Timing & trends

The Punch Bowl Stays

imagesIt is well known that I don’t think much of the ability of government officials to correctly forecast much of anything. Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke have made famously clueless predictions with respect to stock and housing bubbles, and rank and file Fed economists have consistently overestimated the strength of the economy ever since their forecasts became public in 2008 (see my previous article on the subject). But there is one former Fed and White House economist who has a slightly better track record…which is really not saying much. Over his public and private career, former Fed Governor and Bush-era White House Chief Economist Larry Lindsey actually got a few things right.

Back in the late 1990s, Lindsey was one of the few Fed governors to warn about a pending stock bubble, and to suggest that forecasts for future growth in corporate earnings were wildly optimistic. He also famously predicted that the cost of the 2003 Iraq invasion would greatly exceed the $50 billion promised by then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, a dissent that ultimately cost him his White House position. (But even Lindsey’s $100-$200 billion forecast proved way too conservative – the final price of the invasion and occupation is expected to exceed $2 trillion).

Now Lindsey is speaking out again, and this time he is pointing to what he sees as a painfully obvious problem: That the Fed is creating new bubbles that no one seems willing to confront or even acknowledge.  Interviewed by CNBC on June 8th on Squawk Box, Lindsey offered an unusually blunt assessment of the current state of the markets and the economy. To paraphrase:

“The public and the political class love to have everything going up. We had “Bubble #1” in the 1990s, “Bubble #2” in the 00s, and now we are in “Bubble #3.” It’s a lot of fun while it’s going up, but no one wants to be accused of ending the party early. But it’s the Fed’s job to take away the punch bowl before the party really gets going.”

To his credit, however, Lindsey sees how this is sowing the seeds for future pain, saying:

“The current Fed Funds rate is clearly too low, the only question is how we move it higher: Do we do it slowly, and start sooner, or do we wait until we are forced to, by the bond market or by events or statistics, in which case we would need to move more quickly. By far the lower risk approach would be to move slowly and gradually.”

In other words, he is virtually pleading for his former Fed colleagues to begin raising rates immediately. I would take Lindsey’s assertion one step further; the party really got going years ago and has been raging since September 2011, the last time the Dow corrected more than 10%. (That correction occurred at a time when the Fed had briefly ceased stimulating markets with quantitative easing.) Since then, the Dow has rallied by almost 58% without ever taking a breather. With such confidence, the party has long since passed into the realm of late night delirium.

As if to confirm that opinion, on June 8th the Associated Press published an extensive survey of 500 companies (using data supplied by S&P Capital IQ) that showed how corporate earnings have been inflated by gimmicky accounting. Public corporations, upon whose financial performance great sums may be gained or lost, are supposed to report earnings using standard GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) methods. But much like government statisticians (see last month’s commentary on the dismissal of bad first quarter performance), corporate accountants may choose to focus instead on alternative versions of profits to make lemonade from lemons.

Using creative accounting bad performance can be explained away, moved forward, depreciated, offset, or otherwise erased. Given the enormity and complexity of corporate accounting, investors have deputized the analyst community to sniff out these shenanigans. Unfortunately, our deputies may have been napping on the job. 

The AP found that 72% of the 500 companies had adjusted profits that were higher than net income in the first quarter of this year, and that the gap between those figures had widened to sixteen percent from nine percent five years ago. They also found that 21% of companies reported adjusted profits that were 50% more than net income, up from just 13% five years ago. 

But with the fully spiked punch bowl still on the table, and the disco beat thumping on the speakers, investors have consistently looked past the smoke and mirrors and have accepted adjusted profits at face value. In a similar vein, they have looked past the distorting effect made by the huge wave of corporate share buybacks (financed on the back of six years of zero percent interest rates from the Fed). The buybacks have created the illusion of earnings per share growth even while revenues have stalled.   

So kudos to Lindsey for pointing out the ugly truth. But I do not share his belief that the economy and the stock market can survive the slow, steady rate increases that he advocates. I believe that a very large portion of even our modest current growth is based on the “wealth effect” of rising stock, bond, and real estate prices that have only been made possible by zero percent rates in the first place. In my opinion, it is no coincidence that economic growth and stock market performance have stagnated since December 2014 when the Fed’s QE program came to an end (it has very little to do with either bad winter weather or the West Coast port closings).

