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Thursday, 10/31, Market WrapUp (Best month in 15 years)
Financial Sense Online ^ | 10/31/2002 | James J. Puplava

Posted on 10/31/2002 4:43:01 PM PST by rohry

 
Weekday Commentary
from
Jim Puplava

Home

Is it a trick or a treat?

 


STORM WATCH UPDATE
Bubble Troubles Part I
Double, double, toil and trouble; fire burn and cauldron bubble.


Bubble Troubles Part II

Yes, Virginia, There IS
a Housing Bubble

Bubble Troubles Part III
It Ain't Over Yet
for the Stock Market

 Thursday Market Scoreboard
 October 31, 2002

 Dow Industrials 30.38 8397.03
 Dow Utilities 0.61 198.25
 Dow Transports 17.18 2260.07
 S & P 500 4.95 885.76
 NASDAQ 3.02 1329.75
 US Dollar to Yen 122.505
 Euro to US Dollar

.9901

 Gold 1.5 318.40
 Silver 0.02 4.505
 Oil 0.41 27.22
 CRB Index 1.23 228.91
 Natural Gas

0.23 4.156

All market indexes

10/31 10/30

Change

  HUI (Amex Gold Bugs Index)

 Close
 YTD
110.79 113.98 3.19
69.92%
 52week High 147.82

06/03/02

 52week Low 59.86

11/26/01

  XAU (Philadelphia Gold & Silver)

 Close
 YTD
63.44 65.59 2.15
16.55%
 52week High 88.65

05/28/02

 52week Low 49.23

11/19/01


 Market WrapUp for the Week 
Monday  l  Tuesday  l  Wednesday  l  Thursday  l  Friday

Week in Graphs Storm Watch Geopolitical News Energy Precious Metals Raw Materials


Thursday, October 31, 2002

Looking For a Catalyst
The economic news was disappointing. Q3 GDP was below estimates and the trend in GDP looks like the economy is beginning to stall again. What little strength there was in the economy during the third quarter once again came from the consumer. Consumer spending on autos delivered most of the punch during Q3 besides government spending. Auto companies had to entice buyers with zero down and zero interest plus rebates to get buyers in the show room. Now it looks like those incentives are failing to bring in new buyers however, as auto sales have fallen off sharply during the month of October. The economy has less momentum as it enters the final stretch of the year. The strength in consumer spending during the third quarter came mainly from mortgage refi’s with households’ extracting more equity out of their homes to maintain spending. As household wealth declines due to falling stock prices, homeowners are spending the equity built up in their homes to maintain consumption.

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?
This raises the question of, "What comes next?" What will be the next catalyst to spur economic growth, capital spending by business and give the debt- laden consumer a second wind? The consensus seems to be for the Fed to help create another bubble by lowering interest rates and bank reserve requirements in order to inject more credit into the economy. The US is already borrowing $2 trillion annually with very little to show for it. GDP should be much stronger than it is, but deflating asset values, debt liquidation, and foreign imports are siphoning off most of the benefits. If the consumer cuts back on spending, what will take consumption's place? You can forget capital spending. Businesses are still contracting, laying off more workers, and shutting down plants with one out of every four factories in the country now idle. Most companies are making every effort to conserve cash in order to survive. Next year’s profits are going to be worse as a result of new pension funding requirements in order to keep pension plans 90% funded, so there will be no help coming from business. Most firms are saying next year will be another rough year, which explains all of the firing of workers. Furthermore, comparisons for earnings will be much tougher by comparison to 2001 when everything was going south, so you can forget business as a stimulus.

