Stocks & Equities
What you missed since the VICE Letter was launched!
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- Medican (MDCN) was added at .0045 and it surged to .0521, over a 1000% gain!
- Mark recently sold (March 15) GW Pharmaceuticals (GWPH) for $24.70 profit. And, another $23.43 point profit posted on April 15! And $5.39 profit on May 11.
- And, a 47% gain in a low-priced Cannabis-Marijuana ‘penny-stock’ (THCZ) was posted on April 6.
- Mark added the Bitcoin Investment Trust (GBTC) on May 19 at 29.00 and it soared to 33.00 in two days. Still long here, now trading at 30.65.
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If you weren’t sure about this market – now may be the time
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Perspective
Bernanke’s blog indicates that he really still believes the textbook stuff.
Interventionist economics started with certain premises and with logic set out to prevent the financial setbacks that
many thought caused recessions. The pitch included that government could make contra-cyclical fiscal moves that would be stimulative during slow period and booms would be constrained by slowing government activity.
Right!
Since the invention of government, bureaucratic ambition has always been to project influence and expand expenditures. That such an implacable force could time the economy was a very naïve concept and, thankfully, is little discussed these days.
Over-discussed these days are the abilities of the Federal Reserve System to time, yes, the market. What’s more, fund managers around the world fully expect the next change in the administered rate will be perfectly timed. It doesn’t matter whether it is up or down, it will be brilliant.
But the endless discussion of when and how much over the last few quarters has been futile. Relentless financial engineering has been part of this remarkable world of serial bubbles. And the record of rate changes by the senior central bank in and around bubbles is instructive. Particularly when compared to changes in market rates of interest.
The main point is that short-dated market rates of interest decline during a contraction. The notion that the Fed will lower rates to keep a boom going seems based upon intuition. Definitely not on financial history.
So what happens now when short rates are at zero?
Anyone’s guess, but we are staying with the history that it is the change in the curve and credit spreads that signals the contraction. This seems close, but not without irony.
The street used to stay long because the Fed would make the perfectly-timed cut in administered rates. But T-bill rates plunge in a bust anyway.
Now the reason to remain long is that the central bankers will continue to drive long rates down. This one is now hors de combat.
When will this impressive turn in interest rates be noticed by the stock market?
Stock Markets
Our big theme has been that the senior US stock indexes would rally out to “around May” and this is where we are. This view includes that both stocks and the economy will roll over, virtually, together. Since earlier in the year “Macro” numbers have seriously declined, which could be cyclical. And as we have been noting, the stock rally has been seasonal. The seasonal window within which big rallies can complete will soon close.
There has been six classic stock bubbles and the record is worth reviewing.
The South Sea Bubble completed in June 1720. The examples of 1772, 1825,1873 and 1929 all peaked in London and Europe in May. The new pattern was set with the 1873 and 1929 examples when the action in New York peaked in September. The 2007 example peaked in October. The Tech bubble of 2000, in not including strong commodities and real estate, was not a classic bubble. It peaked in March.
Each of these recorded forced liquidation in the fall.
How is this to be applied to now?
The speculative surge in Hong Kong and China has been outstanding. Shanghai and the ChiNext (like Nasdaq) continue to soar. The May 25th ChartWorks updated the SSEC. The key is that the action is similar to the blow-off in 2007. Strong rallies that register Upside Exhaustions, a pause and another zoom – until the concluding one.
Essentially, there were three sets of Exhaustions to the ultimate peak on October 16, 2007.
This rush to blow-off has had two rallies strong enough to register Upside Exhaustions. Will it take one, or two more to complete the overall move?
Nomenclature is important. Will the next one be the penultimate, or the ultimate rally? Seriously, this is sensational stuff and one of the biggest players Hanergy plunged 50% in less than a New York day. Outlying stock exchanges are in full zoom at the most positive season of the year. Cracks are appearing and it is worth reminding ourselves that when lesser exchanges fail it eventually visits senior exchanges.
In the meantime the S&P is working on some “heads-up” patterns. One related to the VIX and the other to junk bonds. The charts follow.
Technically, the NYSE has been deteriorating. The Advance/Decline line for the S&P 500 has been a big positive until it made its last high in late February. The decline since has been an alert.
The overall line is NYAD and it set its high on April 20th and with a couple of swings was close to failing yesterday. Today it has taken out the low of early May. Also an alert.
On the “venerable” Dow Theory, the pattern would become a warning when the DJIA slipped below the 50-Day ma. We have called this Step One and it has happened today.
Warnings all over the place!
