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Friday, 12/6, Market WrapUp (Unemployment Report Overshadowed by New Economic Team)
Financial Sense Online ^ | 12/6/2002 | Michael Hartman

Posted on 12/06/2002 4:52:30 PM PST by rohry

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Today's Market WrapUp
by Michael Hartman
12.06.2002

Back to Market Monitor
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Unemployment Report Overshadowed by New Economic Team

Today’s big news came as a surprise with the resignations of Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill and White House economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey. According to a Bloomberg article, an administration official said that President Bush asked for both of the men to resign. It appears that Mr. Bush is determined to get his way as he realigns his economic team to provide a stimulus package to get the US economy rolling again. For now, it looks like the short-term focus will be some kind of stimulus package that includes tax cuts and increased government spending. I would sure like to hear the candid comments from both Mr. Lindsey and Mr. O’Neill.

Also in the news today was a weak employment report that showed the jobless rate increasing more than expected from 5.7% in October to 6% for November. This is the highest rate of unemployed workers since 1994. The unemployment report has further weakened confidence for a US turnaround and has put additional pressure on the dollar. This morning the dollar weakened to $1.0076 per euro and 123.82 yen per dollar. I will be watching to see what kind of impact the new stimulus package will have on the strength of the US currency. With Mr. Lindsey and Mr. O’Neill out of the way, it will be interesting to watch the developments. Let’s see if President Bush will push through a tax cut to relieve the double taxation of dividends. If he is successful, tax-free dividends could really boost stock prices. For now, the stock market is responding well to the news of the changing of the guard on Capitol Hill.

I’m not going to take the time to go through the rest of the news for the week as it would be redundant. If you would like to get a good overview for the week, just go to the Market WrapUp that Jim Puplava wrote on Wednesday. He extracted thirty-six headlines and bullet-pointed them under the four categories of Earnings Warnings/Economy, Scandals, Investment Market Analysts, and Geopolitical Risks. If you have the time, print out the news headlines and read them in the context of the ten graphs below. See for yourself if the headlines match the trends in the graphs.

Patience, Patience, Patience ... ... ...
The Stock Market has been going sideways for over a month now, Treasury Bonds have been in consolidation since the sharp break in early October, the US Dollar has gone sideways since July, gold has been consolidating since the high reached in June, and the CRB Index has been catching its breath for the last three months after marching higher all year long. The graphs below offer a pictorial of the “sideways-grind” that the markets have endured for the last few months. How will these consolidations resolve themselves? Are we looking at reversal patterns or are we looking at consolidations that are destined to continue the primary trend? Again, please read the headlines and study the graphs side by side to make your own conclusions.


Up With Things, Down With Paper
Since the markets have not provided any real direction recently, I decided to take some extra time to see how the different asset groups have been acting relative to each other. In many of the past market commentaries Jim and I have taken the basic stance that “THINGS” are going UP in price and “PAPER” is going DOWN, especially “PAPER” that is tied to excessive debt. As a proxy for “things” I have chosen to use the CRB Index, gold and oil, and for “paper” I have chosen to use stock prices, the long bond and the US dollar. When I started this project I had one primary goal in mind. I wanted to see if the numbers would confirm our belief that commodities are headed up relative to paper. The answer should also give us a good indication of what to expect when the market consolidations have run their course. Will gold break to the upside? Will the dollar continue its decline? Have we seen the top of the bond market? Will the stock market head down again? Let’s take a closer look.





If you are like me, you can take many hours to play the “what if” game. You can read lots of things into the data contained in these “relative” charts. You can see where most of these relationships made their initial shift at some point in 2001. To make a turn in these relationships is no small matter. These are huge forces at work. To turn these graphs is like trying to make a u-turn in an aircraft carrier doing forty knots. It is a process, not an event—and it takes time! We have now made the initial shift, had a few months of “balancing” with the consolidations, and shortly should begin the next leg in the continuation of the new trends.

You can dissect these graphs in many different ways, but no matter how you slice it or dice it, they are all painting the same picture. All of the graphs show a major trend change that favors tangible assets over paper assets. The sharpest contrast can be seen in the comparison of the CRB Index to the S&P 500 Index. On that chart I intentionally only drew the midline of the trend to highlight the charting principle that once resistance is broken, it typically becomes support. I also look at this graph as being “non-political” relative to the others. The CRB and SP500 are less “political” than gold, the US dollar, Treasury Bonds, etc. In my mind, that relationship has not been “restricted” or “held in check” like the US dollar, gold and bonds.

