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Three BIG Words: Revision, Recession, and Intervention
Financial Sense Online ^ | July 31, 2002 | Jim Puplava

Posted on 07/31/2002 8:00:47 PM PDT by Axion


Wednesday's Stock Market WrapUp

Three BIG Words: Revision, Recession, and Intervention
Three words can best describe today’s markets: revision, recession, and intervention. The morning began with the government’s report on GDP for Q2 and the revisions for years 1999-2001. First a look at the Q2 numbers which show the economy has weakened considerably from the first quarter. The rate of economic growth slowed down to only 1.2% versus economists’ estimates of 2.4%. In addition to the slump in economic growth, another report by the Chicago Purchasing Managers Index for July showed a sharp drop in manufacturing activity. The Chicago CPM Index fell to 51.5% from June’s 58.2%. A reading below 50 indicates the economy is contracting. Like the GDP numbers, which fell short of expectations, the CPM Index came in far lower than expected.

In addition to these numbers, the Fed’s periodic Beige Book report showed the economy expanding modestly and unevenly across the country. The Fed used words such as "stable," "steady," "modest," or "moderate" to describe economic conditions. Four of the Fed’s districts in New York, Boston, Atlanta and Dallas show that economic activity is tapering off. Six other districts reported marginal growth; while only two regions of the country, Cleveland and St. Louis, showed signs of growth. Retail sales are mixed, and in most regions of the country there are visible signs that consumers are starting to retrench on their spending plans. Labor markets are weak and real estate was mixed.

Back To The Past?
It appears from the above reports that the economy is likely heading back toward a recession. This is worrisome for most analysts and economists who have been consistently wrong in forecasting a second half recovery. They were predicting 3.5% to 4% economic growth along with Wall Street. The widely held view is that we get strong economic growth in the second half of the year and this strong economic growth will help fuel corporate profits. Wall Street has some very hefty earnings growth figures for the third and final quarter of the year. The prediction is that pro forma earnings will grow at a 30% rate in the third quarter and a 40% rate during the fourth quarter, even though these projections aren’t real numbers. There is nothing on the horizon, either, in the economy or in the business world that would indicate these projections are even close to becoming a reality. This could be a big shock for the financial markets this fall, which have been counting on a big boost to earnings. Those projections for economic growth and miraculous earnings are looking more like a fantasy at this point.

GDP Revisions Ominous
More ominous for the economy and the financial markets is today’s government revisions of the economic numbers for the years 1999-2001. The major revisions show an economy that was much weaker than originally reported. GDP growth for the first quarter was revised down from the original 6.1% growth rate to 5%. What is more telling is the revisions of 2001 GDP, which show only a rise of 0.3%. Instead of one quarter of negative economic growth, we actually had three consecutive quarters of economic decline. Economic growth actually peaked in the fourth quarter of 1999 and slowed substantially during all of 2000. During 2000, the economy was already heading toward recession with the first quarter of recession beginning in the first quarter of last year. Previous reports had shown the economy had been strong throughout 2000, when in fact it had been weakening all along. A summary of other revisions are listed below:

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (US Commerce Department) issued their GDP report today. A link to the report is listed here for those who want to delve into the statistical data and form your own conclusions. Suffice to say this report is one more nail in the coffin of the new paradigm economy of the 1990’s. Like so many of the corporate revisions we have witnessed -- with more to come in the future -- the 1990’s "New Era Economy" has turned out to be more fiction than reality. As corporations come clean with their books, the government is coming clean with its own revisions as well.

Pinpointing The Truth
What these economic restatements reveal, and what so many other corporate revisions show, is the economy and corporate profits have been much weaker than expected. They point to one of the worst profit recessions in decades and an economy that is plagued by many imbalances. It also points to a day of reckoning that will be ominous when it occurs. The economy is heavily dependent on foreign capital to finance burgeoning trade and current account deficits. The US is taking in and consuming about 75% of the world’s savings. Between US foreign investment outflows and trade and current account deficits, the US needs to take in capital inflows of around $900-$1,000 billion per year. The trade and current account deficits require about $450 billion. Add to it the outflows of US capital, and it isn’t too hard to conclude a dollar crisis of a magnitude never seen before lies directly in front of us.

What must be keeping Fed officials up at night is they are seeing their credit bubble turn into their own worst nightmare. The economic numbers show an economy that is once more heading back into recession and a credit crunch that is developing in the credit markets. The Fed however, is caught in a Catch-22 of its own making. If it lowers interest rates again to combat a weakening economy and flood the financial system with money to combat a credit crunch, it risks losing its credibility. Lower rates could send a signal to the markets that the Fed is losing control. On the other side is the plunging US dollar, which may require raising interest rates to keep foreign money invested, which in turn could damage the economy. Moreover, raising interest rates would pop the Fed’s latest bubble in the housing market. Rising interest rates would abruptly end the consumer-refinancing boom that is helping to prop up consumption as homeowners extract more equity out of their homes. Once the housing bubble bursts, there will be nothing left to prop up the economy besides deficit spending by the government, which has taken on a new dimension.