Credit Markets
In a three-letter word, Wow!
At a press conference yesterday, Draghi advised “We should get used to periods of higher volatility”. We noticed no such comment when the Bund yield was plunging to 0.059%. That was set on April 17th and with a couple of corrections it has soared to 0.954%. When the reversal started in April it reminded of 1992 when big traders took on the Bank of England’s defense of the pound – and won – big time.
Mother Nature always defeats arbitrary policies.
We had expected that the reversal in US Treasuries would be followed by the same reversal in Eurobonds. Our focus was two-fold. One was that the call would work and the other was that central bankers had become fanatical in pursuit of absurd policy and deserved massive failure. This seems well underway.
The full instruction in establishment folly has yet to be completed.
Credit spreads had been expected to narrow into “around May”. The worst was 213 bps in January and the best was reached at 177 bps on May 19. The reversal to widening was accomplished by breaking above 179 bps on Friday.
That was at 183 bps and above 186 bps would extend the trend. Given the degree of financial speculation it should be followed by a severe dislocation. Hitting the “wides” reached with the panic that ended in January seems highly likely. Considering that, one way or another, that central bankers are massively long the trade liquidation will be interesting.
It is convenient to use the TLT to monitor the long bond.
Our January 20th “Ending Action” study expected a significant high to be followed by a long bear market. The high was 137 at the end of January and by stages it slumped to 118 two weeks ago. This took out both the 50-Day and 200-Day moving averages. The swing from overbought to oversold was impressive and the bounce made it to the 200-Day at 123. It has declined to 117.19 and is not oversold.
It is close to breaking down, but before that melancholy prospect there could be one more run with the flight to “quality” trade.
The Municipal market is interesting.
MUB set its high at 111 at the end of January and declined to 108 two weeks ago. This took out both the 50-Day and 200-Day. The rebound to 108.68 failed at the 200-Day. At 107.91 it is at a new low for the move and it looks like a long way down.
Particularly when looking at the fundamentals. Many Democrat-run cities and counties could default. Detroit, the example, is now being followed by Chicago with Burlington recently falling into the trap.
There never has been any fiscal discipline and union workers have been granted impossible pensions. Like the Post Office, municipalities mainly exist to benefit its employees and administrative staff. Providing services to the rate-payers is just the sales pitch.
Currencies
Some international players could be selling the big NYSE stocks and taking the money home. After becoming oversold, the DX jumped from 93 to 98 and has been drifting down. It could not hold above the 50-Day and now could find support at 93.
Financial forces seem to be setting up for some serious concerns in the credit markets. This could end the remarkable flood of new bond issues and the play could swing over to servicing debt. The majority of the debt is due and payable in US dollars into New York.
The dollar could churn around for some weeks, but the chart pattern is within a major bull market.
The Canadian enjoyed a good run from very oversold to overbought. The quote jumped from 78 to 83.9 as most commodities did the “rotation”. Essentially the action is tied to commodities and the trend will be down.
That will be the case until the markets and the public instruct the Bank of Canada that there is no such thing as a national economy. So there is no point in trying to “manage” it. The next step would be to understand that there is no advantage to have the Canadian unit trade at less than the US. A currency board should be established with the instruction to keep it a par.
Precious Metals
The main thing in this sector is that silver is declining relative to gold, which is a sign of problems in the financial markets.
The gold/silver ratio has been volatile which has been an alert to change. It set its recent low at 69 in March and again in May. This was against speculation in stocks and bonds.
Last week we noted that if the ratio rose above 73 it would set a rising trend. It is there today, which is above both the 50 and 200-Day moving averages. The trend is up and it is a warning on the failure of speculation in orthodox investments. Also noted last week was that getting above 77 would be a warning on serious dislocations in the credit markets.
This is not an environment that will be friendly to any equity sectors, including precious metals. There can times when the golds can move opposite to the big board but this is not likely over the next couple of months.
Our November special study was looking for a bottom and advised buying some stocks on weakness. We did not get fully invested. On the second rally of the year GDXJ stalled at the 50-Day ma and we advised taking some money off the table. The same advice was offered on the rally into the middle of May.
So effectively we are not long gold or silver stocks.
We would own some gold as insurance against any old thing. But positioning gold or silver with hopes of making money is just a currency trade.
Silver’s low was 15.04 set in November and the best level was 18.50 set in late January. This was right at the declining 200-Day ma. The May pop took silver up to 17.78, which was above that moving average. At 16.48 today it is below both the 50-Day and 200-Day moving averages and is not looking good. Breaking below the 15.25 level would tarnish the lustrous metal.
