Posted on 02/15/2015 10:11:44 PM PST by Jack Hydrazine
The stock market continues to flirt with new record highs, but the signs that we could be on the precipice of the next major financial crisis continue to mount. A couple of days ago, I discussed the fact that the U.S. dollar is experiencing a tremendous surge in value just like it did in the months prior to the financial crisis of 2008. And previously, I have detailed how the price of oil has collapsed, prices for industrial commodities are tanking and market behavior is becoming extremely choppy. All of these are things that we witnessed just before the last market crash as well. It is also important to note that orders for durable goods are declining and the Baltic Dry Index has dropped to the lowest level on record. So does all of this mean that the stock market is guaranteed to crash in 2015? No, of course not. But what we are looking for are probabilities. We are looking for patterns. There are multiple warning signs that have popped up repeatedly just prior to previous financial crashes, and many of those same warning signs are now appearing once again.
One of these warning signs that I have not discussed previously is the wholesale inventories to sales ratio. When economic activity starts to slow down, inventory tends to get backed up. And that is precisely what is happening right now. In fact, as Wolf Richter recently wrote about, the wholesale inventories to sales ratio has now hit a level that we have not seen since the last recession
In December, the wholesale inventory/sales ratio reached 1.22, after rising consistently since July last year, when it was 1.17. It is now at the highest and worst level since September 2009, as the financial crisis was winding down:
(see graphic at link)
Rising sales gives merchants the optimism to stock more. But because sales are rising in that rosy scenario, the inventory/sales ratio, depicting rising inventories and rising sales, would not suddenly jump. But in the current scenario, sales are not keeping up with inventory growth.
Another sign that I find extremely interesting is the behavior of the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasury notes. As Jeff Clark recently explained, we usually see a spike in the 10 year Treasury yield about the time the market is peaking before a crash
The 10-year Treasury note yield bottomed on January 30 at 1.65%. Today, its at 2%. Thats a 35-basis-point spike a jump of 21% in less than two weeks.
And its the first sign of an impending stock market crash.
(see graphic at link.)
As I explained last September, the 10-year Treasury note yield has ALWAYS spiked higher prior to an important top in the stock market.
For example, the 10-year yield was just 4.5% in January 1999. One year later, it was 6.75% a spike of 50%. The dot-com bubble popped two months later.
In 2007, rates bottomed in March at 4.5%. By July, they had risen to 5.5% a 22% increase. The stock market peaked in September.
Lets be clear not every spike in Treasury rates leads to an important top in the stock market. But there has always been a sharp spike in rates a few months before the top.
Once again, just because something has happened in the past does not mean that it will happen in the future.
But the fact that so many red flags are appearing all at once has got to give any rational person reason for concern.
Yes, the Dow gained more than 100 points on Thursday. But on Thursday we also learned that retail sales dropped again in January. Overall, this has been the worst two month drop in retail sales since 2009
Following last months narrative-crushing drop in retail sales, despite all that low interest rate low gas price stimulus, January was more of the same as hopeful expectations for a modest rebound were denied. Falling 0.8% (against a 0.9% drop in Dec), missing expectations of -0.4%, this is the worst back-to-back drop in retail sales since Oct 2009. Retail sales declined in 6 of the 13 categories.
And economic activity is rapidly slowing down on the other side of the planet as well.
For example, Chinese imports and exports both fell dramatically in January
Chinese imports collapsed 19.9% YoY in January, missing expectations of a modest 3.2% drop by the most since Lehman. This is the biggest YoY drop since May 2009 and worst January since the peak of the financial crisis. Exports tumbled 3.3% YoY (missing expectations of 5.9% surge) for the worst January since 2009. Combined this led to a $60.03 billion trade surplus in January the largest ever. But apart from these massive imbalances, everything is awesome in the global economy (oh apart from The Baltic Dry at record lows, Iron Ore near record lows, oil prices crashed, and the other engine of the world economy USA USA USA imploding).
In light of so much bad economic data, it boggles my mind that stocks have been doing so well.
