Posted on 10/31/2002 4:43:01 PM PST by rohry
Market WrapUp for the Week Week in Graphs Storm Watch Geopolitical News Energy Precious Metals Raw Materials Thursday, October 31, 2002 Looking For a Catalyst The Chicago Manufacturing Index also fell to recession levels last month and the Chicago Purchasing Management Index fell to 45.9 from 48.1 in September. A reading below 50 indicates a contracting manufacturing sector. From the viewpoint of manufacturing, it looks like the double dip recession is here. The Institute For Supply Management report out tomorrow is also expected to show that manufacturing in general around the country is heading back into recession. More worrisome for Q4 is that consumer confidence is now at a decade low indicating that consumer spending may have peaked. Without the stimulus of another round of mortgage refinancing the consumer has no place else to go for money to maintain spending. What Will It Be? That leaves the good ole consumer. It will be important to watch chain store sales next month for signs of consumer retrenchment. This will give clues as to the all-important Christmas retailing season. If consumers pull back, then the economy will be back in recession. There dont appear to be any new catalysts that can drive consumer spending now that mortgage rates have moved up somewhat from last month. In order to create another spending boom, Greenspan needs to create another bubble somewhere that can be tapped and monetized, such as mortgage refis. Without a new asset to borrow against, the consumer is left only with credit cards to support additional spending. The Buyer of Last Resort The left is calling for more spending and more taxes to support new government transfer programs. The tax burden is already greater than 40% for most Americans, and even higher if you include state, property and sales taxes. Tax rates in the US are higher today than what the average serf paid his liege lord in feudal times. Yet more taxes are being advocated. Here in California the governor passed a major energy tax on consumers that will be implemented over time after next weeks election. With the state now financing 25% of the annual budget with debt, more income tax hikes are coming after the governor wins his reelection bid. It isnt understood by most politicians that in hard times, government should decrease the burden of taxation on its citizens. Instead it does just the opposite. After the Clinton Administration increased taxes in 1993, they followed it up with monetary stimulus and a credit boom, which gave us the 90s bubble. Now it appears that the same prescription is being advocated again, to raise taxes to pay for more spending and follow it up with lower interest rates and more credit. This is the standard answer you hear coming from Democrats, and you are increasingly hearing it come from Republicans as well. They should know better. Very few politicians today have the moral courage to tell voters the truth. What's The Truth? The Road to Perdition Instead we hear more calls for government to alleviate the pain when it was government that created the pain in the first place. There seems to be this mistaken belief that the government can solve all economic problems with continuous intervention in the economy and the markets through price supports, monetary expansion and fiscal stimulus. In each case of intervention, it has paid with more debt. It simply has not dawned on policymakers, academics, economists, or analysts that there is a limit to all of that debt. The financial profession is filled with a plethora of advisors from financial planners, brokers, anchors and news columnists who are out giving everyone advice based on a bull market. There are all sorts of rationalizations and explanations as to why there was a recession or bear market. It is easy for the profession to explain everything; while understanding nothing. The idiotic commentary that accompanies most earnings reports is a good example of this, as are the comments for 3-4% economic growth based on a continuous stream of borrowing by consumers, corporations, and lastly government. If federal, state, or municipal governments cant balance their budgets, they borrow more money. When borrowing money isnt enough, they raise taxes and that action is looked upon as fiscal discipline. It is the credit bubble of the 90s and the mortgage, consumption, bond, real estate, and dollar bubble that now exist on top of a stock market bubble giving me confidence that my Perfect Storm thesis is correct. In fact, I would recommend the reader pick up a copy of Charles Mackays Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds and read the chapters on the South Sea Bubble and John Laws Mississippi scheme to look at where we are heading. It is also recommended that the reader look at Charles Kindlebergers Manias, Panics, and Crashes for an understanding on what happens when governments and markets go to extremes as they are today. It's Here. The Four-Step Bear Market Rally Process The individual investor is coming back into the market after the majority of the rally has taken place. Up until last week, money has been flowing out of stock funds each month since July. Over $52 billion came out in July, $3 billion in August, and it is now reported another $16.1 billion came out in September. I believe it will be more of the same for October, since up until the middle of last week, money was flowing out of equity funds. Investor sentiment has done a remarkable turn around. It has gone from 28.4% bullish to 43.4% bullish, exceeding the number of advisors who are bearish. Investors are now putting money back into the market as the rally nears completion. The biggest worry now is missing out on all of the action. The advice given to the public is to buy now before all of the good news comes in before it is too late to own stocks. This next phase of the bear market should shear investors once again, but this time I believe it will lead to capitulation. Once burned, twice shy -- three times, bye-bye. For the month of October, the Dow gained 10.6%, its best showing since January of 1987. It was the first monthly gain for the Dow since March. The S&P 500 gained 8.6%, the biggest advance since March of 2000 when it peaked. The NASDAQ added 13.5%. During this month, smart-money commercial hedgers doubled their short position from 16,452 contracts to 31,052 contracts. Tomorrows report should show additional short positions being added. Whats more, this latest rally has taken place against a backdrop of declining volume, lower breadth, fewer new highs versus lows, and the bulk of the gains experienced in three-day gaps. Mutual fund cash positions are also at very low levels so there is very little fuel to support another rally without strong investor support coming in off the sidelines out of cash. Technically the market pattern is emerging out of a diagonal triangle that came too far, too fast. This is usually a pattern that signals an approaching end with some sort of reversal pattern to follow. The next leg down should be more horrendous taking the averages down to newer lows before we get a sustainable intermediate-term rally. It should be interesting to see what happens next week if the Fed cuts rates. Investors should watch the dollar to see how it holds up. A fourth reason not to cut rates not mentioned yesterday is that it telegraphs to the world that things arent going well. Lowering rates again leaves the Fed with very little ammunition to ward off a financial crisis when the next one occurs. Suffice to say there are plenty of financial crisis candidates around to give the Fed reason for pause. Volume increased on heavier selling today. Most days of distribution are accompanied by heavier volume while rallies have been occurring on weaker volume, which is not a good sign. Big board volume rose to 1.51 billion shares and Nasdaq volume rose to 1.7 billion. Volume on the NYSE was nearly 5% above the three-month average. Market breadth remained barely positive by 6 to 5 on the NYSE and by 10 to 9 on the Nasdaq. The VXN rose 1.7 to 52.99. The VIX fell .17 to 35.91. Overseas Markets Japanese stocks fell, completing a fifth month of declines, after the government backed away from bank industry changes some investors say are needed to end a 12-year economic slump. Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. and other companies that rely on domestic demand slumped. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average dropped 1.3% to 8640.48. Treasury Markets Copyright © Jim Puplava |
How can anyone dispute this?
But I underestimate the value of our economy. I just saw a study by the IRS (complaining you understand!) that its own stats (based on business filings) substantially undervalued American business assets and income. That is fully in keeping with other studies I have seen that have concluded that corporate assets (forget stock, for a moment) have generally undervalued U.S. business assets.
Once again, the "Financial Sense Online" negative spin. Since WHEN is 3.1% GROWTH CONSIDERED BAD? Europe would BEG to have such growth. It was "not in keeping with expectations."
Well come on, be consistent and fair! If the corporations put out rosy estimates that you don't like, you call them smoke and mirrors and say, "Let's check the real data." So here we have real data. Good growth, just below great growth.
I also saw several analysts on a variety of shows saying that in their opinion, they were seeing signs that tech was coming back. Not ROARING back, but slow and steady improvement.
Wasn't that the days of the phony "budget surpluses as far as the eye could see" based on tax revenues coming in from the "New" (Bubble) Economy? I'm a rank novice at economics, but the experts I read don't give me a lot of hope for a recovery any time soon. This guy Pupluva sounds a little bit like an economist from the Austrian School (Von Mises, Hayek, etc). I think we're in for trying times when the baby boomers retire en masse and social security and medicare and the pension funds all strain to stay solvent. Many companys report pension fund gains as revenues and this is the only reason some of them have reported earnings of their quarterly reports. Now with the market down these funds are in trouble and those reports won't look so rosy. We could see the whole Keynesian experiment go down the tubes.
I'm not conspiracy buff, except for NASA and the lack of a moonbase, but it is possible the Fed acted subconsciously in such a manner as to perpetuate the Federal Debt indefinitely.
Even CNBC thought that 3.1% was "not in keeping with expectations..."
By the way, did you catch the currrent analysis on the S&P 500 profit to earnings ratio?:
Standard & Poor's Core Earnings Figures Released for the S&P 500
New Earnings Definition Indicates Lower EPS Results than As-Reported Earnings with Pension Expenses a Major Factor
New York, October 24, 2002 Standard & Poor's,
the independent financial research and ratings leader, today announced that Standard & Poors Core Earnings for the S&P 500 Index for the 12 months ended June 2002 were $18.48 per share compared to as-reported earnings per share (EPS) of $26.74.
This means P/E ratios are over 40 for the S&P...
If I'm not mistaken, the last few quarterly GDP results were revised downward. Can't recall by how much though.
Richard W.
Dubya refuses to implement #1.TRADE DEFICIT: Formally termed a balance of trade deficit, a condition in which a nation's imports are greater than exports. In other words, a country is buying more stuff for foreigners than foreigners are buying from domestic producers. A trade deficit is usually thought to be bad for a country. For this reason, some countries seek to reduce their trade deficit by--
- establishing trade barriers on imports,
- reducing the exchange rate (termed devaluation) such that exports are less expensive and imports more expensive, or
- invading foreign countries with sizable armies.
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