Actually it would be a serious failure and this is possible.
US Auto and Light Truck Sales Historical Chart | Macro Trends
- Car sales have recorded big cyclical swings.
- More recently they peaked with stock speculation in April 2000.
- The key reversal in spreads occurred in February 2000.
- Note the break down when the credit spreads and the yield curve reversed in June 2007.
- Car sales peaked in April 1929.
ChiNext ETF

- The ETF started the year at 1.44.
- The low on the April correction was 2.37.
- The current post is 3.57.
- The index is equivalent to the NASDAQ.
- The speculative zoom is becoming outstanding. As with previous examples the big setback and failed test will define the end.
NASDAQ into 2000 top

Nikkei into 1989 top

Velocity
- The collapse of velocity in 1930 was the public’s choice to hoard cash. It was very distressful to policymakers.
- It prompted Keynes to invent a “new” theory of forced inflation.
- Forced inflation has been “on” ever since.
- This one is GDP/Monetary Base, with data back to 1929.
- The big change was made in 1980, close to the all-time high in commodities.
- For those who still think that Volker personally ended CPI inflation, he is to blame for collapsing velocity.
- For those interested in real financial history, this measure of velocity is plunging at the greatest rate since 1930.
- Velocity increased with the 1932 to 1937 bull market
- This has not been the case with the bull market that began in 2009. Will the recent collapse prompt a new policymaking theory?
Stock Market and Volatility

- This model is close to providing a signal.
- This is a “heads-up”.
Stock Market and Junk

- Action in the junk and high-yield is showing negative diversion.
- A “heads-up”.
Link to June 5, 2015 Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com:http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2015/06/european-bonds-go-for-scarey-ride/
We now inhabit a world where virtually everything is a con.
Which brings us to China, one of the greatest credit bubble and financial cons ever.…..continue reading HERE
Progress of the secular bear market: position as of May 31, 2015

10000 point decline in the Dow in the cards over the next three years
I have been tracking the progress of the secular bear market since forecasting it in Stock Cycles in 2000. The valuation tool I employ is P/R, which I outlined in my first article at Safehaven in 2001. R stands business Resources. It refers to the non-labor resources businesses employ to earn a profit. R can be thought of as a constant-dollar book value. R in year t is the sum of retained earnings from 1871 to year t plus the value of R in 1871. I assume that R in 1871 is equal to the index value in 1871 and proceed from there. Values for the index price, earnings and dividends were obtained from Professor Shiller’s website. The figure at the top of this article shows plots of P/R for previous secular bear markets. Until about a year ago the current secular bear market had been behaving in a very conventional way–even the disruption of the crisis in 2008. But over the last year the behavior of the market has been unprecedented, assuming that we remain in a secular bear market.
I believe the recent rise in the market reflects a bout of irrational exuberance. Consider, in January 1999, P/R reached a level equal to its preceding record value, set in 1901. I had sold half my portfolio the previous month and would sell the rest by the end of the summer. Yet the S&P reached its highest value (on a monthly average basis) in August of 2000, 17 months later. The story told by the NASDAQ is even more interesting. In January 1999, it stood at 2500 and P/R predicted serious declines in the next few years. Indeed, the NASDAQ averaged about 1240 in October 2002, half its value in January 1999. What is interesting is the path taken by the “decline” from 2500 in January 1999 to 1240 in October 2002. On the way “down” it (briefly) was over 5000. Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan had called the late 1990’s market “irrational exuberance” and that is what it was.
The figure at the top of this article shows that the stock market reached an all-time high P/R for our current position in the stock cycle in May of 2014 and since then has moved much higher. But this assessment assumes that we are still in a secular bear market, and that stock market cycles are meaningful. How does the market compare to history if we ignore stock market cycles? The current value of P/R of 1.04 is well below the value of 1.47 seen in 2000. It is even below the absolute P/R of 1.06 in 1966, the lowest of all the secular bull market peaks. (Note: the 1966-1982 bear is scaled in the top figure so as to fit in with the other secular bear markets in order to show relative levels). So is the current level really all that high?
Why the market level today is problematic
The stock market is essentially a capital market; it serves the function of putting a price on the basket of capital associated with a specific firm. A broad-based stock index, like the S&P 500, provides a price for the capital collectively possessed by the companies in the index. R represents the cumulative investments responsible for that capital and can be thought of as an independent measure of the capital in the index.