Cornered, With No Way Out
The 1990’s Clinton/Greenspan credit bubble leaves the Fed no attractive options. In every direction it looks, the Fed finds itself backed into a corner with "no way out." Once realization comes that the economy and the markets aren’t coming back, there is going to be a very severe reaction in the financial markets. The one area to watch is the dollar. Foreigners now own $9 trillion of US financial assets. Those assets are taking a beating with falling financial markets and a plunging US dollar. When some of that money decides to leave our shores, the day of reckoning will be upon us. The excesses of the 90’s will be dealt a severe retribution in the financial markets. There is also the $3 trillion in US equity funds. Up until this time, most investors have been in a state of denial, preferring not to look at their financial statements. At some point when the Fed can’t control the financial markets through intervention and spin, I suspect that John Q. Public and his neighbors are going to be heading for the exit gates at the same time. Trading curbs could be a daily feature of the financial markets if they don’t lock up.

I’m not sure that Fed indirect intervention in the markets will be able to contain the rush towards the exit gates. It is becoming more apparent by the day that intervention is holding up the markets. These miraculous last hour recoveries are becoming more obvious. The one-day wonders when the markets jump up by 4-6% defy rational explanation. Stories that the markets rallied on news of the Rigas family being taken off to jail on July 24th, or the story for Monday’s rally due to investor optimism over the rescue of miners over this weekend are shallow and insulting to one's intellect. Intervention was able to turn the markets from the abyss to a minor gain in the Dow and the S&P 500, but they couldn’t save the Nasdaq.

A Brief Window of Opportunity
What investors may have to understand at this point is they have been afforded one more opportunity to get out of stocks. The predicted second half recovery, or the miraculous earnings recovery, will not take place for the third consecutive year. The cleansing process of the 90’s excess credit boom is about to take a turn for the worst. It could begin as soon as August or at least by this fall. The markets and the public are going to need something to distract them and perhaps a war will do just that. The miracle earnings predicted for the last three years are not going to appear. The economy is going back into recession. And if the dollar plunges, the Fed may be forced by foreigners to raise interest rates at a time it doesn’t want to with severe consequences for the housing market, the economy and the financial markets. If the Fed believes in miracles, it better hope that the $9 trillion of foreign money in our financial markets doesn’t decide to head for the exit gates. If it doesn’t, that will be a miracle worth praying for because there will be no miracle in earnings. 

Heads Up Everyone
Watch the dollar and the US bond market -- they are the keys to what is going to happen going forward. Watch the gold market. It is currently reacting to the derivative markets as James Sinclair and Harry Schultz have explained in their essays on this site. Also watch the gold and silver equities markets reacting in a leveraged way to the price action of bullion. We are now in a corrective process that is taking some of the froth out of the gold markets from second quarter. Once these excesses have been taken out, and gold has been transferred from weak to stronger hands, the stage is set for the next advance of what I believe will be a decade-long bull market. At the moment, gold and silver are climbing a wall of disbelief by both bulls and bears. By fall, and finally by winter, much of this disbelief will turn to conviction. There is nothing like a strong price move to new highs to create new converts. A spike in prices is going to depend, to some extent, on what happens to the dollar and Treasuries. If they both plunge, which I suspect they will, then you are going to see some very large gaps in the price of gold and silver. When that happens, the precious metals stocks will go parabolic. The reason they rise so quickly and dramatically is because of their scarcity. It is similar to the Internet stocks.
The floats are small -- even for some of the majors. So when demand hits these stocks, the prices fly.

If you are new to investing in gold, you must understand that this is a volatile sector. It moves on emotion and fear as well as fundamentals. You must also understand that like the metals themselves, it is scarce. Very strong hands also hold it. Those who are strong believers aren’t parting with it. So when it rises, it moves quickly because there isn’t enough supply. This is why you may want to consider adding to your position on weakness, buying at support levels for the metals or the equities. Finally, avoid the hedgers. They have done poorly when prices rise because they aren’t as leveraged to the price of gold and silver because they have sold their production forward. So when prices rise, they don’t benefit to the same extent as the unhedged companies. You can see this difference reflected in the price run up of the HUI versus the XAU.

Today's Markets
Volume was high coming in at 1.92 billion on the NYSE and 1.64 on the Nasdaq. Advancing issues outpaced declines by a narrow margin on the NYSE while losers beat out winners on the Nasdaq by 20-14. The only green light on the board occurred in oil, drug and bank stocks.

