Posted on 10/07/2002 4:46:37 PM PDT by rohry
Market WrapUp for the Week The Week in Graphs Storm Watch Geopolitical News Energy Resource Page Precious Metals Raw Materials Monday, October 7, 2002 The Cauldron is Bubbling Over Despite these declines, stock prices are still too expensive. That is because earnings have declined much faster than prices. Not a day goes by but we hear of one company after another follow each other in unison with warnings over revenues, earnings, more job layoffs, restructuring charges, writedowns, or some disappointment. Wall Street is trying to put the best face on matters with standard clichés. I watched one money manager defend his position with the glib cliché that hes optimistic and you have to look at the long run. Nobody wants to admit that we are in a protracted bear market that is the result of a bubble deflating. This bubble will deflate and the bear market will continue until such time as the pendulum swings to the extreme. At bear market bottoms, nobody will want to own stocks and P/E multiples and dividend yields will reflect values that will be enticing. We are a long way off form that point. We're only in the second phase of this bear market and it hasnt completed its cycle. I believe there will be a bear market rally and then the final third phase of the bear market, which will be the final wash out. We're far from a bottom despite the wishful spin coming out of Wall Street. Worry Menu Grows Troubled Financial Sector Were talking just about the financial sector here. There are also plenty of rogue waves and ten-sigma events lying around the geopolitical seas. We can start with an impending war, which the President will address in his speech to the nation tonight. In a war, armies kill and blow things up. Lives are lost, property is destroyed and governments are toppled. War introduces more uncertainties for the financial markets and they abhor uncertainty. This upcoming war wont be like the last war since the objectives are much more complex. A regime change is being planned and that means there will be an occupation force in the region for quite some time. A $100-$200 billion war budget implies different objectives and a different strategy with multiple outcomes. If things go well in the initial battle ,there may be cause for celebration. It is what happens afterwards that leaves a big question for the financial markets. Rebuilding a nation or a government is a lot more difficult than defeating an army on the battlefield and making it go back home. So take your pick from either the financial sector, here and around the globe, or the geopolitical minefield and it isnt hard to understand the gyrations in the financial markets. There is plenty to worry about and it is doubtful whether risk control programs have ten-sigma events programmed into their formulas, especially geopolitical risks. He Just Doesn't Get It ... or He Just Doesn't Admit It Mr. Greenspan also went on to praise the growing mountain of leveraged derivatives in our financial system as healthy too. Financial derivatives have grown at a phenomenal pace over the past fifteen years. (He thinks this is good!) Conceptual advances in pricing options and other more complex financial products, along with improvements in computer and telecommunication technologies, have significantly lowered the costs of, and expanded the opportunities for, hedging risks that were not readily deflected in earlier decades. [Speculation opportunities have also grown exponentially.] Moreover, the counterparty credit risk associated with the use of derivative instruments has been mitigated by legally enforceable netting and through the growing use of collateral agreements. [Most contracts are OTC contracts which makes them less liquid and subject to price implosion in the event of a crisis. Derivatives are concentrated in fewer players today and make an event risk like LTCM even more likely.] These increasingly complex financial instruments have been especial contributors, particularly over the past couple of stressful years, to the development of a far more flexible, efficient, and resilient financial system than existed just a quarter-century ago. [Event-driven risks are increasing with each new crisis, bigger than the last. JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America hold most derivatives. Their portfolio makes Enron and LTCM look conservative.] The Sword of Damocles Over Metal Shorts