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 don’t 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
This leaves only the government where both parties are in favor of new government spending plans, resulting from the Keynesian belief of emphasizing the merits of consumption versus the benefits of savings and investment. It is one reason that the US has become such a debt-ridden nation. There are a few ideas for a tax stimulus which would be the right thing to do, but that would not be possible if the Democrats hold on to the Senate. The Democratic leadership is opposed to lowering income tax rates and would prefer to roll back the Bush tax cuts and raise taxes even further. Across the country governors are raising taxes again, exactly the wrong thing to do. Politicians seem to be repeating the same mistakes of the Hoover and the Roosevelt Administrations during the 1930’s. Tax rates were raised to 94%, regulations were imposed on business, and fiscal spending went through the roof. If you look around the country and in Washington, both the right and the left are advocating the very same policies. There is very little hope that tax cuts will become a reality unless there is a change in leadership in the Senate. At this point, not even the experts can predict the outcome of this election. It is simply too close to call.

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 week’s 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 isn’t 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 90’s 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 truth is that our country’s finances are a mess as a result of the 90’s credit and consumption boom. The US is borrowing $500 billion a year from overseas to finance its trade and current account deficit. It is now running annual budget deficits that are heading back up to $400 billion and may be more if we go to war. Borrowing close to $1 trillion a year is not healthy. At some point, foreigners may refuse to lend us more money to finance our trade deficit. The government may also find it difficult to finance its budget deficits without paying higher rates of interest. During this quarter the US government will have to tap the bond markets for $76 billion in capital to finance its spending plans. This is a prescription for financial calamity.

The Road to Perdition
Debt has become so ingrained within our society that nobody questions this financial insanity. Instead, whether you get your news from reading the paper, television, or the Internet, there is a major movement in this country for more government intervention in the economy instead of allowing the markets and the economy to heal itself naturally through debt liquidation and business failure. Weak companies would go under, debt would be liquidated, markets would fall, and the economy would contract until the excesses were wrung out of the economy. Once cleansed of these excesses, a natural restoration process would begin.

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 can’t balance their budgets, they borrow more money. When borrowing money isn’t enough, they raise taxes and that action is looked upon as fiscal discipline.

It is the credit bubble of the 90’s 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 Mackay’s “Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds” and read the chapters on the South Sea Bubble and John Law’s Mississippi scheme to look at where we are heading. It is also recommended that the reader look at Charles Kindleberger’s “Manias, Panics, and Crashes” for an understanding on what happens when governments and markets go to extremes as they are today.

It's Here.
Besides the usual news events of the day of falling profits, more scandals, and a slowdown in the economy, there was no new news other than talk about another Fed rate cut. However, of the four elements I’ve written about in a bear market rally, it now looks like the fourth element is now in place.

The Four-Step Bear Market Rally Process
Phase 1  One-two-three-day rallies, sparked by intervention at key support levels.
Phase 2  Short covering drives violent upside surge in indexes.
Phase 3  Day traders come in and increase short-term momentum.
Phase 4  John Q comes in at end of rally after uptrend has run out.

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. Tomorrow’s report should show additional short positions being added. What’s 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 aren’t 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
European stocks wrapped up their first monthly gain in seven, as the prospect of improved earnings at companies including Royal Dutch/Shell Group and Cap Gemini SA boosted investor optimism. The Dow Jones Stoxx 50 Index climbed 1.4% to 2561.29, its first back-to-back daily increase in three weeks. All eight major European markets were up during today’s trading.

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
Treasuries were little changed with the 10-year Treasury note losing 2/32 to yield 3.97%. Among the raft of data tomorrow, the key indicators will be a national factory-sector report and a monthly labor wrap-up. What those reports say will help investors factor in a possible cut in interest rates next week when the FOMC meets on Wednesday.

Copyright © Jim Puplava
October 31, 2002



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial
KEYWORDS: economics; investing; stockmarket
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To: TigerLikesRooster
Response to your #40:

Your posts are both very simplistic and very insightful.

You express the ultimate bottom line of monetary policy here--"discipline in . . the creation and maintenance of money base." This is the ultimate issue. And the cause of the economic cycle; all depressions, most contractions, all can be laid at the door of the fed--the severe cycles resulting from excess credit creation and consequential bubbles.