Prior to that, the $80+ billion dollars per month that the Fed had been pumping into the economy had helped push up asset prices across the board. With QE gone, the only thing helping to keep them from falling, and the economy from an outright recession (which is technically a possibility for the first half of 2015), is zero percent interest rates. Given this, even modest increases in interest rates could be devastating. Lindsey’s gradual approach may be equally as dangerous as the rapid variety. But the quick hit has the virtue of bringing the inevitable pain forward quickly and dealing with it all at once. Call it the band-aid removal approach; it may seem brutal, but at least it’s direct, decisive and makes us deal with our problems now, rather than pushing them endlessly into the future.

The last attempt made by the Fed to raise rates gradually occurred after 2003-2004 when Alan Greenspan had attempted to withdraw the easy liquidity that he had supplied to the markets in the form of more than one years’ worth of 1% interest rates. But by raising rates in quarter point increments for the succeeding two years, Greenspan was unable to get in front of and contain the growing housing bubble, which burst a few years later and threatened to bring down the entire economy. In retrospect, Greenspan may have done us all a favor if he had moved more decisively.

Today, we face a similar but far more dangerous prospect. Whereas Greenspan kept rates at 1% for only a year, Bernanke and Yellen have kept them at zero for almost seven. We have pumped in massively more liquidity this time around, and our economy has become that much more addicted and unbalanced as a result. Arguably, the bubbles we have created (in stocks, bonds, student debt, auto loans, and real estate) in the years since rates were cut to zero in 2008 have been far larger than the stock and housing bubbles of the Greenspan era. When they pop, look out below. Unfortunately, the gradual approach did not save us last time (worse, it backfired by making the ensuing crisis that much worse), and I believe it won’t work this time.   

In fact, the current bubbles are so large and fragile that air is already coming out with rates still locked at zero. However, unlike prior bubbles that pricked in response to Fed rate hikes, the current bubble may be the first to burst without a pin. It appears the Fed fears this and will do everything it can to avoid any possible stress. That is why Fed officials will talk about raising rates, but keep coming up with excuses why they can’t.   

Lindsey will be right that the markets will eventually force the Fed to raise rates even more abruptly if it waits too long to raise them on its own. But he grossly underestimates the magnitude of the rise and the severity of the crisis when that happens. It won’t just be the end of a raging party, but the beginning of the worst economic hangover this nation has yet experienced.

 

Read the original article at Euro Pacific Capital.

Clive Maund – Gold Market Update

Although the longer-term bullish case for gold could scarcely be stronger, over the short to medium-term the picture continues weak, with it looking vulnerable to breaking down into another downleg to the $1000 area and perhaps lower. In the last update you may recall that there was some optimism expressed that it might perk up on the dollar topping out, but such has not proved to be the case – instead it has performed miserably and now looks set to drop more steeply to new lows.

On its 8-year chart we can see that gold remains in the grip of the bearmarket in force from its bullmarket highs of 2011. gold8year070615

.….continue reading and viewing charts HERE

Stocks Look Less Scary This Way

Here is a quick follow-up on yesterday’s column, along with an administrative note (at the end). Yesterday, I noted there that momentum investors will begin to lose interest in being long equities as the year-over-year price return goes towards zero. I thought of another way to illustrate the same point, which maybe gets to something more like the average investor thinks.

The average “retail” investor wants big returns, but has a very non-linear response to losses. The reason that individual investors as a whole tend to under-perform institutional investors is that the former tend to exaggerate the effect of losses while underestimating the probability of losses. So, what tends to happen is that individual investors are perennially surprised by negative equity returns (don’t feel bad – financial media is set up to reinforce this bias), and react harshly to mildly negative returns – but not harshly enough to significantly negative returns.

So, the chart below shows a simple calculation of the probability of an equity loss over the next twelve months assuming that the expected return is just the return of the last 12 months, and the standard deviation of the return is the VIX (and assuming distributions are normal…just to complete the list of improbable assumptions). This doesn’t seem unreasonable with respect to assessing a typical investor’s expectations: returns should continue, and volatility is forward-looking.

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Maybe it’s just me, but in these terms it seems more amazing. For much of the last few years, the trailing 12 month return was so high that it would take around a one-standard-deviation loss (16% chance) to experience a negative year – if, that is, we use prior returns to forecast future returns. In general, that’s a very bad idea. However, I can’t argue that this naïve approach has failed over the last few years!

What is the trigger that makes investors want to get out? After years of gains are investors going to act like they are “playing with house money” and wait until they get actual losses before they get jittery? Or will a 30-40% subjective chance of loss be enough for them to scale back? I think that this way of looking at the same picture we had yesterday seems much more promising for bulls. But, again, this is only true if valuation doesn’t matter. Stocks look less scary this way…but this is probably not the right way to look at it!