LTCM boxed itself into a corner by increasing its leverage as credit spreads widened and ten-sigma events multiplied. The gold shorts are doing the same thing. As more money moves into bullion and into precious metals, the shorts will be forced to cover. They are hoping that things will be much more subdued and quiet when they do. What they are hoping is that the divergence /convergence theme remerges. Thats what their models tell them and thats what they hope will happen. However, we would suggest with a upcoming war, a slumping economy, growing defaults, bankruptcies, widening credit spreads, rising default premiums, Argentina and next Brazil, divergences are widening -- not converging as their models would suggest. It is just a question of which rogue wave overwhelms them, or worse yet, a series of rogue waves which could in fact be a hundred footer as experienced in the Halloween Perfect Storm of 1991. Today's Market Wall Street is screaming for another Fed induced bailout. They want interest rates to be lowered to zero if necessary. Not that it would help. Just look at Japan if you want to see the efficacy of lowering rates. The Japanese Nikkei fell to 8,688 down from over 39,000 12 years ago. There is absolutely no reason to buy right now. The only thing that has made money this year is shorting the markets and going long gold and precious metals. Even in the washout of the third quarter, the metals held up superbly. You would have to go back three decades to find another time when there was this much uncertainty. Expectations are still far too high as are valuations. NYSE daily lows are back at levels of where they were back in July of this year. The VIX closed at 49.18, up nearly three points for the day. The volatility index is not quite at levels that we saw during the July plunge, but we are slowly getting there and in fact may surpass it. The VXN jumped over 60 to 62.32. It looks like it still wants to rise. We still have a way to go and it appears like it is going to take massive intervention to forestall a decline. Like all crises under Mr. Greenspan's reign, the Fed is more than willing to oblige. Do I hear hyperinflation floating in the air? The next round of intervention in the markets should be not only be breathtaking to watch, but historical in its precedent. John Laws record may about to be surpassed. Volume levels came in at 1.54 billion on the NYSE and 1.40 billion on the NASDAQ. Market breath was decidedly negative by 25-7 on the big board and 25-9 on the NASDAQ. Overseas Markets Japanese stocks fell, with the Nikkei 225 Stock Average having its biggest drop in three months. Banks such as UFJ Holdings Inc. slid on concern the government may seize weak lenders and force their worst customers to fail. The Nikkei sank 3.8%, its biggest decline since June 26, to 8688.00. Bond Market © Copyright Jim Puplava, October 7, 2002 |
Ouch. Makes you wonder how Ronald Reagan was able to revitalize the worst economy since the Great Depression AND win the Cold War. Is this President making the same mistakes his father made? Time will tell, but at this point, it isn't a big stretch to imagine a Democrat running on the ecomony and taking the White House.
No, no you've got it backwards...You read the article first, then you post your thoughts...
Everything was down today...
There are still a bunch of terrorist SOB's that want to take OUT the White House and don't give a crap about our economy.
And in the 80s, there was still a vast Soviet Empire which posed a direct threat to the United States, but it didn't prevent President Reagan from articulating and advancing a comprehensive economic agenda. He was somehow--we can only wonder how--able to communicate this economic strategy to the American people, even through the recession of '82, even while winning the Cold War.
I understand the importance of the war on terrorism (really the war on islamo-fascist nutbags.) I support it. But the President has appeared to suggest that the economy should take a back seat to the war if necessary. I am simply asking the question why the President can't do both at the same time. Does one have to come at the expense of the other? Is there no way to effectively communicate and advance a sound economic policy and a sound war policy at the same time?
If he doesn't find a way to do it, we may have a liberal Democrat for a President in 2004, then how will the war on terror be? How safe will we be if a Democrat selects the next Secratary of Defense? In other words, domestic security, economic growth, and political success are all linked. That's my point. Hopefully the President will prevail on all fronts. I certainly hope so. It's 3 years now of a bear market.
I want to admit I was wrong.
I was on vacation last week, so this is the first chance I've had to come clean.
I moved some money into the market in March-May, took it back out in July. Then moved a wee little back into stocks in September, and am glad I moved slowly.
I thought of putting a little more back in today, but may take a closer look tomorrow.
But I continue to move slowly.
"Last week another secret elitist meeting was held at Waddendon Manor in Buckinghamshire, England. Billionaire Warren Buffett accompanied by Arnold Schwarznegger, were the guests of honor at this ancestral home of the Rothschild banking family. They discussed economic and political issues..."
..hmm..I've heard that "Aahnald" is one of the wealthiest men in Hollywood and has political ambitions that may extend beyond California....maybe he went over to England to make some new best "friends"[potential donors]
Good luck to everybody!
Stonewalls
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