Posted on 10/09/2002 5:25:50 PM PDT by rohry
Market WrapUp for the Week The Week in Graphs Storm Watch Geopolitical News Energy Resource Page Precious Metals Raw Materials Wednesday, October 9, 2002 The Unthinkable is Not Impossible One hundred year storms have a way of surfacing when you least expect it. In the financial world, bear markets have a way of fooling the majority of investors most of the time. Just when you think it's over, it isnt. Just when you think a bottom is in, the market heads lower. When you think the news cant get any worse, it worsens. The truth of the matter is nobody knows where the current storm will head and what damage it will bring. All that the experts can do is bet on probabilities. What lies on the tail end of the curve is that 10-sigma event that is incalculable. The models dont factor it in -- just the probability of its occurrence. The extent of the damage, the long-term consequences, the impact upon lives, economies and governments can only be a guess. History can only alert us to the consequences and remind us that these storms do reappear throughout history. An archduke is shot, a naval base is bombed, a dictator rises to power, a government is overthrown, and suddenly 10-sigma events erupt and a daisy chain of dominoes begin to fall in unison. Business cycles, market crashes, depressions and wars havent been eliminated despite the reassurance from experts and politicians that they will no longer happen. Economic and financial modeling is good at giving you probabilities, but not predictions. They can tell you about the probability of the unexpected, but not when they will occur. Nor can they predict the consequences. The truth is that no one knows what fury a $110 trillion derivative market will unleash if it does in fact implode. In 1998 a hedge fund called LTCM with 1.25 trillion in derivatives nearly brought the financial system to its knees. It would take the Fed, along with 14 other banks, to organize a private sector bailout. At stake were LTCMs lenders who could be dragged along with it. An emergency bailout package was put together and a crisis was averted. A Bank in All The Wrong Places Playing Hot Potato Most OTC derivatives are custom tailored to meet the needs of specific clients with specified risks. This makes them highly illiquid and vulnerable to panic selling in the event of a crisis. This proved to be LTCMs undoing when it occurred. In the volatile markets of 1997-98 when credit spreads widened, risks multiplied. Instead of going from divergence to convergence, divergences widened as they are today. In the corporate debt markets, the yields on investment grade bonds are now 2.5% above Treasuries of the same duration, the widest in at least 10 years. Junk bond defaults are averaging 9-10%. Gaps between junk bonds and Treasuries are now approaching 11%. According to todays Bloomberg, the spreads between Treasuries and junk bonds first hit the 10% level on August 14th and have breached that level 11 times since then. Never Underestimate the Impossible Complacency Rules Today's Market Meanwhile the days headlines point to more stresses in the financial system and in the economy. Job layoffs were a common theme along with possible bankruptcies. Abbott labs will cut 3 percent of its workforce. AT&T, the perpetual restructuring company will cut 4.3 percent of its cable-television payroll. EDS will be sued by employees for a loss of $407 million in its employees 401(k) plan due to a drop in the companys stock. SunTrust reported that it would take a $98.7 million charge for bad loans as non-performing assets rose by 14 percent to $594.7 million. TXU, the Texas power company is asking banks to drop terms forcing it to pay $500 million should a European unit of the company default as energy trading plunges. These are just todays business headlines. On the political front, the socialist candidate Lula in Brazil is emerging as the likely winner of Brazils run off election. Venezuela is on the verge of a political coup as Hugo Chavez begins a political witch-hunt of his opposition and citizens riot in the street. Venezuela is the 4th largest oil exporter of oil to the US. A war against Iraq is looking more likely and the government is alerting us that renewed attacks of terrorism are possible. These are the kind of headlines that don't breed confidence in the markets. This lack of confidence and risk in the financial markets explains much of gold bullion's strength. The latest sell off in shares of gold and silver companies is another leg of a wider sell off by weak hands into stronger hands. A lot of the share accumulation of precious metals stocks over the last few quarters has come from the day-trading crowd looking for a way to make a fast buck. They neither understand nor comprehend that they are dealing with a precious commodity that is returning to its historical role as money. Those in the know, and who have strong financial hands are accumulating at the expense of the ignorant and ill-informed. They will be back in the metals after they explode. Several key silver stocks are looking to break out as option spreads and short positions are unwound. The metals markets