But there is a good market mechanism to solve the problem--maybe more than one. Private money unrelated to a government sponsered entity might work. A much simpler answer is to use pieces of gold as money which proposal has been the subject of extended debate here on other threads.

But you have to recognize that there is a reason for the Fed--or actually two reasons. The US Government does not want to cede the power of control of the money system to the private market exchange system because that is one of the greatest powers government has over its citizens. So, powerful owners of capital, under the guise of the fed which was labled as a central bank but which is not, took over the money system of the United States as part of a legalistic maneuver that on paper was intended to insure that the money system would be managed as a level playing field (which may have lasted for a while).

41 posted on 10/31/2002 8:32:14 PM PST by David
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To: LS
This is the calm before the perfect storm.

If you want to go to the beach, fine.

Buy the dips and knock yourself out. Catch the perfect wave.

But no belly-aching next summer when your house is worth less than your mortgage and your stocks are all delisted because they are under a dollar.

Normal people, on the other hand, should be preparing to sell into this rally now, and getting ready to buy gold/mining shares in December.
42 posted on 10/31/2002 9:31:21 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: Willie Green
"So we're going to suffer #2 while he pursues #3."

False. We are going to have #2 whether anyone wants it or not. The only questions are when and how much.

#3 is irrelevant drivel.
43 posted on 10/31/2002 9:44:31 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: hinckley buzzard
#3 is irrelevant drivel.

Well, you need to convince Dubya of that.
But he doesn't seem to want to hear anything about it.

44 posted on 10/31/2002 9:51:19 PM PST by Willie Green
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To: B4Ranch
Here is one factor that will lead to the end of the housing boom/bubble:

There are currently in this country tens of thousand of homes in foreclosure, and the lenders are going to have to put them on the market sooner or later--they have billions of dollars tied up in non-performing mortgages and in these relatively profitless times that is not sustainable. The assets will have to be liquidated.

So what happens to the housing market when tens of thousands of units come onto the market at distress-sale prices (Over-supply)? And at the same time the consumer figures out that he is tapped out, and has no way to take on more debt (Dropping demand)?

Those trends are in action now, not just speculation for the future.

45 posted on 10/31/2002 9:58:43 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: Willie Green
I see no evidence that he wants to invade anybody with large invading armies. I think he would consider it the ultimate achievement to get "regime change" without risking the military at all.

As for the treasures to be had, we already buy all the oil from Iraq that we want--hundreds of thousand of barrels a day, in case you haven't been paying attention.

Why would we spend a hundred billion dollars to go and "mug" someone with whom we can successfully make deals for far less cost?
46 posted on 10/31/2002 10:18:33 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: hinckley buzzard
US takes role in Colombia to new level
47 posted on 10/31/2002 10:37:34 PM PST by Willie Green
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To: hinckley buzzard
Why would we spend a hundred billion dollars to go and "mug" someone with whom we can successfully make deals for far less cost?

What a clever idea!
Hire a "hit man" so we can keep up appearances as "legitimate" businessmen!
Must've gotten that one out of the mafioso handbook.

48 posted on 10/31/2002 10:53:32 PM PST by Willie Green
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To: LS
Oh, this makes the fact that the numbers aren't worth s... ok.
49 posted on 11/01/2002 12:24:44 AM PST by imawit
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To: LS
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."

I kept looking for that growth number when reading the report, it was not there. What kind of 'report' is this? I guess in there 2000+ words there was not enough room to say 3.1%. All they said was how disappointing todays numbers were. What a crook. No one was expecting 3.1% growth. This STUPID report needs to be renamed TODAY'S MARKET GLOOM PROPAGANDA.

50 posted on 11/01/2002 2:28:23 AM PST by Always Right
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To: hinckley buzzard
There are currently in this country tens of thousand of homes in foreclosure, and the lenders are going to have to put them on the market sooner or later--they have billions of dollars tied up in non-performing mortgages and in these relatively profitless times that is not sustainable.

