction in the Great Depression: An Analysis by Simple Ratios.” In B.S. Bernanke, Essays on the Great Depression. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Bordo, M.D., B. Eichengreen, D. Klingebiel and M.S. Martinez-Peria. 2001. “Is the Crisis Problem Growing More Severe?” Economic Policy32: 51-82.

Paul Krugman, “The Great Recession versus the Great Depression,” Conscience of a Liberal (20 March 2009).

Doug Short, “Four Bad Bears,” DShort: Financial Lifecycle Planning” (20 March 2009).

Sunday, June 14, 2009

How Herbert Hoover Put the “Great” in Great Depression

Common wisdom about the Great Depression seems to be that Herbert Hoover was a free market, laissez-faire kind of guy, who mistakenly decided to “do nothing” and let the economy work itself out...merely watching as it spiraled down the drain.

The rap on Hoover couldn’t be more wrong, says legendary libertarian economist Murray Rothbard. Hoover is actually the guy who made the Great Depression what it is!

Rothbard’s book America’s Great Depression is considered by many to be the finest account of what happened economically and politically in America between 1929 and 1932. (You can download a free copy here, courtesy of Mises.org).

He does a fine job of unraveling the mystery behind the Great Depression, which continues to perplex people to this day. Suddenly a hot topic, now that we’ve got a veritable depression of our own on our hands, people are scrambling to figure out what the heck happened 80 years ago!

Rothbard believes (as do I) that the severity of a depression is directly proportional to the amount of government intervention directed at “fixing things.” He contrasts America’s depression of 1920, which lasted less than a year, with the Great Depression, which just about dragged out into World War II.

America used to have depressions all the time. The 19th century and early 20th century are peppered with them. They were always short and sweet, because the US government was not yet large or powerful enough to really do anything about them. So the panics would come and quickly pass…excesses would be removed from the system…and the path would be clear for the next economic upturn.

The last time the US government pursued a mostly laissez-faire policy in handling a recession/depression was 1920-1921. Warren Harding was president - so it’s not hard to imagine he had a difficult time keeping his hands off the levers, because Harding was widely regarded as one of the least qualified presidents in American history. He’s the guy who Republicans believed just looked like a president – so they dressed him up, and sure enough, he was eventually elected into office.

Ironically, the man Harding appointed as Secretary of Commerce in March 1921 was none other than Herbert Hoover, who only accepted the position on the condition he’d be able to meddle in government economic policy. So Hoover quickly set to work in 1921 by mapping out boneheaded designs for public works projects and other central planning types of activities.

Fortunately for the US, the depression ended before Hoover was able enact any of his programs. But the stage was set for the big dance, coming up at the end of the decade.

When the stock market crashed on October 24, 1929, Hoover kicked into gear right away and started “doing stuff”. He ignored his laissez-faire Secretary of Treasury Mellon, who famously advised him to:

"Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate. It will purge the rottenness out of the system. High costs of living and high living will come down. People will work harder, live a more moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up from less competent people."

Hoover honestly believed he could halt the depression freight train himself. He immediately called a series of conferences at the White House with top business leaders, in an effort to persuade them to maintain their wage rates and expand investments.

Hmmm – sounds eerily similar to the old “hair of the dog” approach we’re seeing today.

Rothbard writes that Hoover even phrased the purpose of these conferences as “the coordination of business and governmental agencies in concerted action,” which also seems to rhyme with today’s cries that capitalism can’t do it alone without government.

By the end of the year, Hoover was able to coerce the country’s leading industrialists into pledging to “maintain wage rates, expand construction, and share any reduced work.” Thus the invisible hand of the market was replaced by the iron fist of Uncle Sam.

While most understand the Great Depression as a deflationary time, Rothbard writes that it wasn’t for a lack of effort on the part of the Fed:

If the Federal Reserve had an inflationist attitude during the boom, it was just as ready to try to cure the depression by inflating further. It stepped in immediately to expand credit and bolster shaky financial positions. In an act unprecedented in its history, the Federal Reserve moved in during the week of the crash—the final week of October—and in that brief period added almost $300 million to the reserves of the nation’s banks. During that week, the Federal Reserve doubled its holdings of government securities, adding over $150 million to reserves, and it discounted about $200 million more for member banks. Instead of going through a healthy and rapid liquidation of unsound positions, the economy was fated to be continually bolstered by governmental measures that could only prolong its diseased state.

The result? Green shoots!

Again from Rothbard:

President Hoover was proud of his experiment in cheap money, and in his speech to the business conference on December 5, he hailed the nation’s good fortune in possessing the splendid Federal Reserve System, which had succeeded in saving shaky banks, had restored confidence, and had made capital more abundant by reducing interest rates.