are a lot like a volcano. You never know when they are going to erupt. But when they do, it will be similar to the eruption of Mt. St. Helens. Gold and silver are commodities that are in short supply, with growing investment demand, and limited options for investment. When they take off, their rise will be parabolic -- not gradual. The residents below arent aware that the volcano is rumbling. Short-sellers, take care. Today's market was predictable. The major averages suffered their broadest decline in over four years as many analysts lowered their profit expectations on GM and GE. The S&P 500 hit a new five-year low; while the venerable Dow closed below 7,300 -- something we havent seen since October of 1997. We seem to be slipping back to the past at ever increasing speeds. It also looks like the inevitable may have a possibility of occurring. After the market close, Moodys Investor Services cut J.P. Morgans long-term debt rating one more level, citing the bank's inability to maintain acceptable profitability. As the bank's credit rating is lowered, it begins to raise the issue of counterparty risk. The downgrade is causing many of the bank's customers to take their business elsewhere because of Morgans growing risks. As earnings falter, it leads to more downgrades. At some point, the bank may be swamped as it finds itself with more at risk in the derivatives market than it has capital to support. Many experts estimate that the bank's value at risk runs in the tens of billions. A failure by Morgan could become the first of many ten-sigma events. For greater understanding of derivates I would suggest reading Rogue Waves Part II, and Rogue Waves and Standard Deviations Part 1 and Part 2. Volume came in at 1.82 billion on the NYSE and 1.75 billion on the NASDAQ. Market breath was horrific with losers outdistancing winners by a wide margin, 28-5 on the big board and by 26-9 on the NASDAQ. We may be seeing the impossible. Time will tell. Overseas Markets Japanese stocks fell, driving the Nikkei 225 Stock Average to a 19-year low for a fourth time this month. Mizuho Holdings Inc. and UFJ Holdings Inc. slumped to their lowest levels since they first started trading. The Nikkei lost 2% to 8539.34. The average has lost more than a fifth of its value in the past three months. The Topix index shed 1.9% to 844.29. Bond Market © Copyright Jim Puplava, October 9, 2002 |
So what this guy is saying basically is that we're cooked! Stick a knife in us cause we're done. Nothing can save us so the last one out turn off the lights. We can't recover--- EVER?!! Everyone will lose EVERYTHING! Does that about cover it?
The Boston Celtics (BOS) were hot and the National Basketball Association season hasn't even started. Shares of the storied basketball franchise shot up 147 percent, closing up $16.65 at $28. Details of a buyout offer for the team were unveiled last week.
US CREDIT OUTLOOK - Almost no place to hide
Wednesday October 9, 4:58 pm ET
By Eric Burroughs
NEW YORK, Oct 9 (Reuters) - Each day seems to bear more grim news for high-strung U.S. capital markets and provide U.S. Treasuries yet more reason to hit new historic low yields.
As stocks keep hitting five-year lows and mounting worries about credit quality have pummeled widely held names like Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:F - News) and J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE:JPM - News), investors are seeking shelter in only the safest of capital hide-outs.
Thus benchmark Treasury yields keep plunging to levels not seen since the 1950s and two-year note yields hit record lows, and analysts see nothing to stop the trend on the horizon.
Spreads on corporate bonds, agency debt, mortgage-backed securities and emerging market debt all widened against Treasuries on Wednesday -- and with good reason.
The Dow fell 215 points on an analyst warning about General Electric's (NYSE:GE - News) future performance. Ford's bonds were hit hard. Moody's downgraded J.P. Morgan Chase's credit rating, while the rating of Germany's Allianz Group was also knocked down by both Moody's and Standard & Poor's. Junk bond yields soared to record highs near 11 percentage points over Treasuries.
more: http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/021009/markets_bonds_outlook_1.html
J.P. Morgan Cut by Moody's, Affects Debt
Wednesday October 9, 4:56 pm ET
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Moody's Investors Service on Wednesday cut J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.'s (NYSE:JPM - News) long-term debt ratings, reflecting concern about the No. 2 U.S. bank's near-term ability to maintain "acceptable profitability" as investment banking revenue falls and loan losses mount.
The downgrade, affecting about $42 billion of debt, follows a similar downgrade on Sept. 17 by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services. J.P. Morgan shares fell nearly 7 percent on Wednesday, suffering most of that decline after Moody's early afternoon downgrade.
Moody's cut J.P. Morgan's senior unsecured debt one notch to "A1," its fifth highest grade, from "Aa3," and also cut several other ratings. Its rating outlook is now stable.