Housing starts each months are over a million. If 10,000 houses are put back into the market, it will not pop any 'bubble'.

51 posted on 11/01/2002 2:40:54 AM PST by Always Right
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To: imawit
What the hell are you talking about? So all government numbers are unreliable? You ready for your tin hat?

I KNOW people who work inside these agencies: NBER, Treas Dept. and (previously) Commerce. They are good, honest people who don't arbitrarily "fudge" numbers so that Pupulva or Financial Sense Online can say "oh, they are s**t" just because they don't like them.

Now, I don't recall you, or anyone else, when the numbers were DOWN, saying, "Oh, we can't believe them. They are lying about a good situation." Nope. Didn't hear that. With you (apparently---correct me if I'm wrong), if the numbers are BAD, then they are genuine and honest, but if they are good, they are fraud. That's Barbra Streisand, and you know it. And I object to the implication that good, honest people are lying. If you had a clue about how these numbers are compiled in the first place, you'd know it's darn near impossible to "fudge" them just from the manner in which they are compiled. Now let's remove the tinfoil, please.

52 posted on 11/01/2002 4:33:50 AM PST by LS
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To: hinckley buzzard
Finally, buz, at least YOU will say what all these gloomsters really mean, which is "Buy GOLD." It's a dumb strategy, but at least you have the guts to say it. I notice that many here dance around what they really are, which is goldbugs.

But you are way off as a seer.

53 posted on 11/01/2002 4:35:03 AM PST by LS
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To: arete
Yep, Richard, and that's why gold is stuck, energy prices continue to fall, and interest rates are at near all-time lows. Yep, those are sure signs of inflation, I gotta hand it to ya.
54 posted on 11/01/2002 4:35:51 AM PST by LS
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To: evaporation-plus
I say again. The "experts" almost always want a rate cut to spur growth. The exception was the 1990s, when (due to Clinton's refinancing of the debt) they were terrified of inflation---all the while we were drifting into DEFLATION.

But the point is, rate cuts don't HELP the money supply, so it is the wrong policy prescription.

55 posted on 11/01/2002 4:37:12 AM PST by LS
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To: rohry
The productivity gains of the 90s have led to an interesting situation. No matter how much money the Fed pumps in, it's not enough to fuel inflation because the supply and distribution of goods is much more responsive to changes in demand.

So no matter how much consumption increases, there is so much idle capacity from increased production efficiency, that it cannot outpace increasing price competition, ie DEFLATION.

An unprecedented economic situation, indeed, and one that the economists have (as of yet) failed to recognize and incorporate into their models.


BUMP

56 posted on 11/01/2002 5:10:01 AM PST by tm22721
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To: LS
#52 + #53 May I be so crude as to ask, what makes you feel that you are the "Expert" in this thread that gives you the authority and expertise to critcize everyone? Please tell us where your knowledge base comes from. Is it success?
57 posted on 11/01/2002 5:16:52 AM PST by B4Ranch
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To: David; hinckley buzzard
Many thanks to you both.
58 posted on 11/01/2002 5:17:43 AM PST by B4Ranch
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To: rohry
Thanks. I especially appreciate the intervention/manipulation dimension.
59 posted on 11/01/2002 5:28:12 AM PST by gabby hayes
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To: B4Ranch
Yah, I'd say some success. Also, a pretty thorough knowledge of history. Some, from research of the 12 or so books I've published, most recently, "The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in the United States" (Harcourt, 2000). Oh, also I was a rock drummer whose band opened for the James Gang, Steppenwolf, Savoy Brown, Mother's Finest, and who played the Troubadeaur with the Who in attendance and was the guest of the Allman Bros. at their Cincy concert. That's my main qualification :)
60 posted on 11/01/2002 5:34:34 AM PST by LS
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