**Administrative Note – I have just agreed to write a book for a terrific publisher. The working title is “What’s Wrong with Money?: The Biggest Bubble of All – and How to Invest with it in Mind.” I am very excited about the project, but it is a lot of work to turn the manuscript out by late August for publication in the fall. My posts here had already been more sporadic than they used to be, but now I actually have an excuse! If you would like to be on the notification list for when the book is published, simply send an email to WWWM@enduringinvestments.com and I will put you on the list!

 


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What Can We Infer From the Stocks-to-Oil Stocks Ratio

The beginning of May brought a new 2015 high of $62.58 in crude oil, but we didn’t see a fresh high in case of oil stocks. In the following weeks, crude oil has been trading in a narrow range and erased less than 38.2% of earlier rally. What happened at the same time with the XOI? The index declined sharply and approached the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement in the recent days, showing its weakness in relation to light crude. Are there any factors on the horizon that could drive oil stocks higher or lower in the near future? Is it possible that the stocks-to-oil stocks ratio give us valuable clues about future moves?

Looking at the oil market from today’s point of view, we can say with full conviction that April was the best month for oil bulls since last June. Back then, oil stocks climbed to the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement, while crude oil erased almost 30% of the June-March declines. Although the XOI seemed to be stronger than the WTI, the beginning of May brought a new 2015 high of $62.58 in crude oil, but we didn’t see a fresh high in case of oil stocks. In the following weeks, crude oil has been trading in a narrow range and erased less than 38.2% of earlier rally. What happened at the same time with the XOI? The index declined sharply and approached the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement in the recent days, showing its weakness in relation to light crude.

Will the proximity to this important retracement encourage oil bulls to act? Or maybe we’ll see further deterioration? Before we try to answer these questions, we’ll examine the NYSE Arca Oil Index (XOI) in different time horizons and find out if there’s something else on the horizon that could drive oil stocks higher or lower in the near future. On top of that, we also decided to focus on the connection between the XOI and the general stock market to find out what impact the S&P500 index could have on the oil stock index’s future moves (charts courtesy by http://stockcharts.com).

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From today’s point of view we see that oil bears not only took the XOI to around 1,360, where the previously-broken medium-term declining red line was, but also managed to push the index lower. With this downward move, oil stocks declined below the 200-week moving average once again, which in combination with sell signals generated by the indicators suggests that further deterioration is still ahead us. If this is the case, and the XOI moves lower from here, the initial downside target would be around 1,270, where currently the green support line based on the Dec and Jan lows is.

Are there any short-term factors that could hinder the realization of the above scenario? Let’s examine the daily chart and find out.

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Looking at the daily chart, we see that the combination of the upper border of the gap (between the Nov 25 low and the Nov 28 high), the 200-day moving average and the 50% Fibonacci retracement level stopped further improvement, triggering a correction of the previous rally. With this downward move, the XOI reached the green support line (based on the Jan 14, and Mar13 lows), which in combination with the proximity to the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement (based on the entire Dec-Apr upward move) triggered a rebound.

At this point, it is also worth noting that the RSI bounced off the level of 30, generating a buy signal, while the CCI and Stochastic Oscillator are oversold and very close to do the same in the coming days. If we see such price action, the XOI will likely moves higher from here and climb to the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement based on the entire recent decline (around 1,360) in the coming days.

Before we summarize today’s article, let’s take a look at the relation between the general stock market an oil stocks. Will it confirm the above pro-growth scenario?

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As you see on the above chart, the ratio reached the resistance zone created by the 2002 low and the 200-month moving average, which could pause (or even stop) further improvement. When we take a closer look at the chart, we notice that we saw such situation in the previous years and also in Jan and then in March (we marked these periods of time with red rectangles). In all these cases, lower values of the ratio translated to an increase in the XOI. Therefore, another pullback from here will likely trigger an improvement in oil stocks in the coming week(s).

Summing up, oil stocks extended losses and reached the green support line based on the Jan and Mar lows, which in combination with the proximity to the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement, the position of the daily indicators and the current situation in the SPX:XOI ratio suggests that we could see a rebound from here to around 1,360 in the coming week(s).

Thank you.

Deflation picking up even more momentum …

Screen Shot 2015-06-10 at 5.51.19 AMSome analysts seem to think inflation is making a big comeback. Their reasoning: Interest rates have started to move higher, hence, inflation is lurking out there.

But they’re clueless. They are confusing declining bond prices (rising interest rates) with normal times — and the world is about as far away from normal times as I am of becoming the next Pope.

