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It has been several years
since this many bullish technical and fundamental factors have conspired
to point to a bull market for stocks as we approach the start of a new
year. Just listing them all would fill up several reports. The
diminishing supply of stocks, persistent bearish investor sentiment,
increasing liquidity, record corporate cash, and record valuation are
just some of the reasons why the months ahead should be bullish for
stocks.
If we
could begin with one major feature of the present stock market it would
have to be a drastically improved supply/demand situation from the past
few years. Mergers and acquisitions have helped to reduce the floating
supply of shares, but so too have record stock buybacks. As veteran
analyst Don Hays recently pointed out, "Corporations last
year...made over $400 billion of cash takeovers of U.S. corporations.
Besides that, they bought back $600 billion of their own stock. There
has never been anything like this in the history of the U.S. stock
market. We now have a 3% reduction of stock available for purchase today
in relation to the supply one year ago." This situation has wound
the stock market "coil" so tightly that it can only press
higher in the months ahead.
Not only
are valuation and other fundamental factors pointing to higher stock
prices in the months ahead, but the price behavior of some economically
sensitive and very important individual stocks have also given clues for
us in the intermediate-to-longer-term. Take, for example, the bank stock
sector. Bank stocks have been on a rip-and-tear lately and the Bank
Index (BKX) is fresh of a new all-time high. The bank stocks are a major
leading indicator and have been known to lead the way for the broad
market. In this case that way is higher, as the chart for BKX
emphatically shows.

Bank
stocks have been bolstered by record earnings, as Lehman Brothers,
Goldman Sachs and Bear Stearns have been among the latest of the major
banks to report record annual earnings. Interestingly, in the same
article on Dec. 15 that reported these record bank earnings, the
Financial Times noted that "investors appear concerned that recent
near-perfect capital market conditions will not continue." FT added
that a slowdown in the housing market "could hurt" the leading
banks even as they reap large profits from mortgage-related securities.
Once again we see the specter of investor pessimism raising its head,
underscoring the undercurrent of fear that has and will continue to
bolster the stock market’s "wall of worry" in the months
ahead.
The stocks
of some blue chip leading indicators look exceptional as we close out
2006 and head into 2007. Some of these are Dow 30 components and are
worth reviewing:
IBM: Big
Blue broke out of its 9-month trading range in October on extremely high
volume and has gone on to make higher highs, closing out the year at a
price of $97.15. Any worthwhile bull market should be led by IBM and
it’s comforting to know (from a bull’s standpoint) that IBM is
leading the way higher into 2007. IBM should be able to exceed the $100
benchmark sometime in early 2007 and eventually re-test its previous
all-time highs between the $130-$135 area.

GE: Next
up we have the super-bullish chart of another market
"general," General Electric. GE recently made a high-volume
breakout from a 2-year congestion range between roughly the $32-$36
levels. The chart pattern in GE is very promising and now that all that
overhead resistance has been cleared away we should finally start to see
some solid performance from GE, just like we did in the "glory
days" of the late ‘90s.

MER:
Merrill Lynch has supplanted GM as the ultimate broad market leading
indicator and MER is currently flashing yet another bullish
intermediate-term signal. Riding just below its all-time high at the $94
level, MER enters 2007 on a high note and has already signaled that the
interim outlook is bullish for the broad market. As MER typically
precedes the S&P at major turning points, it has already signaled
higher prices for stocks in the coming months and will bear keeping a
watch on for other important signals in the year ahead.
MSFT:
Since bottoming this past June, Microsoft has risen to a 4-year high at
$30. Will 2007 be the year MSFT finally exceeds its 4-year trading range
high at $30 and goes on to make further headway to approach the previous
all-time high? Price, volume, momentum and valuation factors all point
to "yes!"
T:
AT&T is an important leading indicator for the tech sector and
economy and has performed extremely well in 2006, besting many of its
fellow Dow 30 components in terms of the steadiness of its uptrend from
its October 2005 low. A rising AT&T stock is always a bullish
harbinger for the rest of the stock market, a fact which should be
revealed for all to see in 2007.
The DRAM
Index is another reason to expect that 2007 will be kind to tech stocks.
Since bottoming a year ago, DRAM prices have climbed steadily and look
to continue this trend into 2007. This is a bullish leading indicator
for the SOXX and for the NASDAQ stocks in general.
We all
know that the underlying monetary trends are needed to fuel a worthwhile
bull market in stocks. We’e already examined some of the important
money supply gauges in the past few weeks, such as the ones showing the
percentage increase in M2 and MZM money supply as well as bank credit.
But what many observers are now asking is how to tell if these recent
and much-needed injections of liquidity in the banking system will
actually serve to help the economy and stock market, or whether
consumers and investor might shun this increased money supply? To answer
that question we turn to the trend in adjusted reserves of commercial
banks.
In the
classic book by W.G. Bretz, "Juncture Recognition in the Stock
Market" (out of print), the author writes, "The ability of the
commercial banks to extend loans is affected by a variety of factors.
One of these is the rate at which existing loans are repaid. When loans
are being repaid more rapidly than they are being expanded, the ratio
rises and the reserve position of the banks improves. A rising [adjusted
reserves] index thus implies a change in the direction of easier credit
conditions. Such a development should make the banking system eager to
advance loans to the public and to the business community. It represents
a background favorable for, but not necessarily producing, a stock
market boom. The actual boom itself is the result of a complex [set] of
factors that combine to create a condition of stress sufficiently
powerful to reverse the existing trend."
What Bretz
is saying here is that a rising adjusted reserves trend, when
accompanied by an increase in money supply and bank credit, in most
cases guarantees that a bull market in stocks will follow, not to
mention a general economic improvement. And when we look at the recent
trend of the adjusted reserves provided by the St. Louis Fed we see a
*major* improvement in reserves in just the past few weeks. On an
annualized percentage change basis, adjusted reserves have gone from
negative numbers earlier this year to a growth of nearly 200% as of
early December. Earlier this fall we pointed out that adjusted reserves
were in sore need of recovery but now those reserves have risen of late
to let us know that the process of re-liquefaction is well underway.
Meanwhile, the MZM money supply statistics continue to show a healthy
rate of growth as of late December. This is paving the way for a
continued stock market boom and economic recovery in 2007.

While
monetary liquidity is increasing, the supply of shares outstanding in
the stock market has been shrinking steadily to form a potentially
bullish combination. This has been mostly a consequence of share
buybacks, M&A, the private equity trend, and Sarbanes-Oxley. The
stock market liquidity analytical firm Trimtabs Investment Research
recently observed that for 2006 the amount of outstanding shares has
fallen by approximately $500 billion. Trimtabs observed, "U.S.
equity fund inflows from 2001 through 2006 have been much lower than
they were from 1995 through 2000. The bull run since 2003 has occurred
even though individual investors have not been big buyers of U.S. equity
funds."
Part of
this has been reflected by the unusually large percentage of
"neutral" investors in the AAII investor sentiment polls since
2003, a phenomenon we've commented on at length in the past. What
happens when these sidelined investors, who have trillions parked in
cash, decide to enter the stock market in 2007? Mark Dodson of Hays
Advisory answers thusly: "When the public starts buying, it will be
in a stock market with a smaller supply of stocks, causing an equity
supply shock....a welcome change."
A welcome
change indeed, and for that reason we welcome the many profitable
opportunities the year 2007 is sure to bring the investors are willing
to take advantage of them.

© 2007 Clif Droke
Editorial Archive
Clif
Droke
P.O. Box 3401
Topsail Beach, N.C. 28445-9831 USA
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