It follows that the index earnings (E) divided by R gives the return on capital (ROC) for the index. The quotient of ROC and P/R gives the return on price (ROP) which should be indicative of the typical return on investment (ROI) from a purchase of a diversified portfolio of stocks in the index. Since capital is a real thing, ROC is a real return and so is ROP. ROC declined after WW I and never recovered. Table 1 shows ROC for the period before and after 1916. ROC was much lower after 1916 than before. The stock market responded by pricing capital lower, the average price for R was 24% lower after 1916 than before. As a result ROP did not drop nearly as much as ROC. Actual observed total return was only modestly lower.
Table 1. Estimation of stock market total real return using ROC and P/R

So far we have seen that around 1916 the way the stock market works changed in ways that reduced the average price of capital. There is an old Wall Street saying that the market is driven by fear and greed. Before 1916, the balance between fear and greed maintained P/R at about 1, and investors reaped a real return of 7.0% on a ROC of 7.3%. After 1916, the average level of fear increased so as to reduce average P/R, enabling an ROC of 4.5% to give a 6.2% real return. To do this required large swings in market levels (i.e. the secular bull and bear markets) to generate the fear necessary to produce low average prices. The figure at the top of the page shows that secular bear markets after WW I ended at much lower levels than those before WW I. Presumably, the current secular bear market should be no different than the other three post-WW I ones.
It is a reasonable assumption that the S&P 500 and Cowles index are sufficiently broad-based to be representative of the economy. In this case, R serves as a proxy for the amount of capital in the economy. As capital and labor are both factors of production, GDP should be correlated with both. Since the emergence of a modern industrial economy after the Civil War, GDP per capita (GDPpc) has been proportional to R.1 This means the ratio of GDPpc to R should be approximately constant if capital is being used efficiently. Indeed, from 1871 to 1907 GDPpc/R (capital productivity) showed an average value of 44±2 and over 1942-2000 it showed an average value of 42±3 (Figure 1). Following the Panic of 1907, GDPpc/R began a steady decline reaching the mid 20’s during the heights of the Depression. The ratio GDPpc/R can be thought of as a measure of sales per person (consumer) per unit of capital invested. A decline in the top line eventually falls to the bottom line, and after about a decade lag, pre-tax ROC also began to decline.
Figure 1. Declining capital productivity (GDPpc/R) led to the decline in ROC after 1916
So the fundamental problem was that capital ceased to produce as much output per person after 1907 as it had before. Less output means less pre-tax and post-tax ROC. Less ROC means more stock market and economic volatility to drive down P/R, which leads to increased risk, lower investment returns or both. Since the ethos of capitalism is the maximization of profit, this constraining of profit can be thought of as an operational crisis in capitalism, that culminated, decades later, in the general crisis of the Great Depression.
Capital that has a lower productivity than normal (i.e. between 1907 and 1942 and since 2000) does not have the same value as capital that produces normal output. We can account for changes in capital productivity by using the observation that during “normal” times GDPpc/R is approximately constant allowing us to express R as GDPpc/constant. If we use this in place of R we get:
- P/R = constant * P / GDPpc
Figure 2 shows a plot of equation with a constant of 44 used before 1942 and 42 afterward. This shows how the market priced capital based on its performance. Three peaks stand out, 1929, 2000 and now.
Figure 2. P/R adjusted for capital productivity
That the stock market was in a bubble in 1929 was confirmed by the tremendous decline afterward. The situation in 2000 is different. Like 1929, 2000 was the end of a secular bull market during which conditions had long been favorable to investment and investors were understandably in a bullish mood. When the market began to decline, the Fed sprang into action and slashed interest rates. The real estate market, which had been in a bull mode for several years, but was not yet seriously overvalued, responded favorably and housing prices and building activity remained fairly strong during the 2001 recession, resulting in a milder downturn both economically and in the stock market than might otherwise had happened. A side effect of a strong real estate market during the recession was an even stronger real estate market after the recession, which resulted in a bubble in which real estate prices got about as overvalued as stocks had been in 2000. The aftermath of this bubble was much more severe on both the stock market and the economy. At the market bottom in 2009 P/R had fallen by two thirds from its high, and the US economy had experienced its first financial panic in 75 years.
Today the stock market is again approaching the valuations seen in 2000 and 1929. Unlike these peaks, today’s peak does not show a particularly high level in terms of P/E or other conventional measures of valuation. Stocks don’t look particularly high because the impact of the drop in capital productivity over the last decade has not yet filtered through to the bottom line. Rising profit margins since 2000 have worked to offset falling capital productivity so as to maintain ROC at pre-2000 levels (Figure 3).