And by the end of 1929, Hoover had also:
  • Urged an aggressive expansion of all state public works programs
  • Instituted farm subsidies and price supports
  • Enacted rules to discourage commodity speculators
Talk about a panicked two months!

In 1930, the train wreck continued, as mid-year saw the passing of the infamous Smoot-Hawley Tariff, one of the most economically damaging laws ever passed in the history of the world.
Cutting off international trade is at best a bad idea in good times, but a disastrous idea at a time of severe economic hardship.

And he wasn’t yet done. Hoover then set out to weaken bankruptcy laws, in order to prevent them, resulting in many “zombie” companies being propped up (Detroit, anyone?). He imposed limits on immigration and deported illegal aliens, in a misguided effort to help the unemployment rate by “reducing supply” in the available workforce.

Hoover continued his crusade to keep wage rates propped up – focusing on maximum employment. Employers’ were severely hamstrung in their ability to unload marginal employees. Laws were passed that dictated how many hours construction employees could work on federal projects.

In addition to these gems, he tried just about every remaining misguided economic move that we haven’t yet discussed. He went after short sellers. He restricted oil production in the name of conservation. He enacted one of the largest tax increases in the history of the US.

In conclusion, Hoover was a socialist bum who did not have a free market bone in his body. Kudos to Murray Rothbard for exposing him as the fraud that he is. I’ll leave you with this inane quote from Hoover in his doomed 1932 reelection campaign, which illustrates exactly how clueless this guy was:

[W]e might have done nothing. That would have been utter ruin. Instead, we met the situation with proposals to private business and to Congress of the most gigantic program of economic defense and counterattack ever evolved in the history of the Republic. We put it into action.


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Positions Update

Nice week but I have to admit – I’m starting to get quite cautious that some of these trends have played out.

First, I was stopped out of our Orange Juice position, taking a modest profit on this trade. OJ never managed to clear the $1.00, but it’s still cheap, so we’ll be keeping an eye on it. We were stopped out at our customary “15-day low” exit.

The dollar may be in the early stages of a rally, and that’s bearish for gold…which seasonally sucks in the summer anyway. Tomorrow, I’ll be shifting my wife’s entire 401K allocation out of the gold stock fund into short term treasuries, as I’m concerned that gold could be in a vulnerable short term spot here. The fund is already up 30% on the year, so it’s due for a pullback.

With the dollar rallying, that could give the Australian dollar problems, so I may look to hedge that position with another short, or possibly a long position in the dollar index.

Finally, soybeans have continued to move up on tight supply concerns and strong demand from China. I’ve been pyramiding some mini’s of this position – though it’s tough to say if this rally has more legs, or is due for a pullback. Many of the technical publications I follow have turned quite bearish on beans, so I remain cautious here.


Current Account Value: $33,798.87

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $53,798.87
Weekly return: 3.9%
2009 YTD return: -33.5% (Don't call it a comeback??)

2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, May 24, 2009

This Ain't Your Grandpa's Deflation...This Week in Commodities

Common wisdom holds that depressions are inherently deflationary.  The United States in the 1930's.  Japan in the 1990's and 2000's.

Combine a depression with other deflationary factors going today in the US - demographics, deleveraging, falling asset prices, even productivity - and you've got some serious deflationary headwinds.

(As a side note - I've warmed to the view that gentle deflation, as a result of increasing productivity, is the optimal, and honest, situation that promotes both savings and economic growth.  It's silly to label all deflation as "bad" or "evil"...how can deflation created by increased productivity be bad?  But I digress.)

Ben Bernanke, a student of the Great Depression, believes that the Depression could have been averted if deflation had been averted.

Determined not to repeat the mistakes of history - or what he thought were the mistakes of history - Bernanke took unprecendented measures...first, lowering interest rates as far as they would go...next, utterly trashing the Fed's balance sheet...and finally, when all else failed, he cranked up the printing presses.

Printing money always leads to inflation...in fact, printing money...or quantitative easing...is inflation.  Rising prices - which follow - are the symptoms of inflation.  

But what if you just print the money "for a little while"?  That's right - print it up, float it out there to keep the economy from grinding to a halt - and then when things are moving again, start to pull it back in.

Doesn't it sound insane?

Well, this is what is being tried.  And as hyperinflationary as this sounds, even the most fervent inflation hounds believe it will be a year or two or three before we start to see inflation creeping into the system.

Too much credit was destroyed, the velocity of money slowed down too much...logical reasoning dictated that it would take the Fed time to print enough to make up the gap...even at the rapid rate in which they were printing.

Then a funny thing happend while we were chilling out, getting comfortable, and generally not worrying about inflation - commodity prices started to move up.  The dollar started to drop.  Bond yields started to climb.