A Few More Observations
Take a look at the CRB relative to the thirty-year bond ($CRB:$USB). You can see the last consolidation that ended in early October when the ratio broke out above the red resistance line. After it broke out, it came back to re-test support and has since continued its upward path. I expect that relationship to continue along the same direction.

Here’s another thought. Look at the CRB in the first set of graphs and compare it to the CRB relative to the US dollar. The CRB alone looks rather flat for the last three months, but relative to a declining dollar it’s screaming a signal of future inflation.

The chart that fascinates me the most is gold relative to thirty-year Treasury Bonds ($GOLD:$USB). I’m captivated with the support on the graph at the low end of the trend channel. Next year when gold goes to $400 per ounce and bonds fall with rising interest rates, I see this chart going absolutely vertical!! Inter-market relationships tell a big story. Play with the relationships on a “What if” basis to see where these charts will be heading. By summertime next year, I expect we will look at these same charts to see the completion of phase two in the transition of market leadership. If you don’t have any portfolio insurance in the form of exposure to precious metals, it might be a good idea. Got Gold? Even better, got Silver? In my mind we are about one-third of the way through the correction process brought about by the excesses that were created during the expansion of the last two decades.

Stocks for the Week
The Dow Industrials dropped 250 points to close the week at 8646 for a loss of 2.8%, the NASDAQ lost 57 points or 3.9% to 1422, and the S&P 500 declined 24 points to 912, a loss of 2.6%.

Overseas Markets
European stocks fell, sending benchmark indexes to their biggest weekly losses since September, as reports indicated economic growth is slowing. Aegon NV and Barclays Plc, among the week's worst performers, dropped. The Dow Jones Stoxx 50 Index declined 0.4% to 2542.00, having earlier lost as much as 2.5%. Both the Stoxx 50 and Stoxx 600 indexes have shed more than 4 percent this week.

Japanese stocks fell, dragging the benchmarks to their first weekly drop in three. Ito-Yokado Co. and other retailers that depend on domestic sales slid after a government report pointed to a shrinking economy in six months. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average fell 0.6% to 8863. The Topix index slid 0.7% to 860.65, with retail, telecommunications and bank shares accounting for a fifth of its drop. For the week, the Nikkei lost 0.6%, its biggest weekly drop since the five days ended Oct. 25.

Copyright © 2002 Michael Hartman
mhartman@puplava.com
  
December 6, 2002


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial
KEYWORDS: economics; investing; stockmarket
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To: Doctor Stochastic
They claimed that the "criminal" Bush clan announced the resignations to cover up the unemployment reports.

I do find it interesting that just as the wheels were about to come off the bus, on a Friday where big news is coming on the geopolitical front, suddenly two Administration money guys get sacked.

I'm sure there is more to it, but the timing is very Clintonesque.

21 posted on 12/06/2002 11:18:20 PM PST by Orion
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To: Orion
I'm sure there is more to it, but the timing is very Clintonesque

Right out of the Clinton playbook. They sure as heck didn't want the unemployment numbers to be the topic of conversation over the week-end and they sure didn't want the stock market tanking as it was about to do. By next month, we'll probably be marching on Baghdad so they won't have to worry about pushing the employment numbers off the headlines.

Richard W.

22 posted on 12/07/2002 5:02:03 AM PST by arete
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To: rohry
Gold Derivatives: Moving towards Checkmate

Well I read it twice and found it to be way to complex for me to fully appreciate. I take it that the CB's have leased out their national treasures (gold reserves) and it can't be replaced without driving the price of gold through the roof -- is that about it? What if they simply "nationalize" the bullion banks? Is that possible?

Richard W.

23 posted on 12/07/2002 5:09:37 AM PST by arete
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To: David
David,

Do you want to give us your condensed, not too many details, of the important points and conclusions of the article and how that is going to affect us in the future? Any idea of the CB's game plan if you eliminate the "stupid decisions" aspect?

Richard W.

24 posted on 12/07/2002 6:28:17 AM PST by arete
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To: dalereed; arete
change the bankruptcy rules

I too dislike bankruptcy, but this new bill is nothing but a save the credit card companies butt. I have been burned by bankruptcys and learned to be tighter in my credit policies, but the cc just keep expanding their lending to more and less credit worthy people. The new law appears to me to be a way of having the courts collect for them, by forcing people into chapter 13.

