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Today's Market WrapUp 07.07.2003 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Puplava Archive The G-Men Part of my weekend routine includes stops at my favorite book stores. The big stores such as Barnes and Noble and Borders now offer their customers a coffee café. At the Barnes and Noble I frequent, they have a Starbucks so I am able to satisfy my caffeine needs and peruse the book shelves in an elevated state. I’m always looking for a good book or an author to interview for my weekend broadcasts. I also enjoy reading foreign publications and magazines because they cover news stories we seldom hear about here in the U.S. Over the last month I have noticed a discernable trend in the degree of bullishness in both newspapers and magazines. Everyone is convinced that we are in a new bull market. The consensus is overwhelming with bearish headlines a distinct rarity these days. In fact it would appear that the bears have all gone back into hibernation. Signs of the new bullish sentiment are everywhere. It can be seen on magazine covers, newspaper headlines, CNBC ratings, the increase in margin debt, the return and popularity of day trading, and the profits of discount brokers, such as Charles Schwab. Riding
the Bull In examining the rationale for the new bull market, the main reason given for an economic recovery and a new bull market is confidence in government, especially in Mr. G. The two main arguments are that interest rates are at record lows and the Fed has omnipotent powers to levitate anything that it desires. In other words, there is complete confidence in the Fed’s ability to keep bubbles inflated as well as create new bubbles to replace those that have partially deflated. This confidence in the effectiveness of monetary policy is in danger of turning into blind faith, ignoring reality or becoming completely blind to it. As a result, actual evidence of a recovery or sky-high market valuations are completely ignored. It’s a lot like a sailor ignoring a dropping barometer reading and heading out to sea just because the skies are clear. Erroneous
Assumptions - Then and Now Yet this blind faith in the efficacy of fiscal and monetary policy are ignoring, or worse, turning blind to the structural problems that now plague the U.S. economy. The assumption that America’s economy is fundamentally sound is ignoring an economy that is setting new record debt levels within all sectors of the economy, has virtually no savings, and is turning to the rest of the world to finance its voracious appetite for its debt based consumption. We don’t produce, we don’t save, and we don’t invest any more. What drives the American economy now is debt, consumption, and asset bubbles. In present economic and financial circles, there is no recognition given to the maladjustments that come with asset bubbles created through an abundance of credit. This overconfidence comes from a misunderstanding of credit and asset bubbles. When we see price inflation in real goods, policymakers and bond vigilantes become worried. When inflation causes asset bubbles to inflate, we become euphoric, failing to distinguish that both goods inflation and asset bubbles are one in the same thing. They are visible signs of excess credit and inflation. One aspect of inflation is seen as detrimental; while the other sign of inflation in assets is viewed as bullish. The
Underlying Symptom is Ignored Thinking in professional financial circles now runs contrary to actually solving the problem. The current answer is for more of the credit tonic to ease the pain. If more credit is injected into the economy, Herbie Homeowner can refinance his home mortgage and extract more equity to buy things he doesn’t need. Lower interest rates also allow bankrupt or profitless companies to stay on life support by borrowing more money. Financially dead companies can borrow even more money at even lower interest rates, allowing them to postpone the inevitable for a while longer. As a result, excess capacity is never eliminated, but in fact is being subsidized by the constant flow of credit. All the Fed is doing is buying more time. Meanwhile, in place of one asset bubble, it has now created multiple bubbles to supplement the original bubble in the stock market. Believing
Isn't Seeing We have now arrived at a key inflexion point in the markets. Stock prices have levitated again based on a lot of hope and hype coming from the Street and a little help from friends. The second quarter reporting season will begin in earnest next week. As the graph below indicates, earnings expectations have been adjusted downward. Operating profits are expected to be up 5% year over year. The best that can be said about the profit picture is that it isn’t getting worse. Everyone is hopeful, but they are still holding back on spending plans, waiting for visible signs that an enduring recovery is in place. Any sign or hope that things may be improving is seized upon by the markets as an excuse to rally. This morning’s front page piece in the Wall Street Journal that tech suppliers sense an uptick in spending was given as one reason the markets surged at the opening bell. However, this morning’s surge in stock prices had more to do with miracles in the futures pit than it did miracles in the economy. The familiar flag pole rally pattern has become all too familiar, a huge jump in futures that translated into a rally in the indexes and remaining there the rest of the day. It reminds me of a line from a Beatles song “…a little help from my friends.”
The only problem with a depreciating dollar is that the countries that the U.S. runs the largest trade deficit with are countries whose currency has moved very little. Japan is actively intervening in the currency markets to prevent the yen from rising and China pegs its currency to the dollar. Bulls ignore this flaw in their devaluation arguments. In the final analysis it is believed that zero percent interest rates will make holding cash worthless, thereby leaving consumers as well as savers with no other choice but to spend, borrow and invest in stocks. These are rather shallow arguments for a new bull market. However, analyze and sum up the bulls’ arguments for a recovery and new bull market. It boils down to this: confidence in The G-Men and Mr. G himself. The ability of the G-man to create another asset bubble is what keeps the bulls going. I believe this confidence is about to run into a wall of reality when it comes to the second-half of the year. That is when the actual rubber will meet the road. As I have said before, the Grand Banks are no picnic in the fall—nor is the stock market Today’s Markets Back at the casino, stocks took off like a rocket ship ignited by powerful buying in the futures pit this morning. The NASDAQ experienced its best close in 14 months. The market’s fears of deflation are beginning to fade as asset bubbles reinflate. The major indexes rallied despite profit warnings coming from BMC Software and Schering-Plough. The current thinking is that profits will beat estimates this quarter and that is all that counts even though those estimates have been lowered. Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs issued a bullish report on tech spending projections. If the actual numbers look dismal, just crank up the projections. The rally took place among the usual suspects: semiconductor, hardware, biotech and Internet issues. On the sell-side were energy and gold—the two sectors with the most promising earnings prospects thanks to higher metals and energy prices. Wall Street downgraded the energy sector; while it upgraded the tech sector. The worse a company performs, the more attractive it becomes for investors. The rally this year has taken place among those companies either experiencing balance sheet or income statement problems. Your business can be performing miserably, but what counts these days is beating expectations that are in a constant state of being adjusted down in real time. While fund managers have been rushing into tech stocks and buying with complete abandon; the insiders who run these very same companies have been selling their shares in record volumes. In short, the insiders are selling; while fund managers and their shareholders are buying. The recent rally has attracted the little guy again with $2.5 billion flowing into stock funds last week according to Trim Tabs, which keeps track of money flows. The company has become aggressively bearish recently based on the largest insider corporate selling it has seen in years.
Volume came in today at 1.38 billion on the NYSE and 1.81 billion on the Nasdaq. It appears that stocks are going through a distribution phase. The insiders are selling and the public is buying. Market breadth was positive by 22-10 on the Big Board and by 23-9 on the Nasdaq. The VIX added .44 to close at 22.05 while the VXN popped 1.04 to close at 33.51. Copyright
© 2003 Jim Puplava Graphic source: StockCharts.com, CNNMoney
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