Falling Dollar, Rising Bond Yields = An "Uh Oh" Sandwich

Remember when every investor in the world was worried about the dollar's poor fundamentals?  McDonald's was poking fun at the dollar in it's commercials...music videos were flashing euros...supermodel Gisele Bundchen asked to be paid in euros rather than dollars.

That marked a bottom - at least a short term bottom - in the dollar.  Everyone was on the same side of the trade - short the US dollar.  

When world financial markets collapsed, a global "flight to safety" and massive short covering propelled the dollar up, up, and up.  

For awhile, nobody worried about the dollar's fundamentals...at least in the short term.  The Fed's printing money?  Hey, no problem, the dollar's still the world's reserve currency.  Besides, other countries are printing money too.  Why worry?

In the meantime, the dollar quiety began to slide...and the dollar index is now sitting at its low point for 2009:

It's a quiet race to get rid of US dollars once again. 
(Source: Barchart.com)

Makes you wonder if currency fundamentals do, in fact, still matter...if printing money is indeed bearish for the value of the currency being printed.

Meanwhile, what has The Fed been doing with it's newly printed dollars?  It's been buying long dated US Treasuries to keep yields down!

Nobody else is buying this trash, so it's up to our printing presses to pick up the slack.  The Fed announced this "newly printed cash for trash" program last December - when yields on the 10 and 30 year bonds were dropping, and deflation was king.

Common wisdom held that deflation, combined with these "monetization purchases" by The Fed, would continue to drive rates down...possibly all the way to zero.

But a funny thing happened on the way to Japan...rates bottomed on December 18, 2008, and have been climbing ever since!  Long dated Treasuries have been slammed throughout the first half of 2009!

30-Year Treasuries are not behaving like we're in a deflationary environment
 (Source: Barchart.com)

Uh oh...this is not good.  What a Fed to do?

If they let interest rates rise - that will surely squash whatever is left of the US consumer.  Green shoots turn into marajuana buds - game over.

But the only way to prevent interest rates from rising in the near term (short of cutting government debt, which we know is not going to happen) - is to step up their purchase of long term bonds.

So applying a little game theory to the Fed's current hand - we have to expect them to sacrifice the dollar.

The twist, I believe, is that the dollar could get trashed quite soon.  So I would strongly advise you to take a hard look at your savings and investments - right now.  

Charts don't lie.  No matter what our personal beliefs or biases are about the future, no matter what we think is going happen - we have to defer to what the markets are telling us.  And right now, the markets are starting to say "uh oh."

It could be a breathtaking move out of the dollar - it's value could feasibly get trashed in a matter of weeks, days, or even hours.  Don't be the one left holding the "Old Maid" card as the rest of the world runs for the exits. 



Positions Update - Back in the High Life Again!

What a week put by the Aussie...while the USD tanked, the A$ soared - moving up over 3.5 cents in one week!

I believe the Australian dollar could continue to rally further from here, and will be holding this position until we see a change in the trend.  Because we know that the trend is our friend!

OJ was down slightly on the week...some rain in Florida to snap the drought.  Prices held strong though...they could be consolidating before the next move higher.  We're still at fairly cheap prices on OJ, so there is room on the upside.

Not to cry over spilt milk - or in this case, spilt sugar - but I should not have "taken profits" in my sugar positions last week.  Just goes to show that when the trend is on your side, you don't sell and wait for a pullback...because it may never come!

Shame on me, and now I sit on the sidelines, waiting for a further breakout to the upside to reinitiate this position.

Finally with a little dry powder sitting around, I decided to "punt" on a Mini Soybeans contract on Friday.  Beans have been extremely strong, driven by demand from...you guessed it...China.  The soybean complex is a favorite of the Chinese - more so than corn and wheat - and as a result, beans have leading the pack as far as the grains go.

Soybeans are on the move, driven by Chinese demand. 
(Source: Barchart.com)


Current Account Value: $31,836.61

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $51,836.61
Weekly return: 11.6%
2009 YTD return: -37.3% (Don't call it a comeback??)

Prior year's results:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Saturday, April 18, 2009

WSJ: Leading Investors Who Survived the Great Depression

The Wall Street Journal published an insightful article earlier this week, profiling 3 investors who survivied the Great Depression, and continue to actively invest and manage funds today.

For what it's worth, all 3 seem to scoff at the idea that we are in for a repeat of the Great Depression today.  One guy sites the diversity of today's US economy, compared with a small handful of industries that drove most of the economy during the Depression, as a big difference.

My favorite profile is the first guy, who still goes into the office everyday at the ripe young age of 103.  

Man, and I got sick of office life at the age of 25! 

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