Yes, interest rates all over the globe are starting to rise, and bond prices are sliding — most notably in Europe.

But that doesn’t mean inflation is coming back. It’s not. In a minute I’ll show you the evidence as to why.

Interest rates are rising and bond prices are falling because the SOVEREIGN DEBT CRISIS is rapidly approaching. 

That final point in time — the final reckoning — where the majority of investors begin to realize that Europe, Japan and the biggest debtor of them all, the U.S., are patently bankrupt … will never make good on their debts …

And instead, will do everything they can to chase, track, tax and seize your wealth to help them keep their heads above water.

Screen Shot 2015-06-10 at 5.44.49 AMWhich is precisely why the Western socialist governments of this world — Europe, Japan and the U.S. — are all acting like caged animals …

 arrow blackRaising taxes, throughout Europe … a new proposed second hike in the sales tax in Japan … Obamacare here and behind the curtain in Washington, even more income tax hikes coming.

arrow blackSpying on citizens — yes, it’s still going on. To track your money, to tax it more, and not too far in the future, to nationalize and confiscate it.

arrow blackEnacting extensive capital controls throughout Europe, where in France, for instance, you can no longer conduct any business in cash, and where you cannot take out of the bank more than 1,000 euros at a time. Similar controls exist now in Greece, Cyprus, Italy and even Spain.

arrow black Where economists like Harvard University’s Ken Rogoff and Citibank’s Willem Buiter are traipsing the globe telling governments it’s time to abolish cash and replace it with electronic currency.

arrow black And where governments are now so wrought with troubles that financial repression of their people is not enough and instead, they are moving to distract them by playing games with other countries.

Hence, the rising tide of wars around the world, from terrorism to outright international conflict. Where just recently Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko warned his country to “prepare for a full-scale Russian invasion.”

Where China is ready to duke it out with Japan and other countries, including the United States, in the South China Sea.

Where the number of separatist, anarchist and neo-Nazi groups in Europe are at an all-time high.

This is NOT the stuff of solid economic growth 
and certainly not a formula for inflation. 

To the contrary, it is the stuff of dying empires …

Of deflationary contractions. Of hoarding and burying wealth.

So much so that stock and commodity market trading volumes are less than half what they were in 2007 and 2008.

Yes, all these things will eventually positively impact gold. But not because of inflation. But because empires of the West are dying.

If you don’t believe the picture I paint for you above, as to the evidence that there’s no inflation, all you have to do then is simply look at the facts on the ground …

arrow black The year-over-year change in U.S. retail sales peaked way back in July 2011, and has been declining ever since.

arrow black U.S. consumer confidence, measured by the widely respected polls of the University of Michigan, remains well below its peak in 1999.

arrow black Quarterly U.S. GDP has been in declining mode since 1999 and this year’s first quarter GDP declined a whopping 0.7 percent.

arrow black U.S. industrial production has declined since June 2010, with factory orders plummeting for eight straight months including a 0.4 percent decline in April.

Those are just the gross economic figures that support the fact that there is no inflation on the horizon. Now turn to the markets, and the most inflation-sensitive of them all… commodities.

arrow black Gold has now broken support at the $1,180 level. Its next move, perhaps after a bounce or two:  below $1,100.

arrow black Silver too is cracking, now dangerously positioned to fall below $14.50, then even lower.

arrow black Copper is starting to slide once again, falling to the $2.70 level, with lower prices ahead.

arrow black Platinum and palladium, both weak at the knees.

arrow black Oil, unable to get back above $65 a barrel, and now poised to move lower again. Natural gas, barely above multi-year lows.

arrow black The grain markets, all weak. Soybeans, sliding. Corn and wheat, ready to slide again from multi-month and multi-year highs.

arrow black Coffee, cocoa, sugar, all looking very weak.

arrow black And more.

The U.S. dollar, near multi-year highs and about to take off like a rocket again. In itself, a major deflationary warning.

Prepare for inflation, as these blind analysts would have you do, and you will be on the wrong side of the markets.

Prepare for more deflation with inverse commodity ETFs and the like, and by staying invested in mostly U.S. dollars where they will buy you more and more over the next several months …

And you will protect and grow your wealth.

And last, but certainly not least, when the time is right — not too far off in the future …

You will be able to buy gold and silver on the cheap, when everyone else is dumping them …

Not recognizing that the real crisis is in government, which is when gold and silver truly shine.

I rest my case.

Best wishes and stay safe …

Larry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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