Figure 3. Trends in capital productivity, profit margin and ROC since 1980
Concerns over the sustainability of current margins, have been expressed:
You have to pay close attention to Mauldin’s reasoning, which I’m obliged to disclose are based on the opinions of investor John Hussman, a closely followed investment adviser. He says “while price/earnings multiples appear only moderately elevated, those multiples themselves reflect earnings that embed record profit margins that stand about 70% above their historical norms.” Get that? Stocks are priced too high because expected record profits are too far above normal corporate earning power. By this rule of thumb, Maudlin reckons that “market valuations… are well above any point prior to the late-1990s market bubble.” Meaning that it’s 2000 all over again, as profit margins must revert to mean sooner or later.
Mauldin’s analysis concludes that stocks are again at levels similar to 2000, which agrees with Figure 3. Using a different methodology John Hussman has also concluded that the market as of 2014 was extremely overvalued:
The upshot is that equities are likely to produce total returns close to zero over the coming decade. But they still present something of an “inventory” problem. The basic inventory problem is to accumulate inventory prior to advances in price, to hold that inventory as long as it appreciates in price, and to release that inventory when prices are elevated. What we observe at present is a market where the inventory now fetches record prices and is likely to enjoy little return for long-term holders, and suffer severe losses over the completion of the present cycle. But should short-term demand become even greater, one can’t rule out a move to even higher prices and even more dismal long-term prospective returns – something to be celebrated by those who hold out long enough to sell at that point, but tragic for those who actually buy the inventory in the hope that it will be rewarding over time.
If we accept the likelihood of a major decline in the next few years how far is the market likely to fall? If the stock market returns to the normal secular bear pattern of a downward trend in P/R, then the coming bear market bottom should see P/R below 0.49. Even if the bear market were the start today it would likely take a couple of years to reach the bottom, as was the case in 2000-2002 and 2007-2009. Let us assume a bottom in 2018. Over those three years R can be expected to gain another 10% and be at around 2200. Multiplying this by 0.49 gives about 1080, about half of current levels. This is the best case.
Worst case would be if the coming bear market/recession were associated with another financial crisis. Should this happen there is little the Fed can do, interest rates are already near zero and three rounds of quantitative easing have already been tried and shown to have little positive impact on growth. Crises are all about confidence, specifically the loss of it (which is why historically they were called panics). With the recent experience of limited Fed effectiveness, it is unlikely Fed action along will be able to significantly moderate the extent of the decline.
This leaves direct government intervention. In the last crisis the market found a bottom shortly (thirteen market days) after the passage of the stimulus bill. And this had following the TARP bill four months earlier. Serious deflation never appeared and unemployment never approached the 25% level seen in the 1932-33 crisis. So it would appear policymakers were successful in preventing a worst-case outcome in 2009. Worst case for the coming bear market would be if no legislative action is taken this time. In this case the relevant examples would be come from the period after WW I (when modern secular cycles really began) to the period after 1950 when government economic intervention became routine. This period includes bear market bottoms in 1920, 1932, 1938 1942 and 1949. The P/R values for these are 0.27, 0.21, 0.45, 0.28, and 0.31, respectively. The average of these is 0.30, which when multiplied by 2200 yields 670, about the same value as that reached in 2009. Thus a range of lows between around 650 and 1050 is projected for the coming decline.
The consensus of the chart at the top of the page suggests a P/R value around 0.4 as most typical, which translates to a bottom around 900. So 900 would be the median forecast for the bottom. In terms of the DJIA, this translates to about 8000, that is, about a ten thousand point drop in the Dow.
References:
1. Alexander, Michael A. (2000) Stock cycles: why stocks won’t beat money markets over the next twenty years, Writers Club Press, New York, p 44.
“I’ve said this before; there are three things that I depend on, and they have always worked for me. One, I am always safe. Two, I always hear what’s important and what I am supposed to hear. And three, God provides me with whatever supplies I need for that day.
Over the weekend, I received a brochure from Steven Leeb…..
….read more HERE
….also posted on June 10th
Russell comment: it should not be long before we hear about Chinese gold reserves, which I personally believe will be huge and shocking.
Just before the close the close, the Dow is up 246 points and back above the 18,000 level. Confirming the Dow in direction, Transports are up 60 and well above the big even number of 8,000. The Nasdaq is up 69 and well above the even number of 5,000. Gold is up to 8.3 to 1185.9 and silver is up 2 cents to 15.98.
From what I hear, every central bank is buying gold as a hedge against an overpriced and over-loved dollar.”
….read more HERE