MORE: http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/021009/financial_jpmorgan_moodys_7.html ==============================================================
Ferguson: Fed Can't Fix Stocks Swings
Wednesday October 9, 8:49 pm ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is limited in what it can do to help smooth economic ups and downs, the U.S. central bank's vice chairman said on Wednesday as analysts fretted about the strength of the recovery and stocks tumbled to fresh multiyear lows.
In remarks prepared for delivery to the Bond Market Association, Fed Vice Chairman Roger Ferguson also stressed that the central bank cannot target stock prices, even though some analysts have suggested it should take on more of a role in managing swings in the markets.
"Nobody would deny that central banks can be quite powerful and that monetary policy works, over time," Ferguson said. "But in the scheme of things, a central bank's ability to smooth asset prices (if it wanted to) or to buffer shocks to spending or production is somewhat limited."
He added that "monetary policy action cannot appropriately be targeted to benefit one industry, region or economic group."
Ferguson's discussion of "Central Banks and Markets" came as major U.S. stock indexes tumbled to new multi-year lows in the aftermath of a huge run-up during the late 1990s.
The blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average sank 2.87 percent to 7,286.27 on Wednesday, a low not seen since October 1997. The index is down more than 37 percent from its January 2000 high. The broad Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 2.73 percent while the Nasdaq Composite slipped or 1.34 percent to hit a new six-year closing low.
Some economists have criticized the Fed for not doing more to try to burst the late 1990s stock market bubble before it got out of hand. Such critics have said higher interest rates might have helped to contain what Greenspan once referred to as "irrational exuberance" in the markets and, thus, possibly have prevented the ensuing hangover.
But Ferguson said the Fed focuses squarely on the macroeconomy and the broad level of prices of goods and services, aiming to avoid either excessive rises or broad declines in prices.
"Some have suggested that under some circumstances central banks should adjust the overnight funds rate to affect intentionally the relative price of another asset class, namely equities," he said, acknowledging the criticism.
"UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES"
But he cited two drawbacks to trying to make stock prices the focus of interest-rate actions: the fact that there is no clear link between rate changes and stock movements and also that there could be "unintended consequences" for the economy from efforts to influence equity markets.
Ferguson did stress that stock market movements factor into Fed decisions, even if they are not the target of policy.
"To be clear, this is not an argument for never considering prices in asset markets when determining how well we are likely to do in achieving our goals," he said.
Just as the Fed's powers are limited concerning stock movements, it cannot always fully counter surprise events or "shocks" that might hit the economy. Ferguson cited the recent sharp pullback in business investment spending as an example.
"The reality is that when the shortfall in desired spending is large or arises quite quickly, as was the case last year when businesses slashed their investment plans in light of a perceived overhang of capital, the initial monetary policy offset can be only partial and not necessarily synchronous," the Fed vice chairman said.
The U.S. central bank last year slashed interest rates 11 times to a 40-year low of 1.75 percent as it sought to fight a recession triggered largely by the business spending pullback.
Although a recovery appears to be under way, it has been choppy and slow to hit its stride.
Ferguson did not discuss the current economic outlook, nor did he delve into the issues of recent Fed policy discussions. At the central bank's last meeting on Sept. 24, the majority of Fed policymakers decided to leave interest rates steady.
But two officials dissented, arguing for cuts in rates.
Without specifically mentioning the two recent dissents, Ferguson said he has been "pleased" with the Fed's decision, announced in March, to disclose to the public any dissents at monetary policy meetings at the time that they occur.
Previously, such dissents were disclosed with a time lag of several weeks. That lag sometimes led to confusion about the context in which dissents were made.
"We decided to eliminate that potential source of misunderstanding, and, for a central bank, we made that decision relatively quickly," he said. "I am pleased with the Committee's quick response."
To be perfectly honest, I'm figuring that we are in for about a 10-15 year bear market. Sorry if this is a depressing concept, but I believe this is the truth. The Dow will probably end up around 3000 before this is all said and done. In fact, I'll pick some numbers right now.
Dow 3000, NASDAQ 750, S&P500 500. Within the next two years. This is, of course, predicted with my patented SWAG ("Scientific" Wild Assed Guess) method. Personally, I'm in cash and real estate right now. Stocks and bonds make me nervous.
Well, if we are in a 10-15 year bear market at least my kids will live long enough to see the market recover.
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