But this is typical bubble behavior. Financial bubbles tend to be very irrational and they tend to go on a lot longer than most people think they will. When they do finally burst, the consequences are often quite horrifying.
It may not seem like it to most people, but we are right on track for a major financial catastrophe. It is playing out right in front of our eyes in textbook fashion. But it is going to take a little while to unfold.
Unfortunately, most people these days do not have the patience to watch long-term trends develop. Instead, we have been trained by the mainstream media to have the attention spans of toddlers. We bounce from one 48-hour news cycle to the next, eagerly looking forward to the next scandal that is going to break.
And when the next financial crash does strike, the mainstream media is going to talk about what a surprise it is. But for those that are watching the long-term trends, it is not going to be a surprise at all. We will have seen it coming a mile away.
Related...
The Shemitah: The Biblical Pattern Which Indicates That A Financial Collapse May Be Coming In 2015
http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/shemitah-biblical-pattern-indicates-financial-collapse-may-coming-2015
I’ve been reading about the coming economic collapse ... since back in the ‘70s. I keep wondering when it’s going to happen ... :-) ...
Mr. Armstrong says 1OCT2015.
http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/the-forecaster-can-this-source-code-predict-the-future_12082014
Right after socialism runs out other peoples’ money. 500 yrs from now? Seem the supply of cash is endless.
bump
I’ve been reading doom and gloom reports for 40 years. We just keep our IRA’s in sound investments and hope for the best. Yes there have some huge down markets in the last 40 years. But they have always come back.
The Jehovah’s Witnesses have been giving dates for the end of the world, too, since the ‘70s ... :-) ...
And that reminds me ... there was a real pretty lady that came up to me in the parking lot of Walmart, this morning, about 7:30. She asked if she could talk to me, when I was putting on new windshield wipers on my car (just got them, we’ve got snow and ice coming).
I said, “Okay” and she whipped out a “Watchtower” publication. The second I saw that, I said, “I don’t do that!” And I walked off leaving her standing there ... :-) ...
You can chew up HOURS talking to them and getting nowhere. Been there, done that!
SO ... anyway “dates” for the coming disaster? ... well ... you can keep your “dates” ... LOL ...
Yup. Buy and hold. Let the market timers take the losses.
The thing about impending DOOM....is that it’s always impending.
After the 1929 stock market crash....there were various little minor recovery notes. But as each year passed, the administration and Senate/House dug up more regulation to delay real recovery. Yet folks stood around and eventually accepted ongoing DOOM as the norm. As we went through the 1950s and into full recovery...we still talked impending DOOM.
I imagine that impending DOOM gets brought up 10,000 times a year on CNBC and via the Wall Street Journal. Life goes on.
The reimplementation of Quantitative Easing by the FED who had previously stopped in October 2014 with great fanfare bears no mention here, nor does the FED any longer require approval to print money to buy stocks....
So he’s saying the sky is falling. All is so good it’s gotta be bad.
As long as there’s trees :-)
If the prediction has merit, this would seem to be the very investment to buy.
http://www.zacks.com/funds/mutual-fund/quote/BEARX
Federated Prudent Bear Fd A: (MF: BEARX)
Fund Description
The fund was incepted in December 1995 and is managed by David W. Tice & Associates. The fund seeks capital appreciation. The fund is a no-load mutual fund specifically designed to benefit from stock market declines as the fund has more short than long positions. The fund takes long and short positions. That is, the fund buys stocks just like most mutual funds. The fund also takes short positions and purchases put options to benefit from an anticipated decline in a stock or stock index. Currently, significant portions of long positions are gold and silver mining companies. The fund distributes dividends and capital gains, if any, at the end of each calendar year.
Total return since inception: -4.69%
Same thoughts.
Economy Collapsing? We got an app for that.
Oh well... Hey guys did you see the latest Kim Kardashian pic? Now you get to see the right side of her naked naughty bits...!!!!
The money ran out a while ago. It’s all credit more. Do you think there is twenty trillion in cash out there?
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