Overseas Market
European stocks climbed as companies including Unilever, Allied Irish Banks and Sanpaolo IMI said earnings will be better than forecast or topped estimates. The Dow Jones Stoxx 50 Index was 0.9% higher at 2744.83 at 5:45 p.m. London time. Five of the eight major European markets were up during today’s trading. Japanese stocks fell, led by exporters such as Kyocera Corp., after a drop in a U.S. consumer confidence index stoked concern that spending will slow in the nation's biggest trading partner. The Nikkei 225 stock average lost 1.3% to 9877.94 as of 3 p.m.

Treasury Market
Treasuries reacted positively to the day's weaker-than-anticipated data, which fully support the notion of a sidelined Fed for the foreseeable future. But Treasury investors also had to contend with a large refunding package. The government will auction $22 billion in five-year notes and $18 billion in 10-year notes next week. The 10-year Treasury note rallied 1 point to yield 4.46% while the 30-year government bond gained 1 10/32 to yield 5.305%.

The Fed's Beige Book report on economic conditions revealed that growth expanded moderately across sectors and regions. The Fed also indicted that retail sales were mixed and that manufacturing was improving while labor markets remained stable. Thursday will see the release of another slew of reports: weekly initial claims, June construction spending, expected to have risen 0.3%, and the July Institute of Supply Management Index, which is seen posting

© Copyright Jim Puplava, July 31, 2002 a 55.4% reading.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS:
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1 posted on 07/31/2002 8:00:47 PM PDT by Axion
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To: Axion
The housing market is not driven by low interest rates. It is driven by immigration population growth.
2 posted on 07/31/2002 8:30:41 PM PDT by henderson field
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To: Axion
Overnight action in the Dow, Nasdaq, S&P, gold, currencies can be followed here-- http://www.mrci.com/qpnight.asp
3 posted on 07/31/2002 8:36:11 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: Axion
This site IMO is excellent. Been a lurker there for quit some time.
4 posted on 07/31/2002 10:14:00 PM PDT by Digger
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To: Axion
I like the line I heard on with Kudlow and Kramer on MSNBC -

"today, USA, Inc. was forced to restate growth for the past 4 quarters..."

5 posted on 08/01/2002 12:08:12 AM PDT by glorgau
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To: sinkspur; bvw; Tauzero; kezekiel; ChadGore; Harley - Mississippi; Dukie; Matchett-PI; Moonman62; ...
The markets and the public are going to need something to distract them and perhaps a war will do just that.

Listen to the drumbeats of war. That tells be the economy is weak and there is no real recovery in sight.

Richard W.

6 posted on 08/01/2002 5:17:01 AM PDT by arete
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To: Axion
Gold is falling like a rock again today. Just like last week when there was major interventions in the markets. Humm.

Richard W.

7 posted on 08/01/2002 5:27:53 AM PDT by arete
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To: Axion
Once these excesses have been taken out, and gold has been transferred from weak to stronger hands, the stage is set for the next advance of what I believe will be a decade-long bull market.

IMHO this is pure speculation, the trend for gold is still down and this action looks like a typical bear market rally. The real economic enemy is not inflation, but deflation and gold is acting as it should in deflationary times. Gold should not be purchased for investment purposes but as a store of wealth in times of crisis.

8 posted on 08/01/2002 5:34:55 AM PDT by TightSqueeze
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To: arete
It appears from the above reports that the economy is likely heading back toward a recession. This is worrisome for most analysts and economists who have been consistently wrong in forecasting a second half recovery

This would be the "double dip recession" some analysts had feared earlier, wouldn't it? I would think the timing would be awful, with people delaying retirement or taking part time jobs to supplement retirements. And it's a lot of people in that category: the "baby boomers" are in their mid-50s now. One would think this has to cause an unemployment situation, unless there is something like increased defense spending.

9 posted on 08/01/2002 5:42:10 AM PDT by grania
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To: arete
Richard, come on. Who is "doing the drumbeats of war?" THE DAMN NEW YORK TIMES. Yah, those liberals want to strengthen the economy to re-elect Bush? Not logical. Moreover, sorry to tell you, but economic history shows that war is NOT good for business. There has been no war where major industries outside of munitions have really prospered. Robert Higgs has a WELL-RESPECTED study showing that the U.S. really didn't come "out" of the Great Depression until 1946, when the pent up savings of Americans finally came back to consumer goods. Military spending did little to "get us out" of the Depression.
10 posted on 08/01/2002 5:43:21 AM PDT by LS
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To: TightSqueeze
Since Q3 last year gold had been trending up (from $260 to $325), seemingly reversing the deflationary downward trend that started in 1997. However, since last Tuesday, gold has fallen 8% (from $325 down to $300). Barring major manipulation of the market (which I now believe), it is a bad sign that the Fed is not supplying enough liquidity and deflation will be reignited. Not good.
11 posted on 08/01/2002 5:45:30 AM PDT by Wyatt's Torch
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To: LS
Yah, those liberals want to strengthen the economy to re-elect Bush? Not logical. Moreover, sorry to tell you, but economic history shows that war is NOT good for business.