25 posted on 12/07/2002 8:14:56 AM PST by razorback-bert
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To: arete
The one thing that hasn't been given much mention is the islamic nations converting from paper money to gold coins.

This is going to put a hugh drain in the available gold for jewlery and industrial uses to the rest of the world and could drasticly increase the price.
26 posted on 12/07/2002 8:45:15 AM PST by dalereed
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To: razorback-bert
"The new law appears to me to be a way of having the courts collect for them, by forcing people into chapter 13."

Credit cards are no different than any other debt, everytime you sign when you use it you obligate yourself to pay for the purchase.

I have a credit card and use it but the full ballance is paid every month, it's a convienence, not a borrowing instrument!

In my 65 years I have always lived by the rules taught to me by my parents, never borrow for personal consumption except for a home mortgage and have never bought anything on time payments.

If you can't pay for it, you don't need it! I even saved up the full purchase price to purchase my airplane, it delayed my flying by a number of years but at least when I totaled it I didn't owe anyone any money.

27 posted on 12/07/2002 8:51:43 AM PST by dalereed
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Comment #28 Removed by Moderator

To: dalereed
If you can't pay for it, you don't need it! I even saved up the full purchase price to purchase my airplane, it delayed my flying by a number of years but at least when I totaled it I didn't owe anyone any money.

Hard landing?

Richard W.

29 posted on 12/07/2002 9:17:12 AM PST by arete
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To: goldenboy
Thank you for explaining that. Is it that simple? What is to prevent the bullion banks from just closing their doors and walking away without coming up with the metal? CB's shouldn't care cause they don't want the POG up anyway and it may just serve the puppet masters purposes in the long run.

Richard W.

30 posted on 12/07/2002 9:23:12 AM PST by arete
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To: arete
Sorry to say but it now resides in a salvage yard in Mexico City. At least I didn't kill the 5 doctors and nurses I had with me or myself so I guess an optimist would say it was a "hard landing" but a successful one.

The sad part was that I only had it insured for $50k and when I crashed it the same year and model prices ranged from $187k to $225k.
31 posted on 12/07/2002 9:34:51 AM PST by dalereed
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Comment #32 Removed by Moderator

To: goldenboy
If any player could have accumulated, and could afford a 5% holding of the world's gold supply over the last 200 years, it would be the Rothschilds.

I'd say that the little city state in Rome could be a hundred years ahead of the Rothschilds. Just think of the history there.

Richard W.

33 posted on 12/07/2002 10:00:55 AM PST by arete
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To: goldenboy
be a hundred years ahead of the Rothschilds. Just think of the history there.

Make that about 1800 years. Love to have a peek inside those vaults.

Richard W.

34 posted on 12/07/2002 10:03:37 AM PST by arete
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Comment #35 Removed by Moderator

To: arete
Right out of the Clinton playbook. They sure as heck didn't want the unemployment numbers to be the topic of conversation over the week-end and they sure didn't want the stock market tanking as it was about to do.

The scary thing is if Bush has learned this from Clinton, what else has he learned? What are his priorities? Clinton never had the Everlasting War on Terrorism, the Patriot Act, Campaign Finance Reform, and the Dept. of Homeland Security.

When the economy gets fugly, what can we expect? I suspect we will get lots of dead Arabs, the printing presses running day/night, lots of Americans in prison without access to lawyers or trials, and a total information system that will be used to supress dissent.

36 posted on 12/07/2002 2:22:49 PM PST by Orion
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To: Orion
Believe me, I share your concerns. Many things that I have seeing that I consider very troubling. I have a very uneasy feeling.

Richard W.

37 posted on 12/07/2002 2:36:15 PM PST by arete
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To: bvw; Tauzero; kezekiel; ChadGore; Harley - Mississippi; Dukie; Matchett-PI; Ken H; MrNatural; ...
Here is a series of links to Puplava's Financial Sense Newshour audio. It's always intesting.

1st Hour

2nd Hour

Neal Adams

Topics discussed:10-Sigma; Dollar Devaluation; Technical Positions of the Market; Brace Yourself For the First Quarter

Richard W.

38 posted on 12/07/2002 6:53:23 PM PST by arete
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To: arete
That be -- intesting = interesting

Richard W.
39 posted on 12/07/2002 8:18:22 PM PST by arete
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To: rohry
Thanks for the link in #4.

The music will stop. Got gold?
40 posted on 12/08/2002 10:18:43 AM PST by headsonpikes
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