No liberals don't want to strengthen the economy not that there is anyway they could. Unless you know of some secret fix, I'd say that the libs are simply making hay out of pointing out the obvious.

I also suspect that the ruling class elite (all politicians) see themselves in jeopardy of being thrown out of office if things get really bad. If the best they can do is give us recession and economic uncertainty, then maybe all of them need to go.

War, unless you are building tanks, probably does little to stimulate economic activity overall. It does provide the public with a big distraction and at least in the short run, provides a form of single mindedness and societal "glue." The politicians want us focused on Saddam and not Senator Dipshit. It is terribly unfashionable and UNPATRIOTIC to criticise our government when we are at war.

Richard W.

12 posted on 08/01/2002 6:08:53 AM PDT by arete
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To: Wyatt's Torch; LS
There is more bad news on the way tomorrow judging from the gold market.

Jobless Claims Rise in Latest Week

Richard W.

13 posted on 08/01/2002 6:20:18 AM PDT by arete
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To: arete
July ISM sinks to 50.5%, showing slow growth By Rex Nutting

The nation's manufacturing sector was growing for the sixth straight month in July, but at a much slower pace than in June, according to the Institute for Supply Management. The ISM index fell to 50.5% from 56.2% in June. New orders dropped to 50.4% from 60.8%. Production sank to 55.7% from 61.4%. Employment eased to 45.0% from 49.7. ISM said the drop in new orders could be a pause in inventory replenishment.

Richard W.

14 posted on 08/01/2002 7:11:29 AM PDT by arete
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To: LS; Wyatt's Torch
Like I said, the bad news just keeps rolling in:

Construction spending fell 2.2 percent in June, instead of the 0.2 percent rise economists expected. The May figure was revised to a 2 percent drop from the originally reported 0.7 percent dip.

Complete text of article here:

Weak and weaker

All that pro-duct-iv-ity just doesn't seem to be helping all that much.

Richard W.

15 posted on 08/01/2002 7:22:01 AM PDT by arete
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To: arete; Wyatt's Torch; rohry; LS; meyer; DarkWaters; STONEWALLS; TigerLikesRooster; junta; ...
Companies must pour billions into retiree plans after betting on stocks
 
Amid the wreckage of the worst bear market in at least three decades, hemorrhaging corporate pension plans are rapidly becoming Wall Street's biggest new worry. They have lost hundreds of billions of dollars, and now companies face the end of their long-running holiday from writing checks to the plans. Over the next 18 months or so, companies ranging from General Motors to United Technologies face having to pump billions into their plans to comply with federal laws to protect pensioners.
 
Even if plan investments somehow manage to eke out 5% returns this year, companies in Standard & Poor's 500-stock index will be $40 billion short of their projected pension obligations, according to Morgan Stanley estimates. If plans lose 5%, they'll be $150 billion in the hole. Either way, it is a world away from 1999 when the plans had a $292 billion surplus and a 30% cushion over their commitments. "The squeeze on U.S. pension funds has the potential to be the defining U.S. financial crisis of the 2000s, like the savings and loan squeeze of the 1980s," says Bob Prince, director of research and trading at money manager Bridgewater Associates.
16 posted on 08/01/2002 8:21:32 AM PDT by razorback-bert
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To: Wyatt's Torch; arete
I think we are suffering from an inflated deflation, now pass me my Nobel Prize.
17 posted on 08/01/2002 8:26:38 AM PDT by razorback-bert
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To: razorback-bert
As far as financial disasters go my bet is still on the GSEs and what they have done. I read somewhere that one of the smaller government boondoggles (not FNM or FRE) has a 10% non-performing rate and all this while the economy is still growing and credit card apps are still being sent out to anyone with a pulse. Wait till a contraction of both happens in ernest and all those 50% gross income mortgages become junk.
18 posted on 08/01/2002 8:31:25 AM PDT by junta
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To: arete
Anyone who's read Puplava for any length of time knows that he is, at bottom, a gold bug. Talking down the economy, painting the worst possible picture, and getting in a plug for gold is his stock in trade.

The language may slightly vary, the numbers vary, but the message never does.

19 posted on 08/01/2002 8:32:19 AM PDT by sinkspur
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To: Lazamataz
You slacker you.
20 posted on 08/01/2002 8:40:06 AM PDT by Tauzero
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