 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, July 20, 2005
------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: There's an interesting approach to market forecasting that starts with Murphy's Law. If it can go wrong, it will go wrong, and when it does go wrong, it'll take down the greatest number of people with it. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Murphy's Trade By Tom Dyson Capt. Edward A. Murphy is the man after whom Murphy's Law is named. He was an engineer in the air force, working on a project to see how much deceleration a pilot could withstand in a crash. One day, he lost his temper with a technician. The guy had wired a switchboard incorrectly, says the legend, and when Murphy discovered the mistake, he cursed the technician saying, "If there is any way to do it wrong, he'll find it." There's an interesting approach to market forecasting that starts with Murphy's Law as its premise. Those who follow this approach take the line that, if it can go wrong, it will go wrong, and when it does go wrong, it'll take down the greatest number of people with it. Look at these returns over the last 3 years: U.S. Stocks (S&P) +24% U.S. Bonds (TLT) +33% U.S Real estate (OFHEO) +19% Europe stocks (IEV) +10% European Bonds (Framlington) +19% Europe real estate (FinFacts) +17% UK stocks (FTSE) +12% UK bonds (S&P services) +30% UK real estate (Halifax) +25% Emerging markets (EEM 28 months) +114% Copper (Kitco) +105% Gold (Kitco) +40% Crude Oil (AP) +117% Japanese stocks (ITF) +3% Pacific Stocks Ex-Japan (EPP) +17% All the standard metrics used to measure the value of these assets are off the chart. There are no more obviously cheap stocks however you look at them, real estate prices bear no relation to rental yields, and bond yields don't even compensate you for inflation. Everything is up. Across the board, asset prices have been pushed higher by excess liquidity. The source of liquidity: The 2001-2 recession - aided by the tech wreck, Y2K, Enron's collapse, and 9/11 - pushed U.S monetary administrators to take drastic action. They cut interest rates to 46-year lows and flooded the markets with cheap credit. The cheap credit flowed into global asset markets like rainwater to a gutter, and pushed prices up everywhere. "Had the government not intervened four years ago," writes Fred Hickey's High-Tech Strategist, "the national savings rate would not have been driven to zero on the eve of the retirements of the early baby-boomer generation." "The current account deficit would not have doubled, household mortgage debt would not be nearly $3 trillion higher and we wouldn't be so reliant on the generosity of foreign lenders, who own nearly 45% of the publicly-owned portion ($4.5 trillion) of our $7.84 trillion national debt (up over $2 trillion in less than 4 years)." Debt has been used as a way to prolong consumption and consequently, Americans as a whole owe large amounts of money. The majority is a debtor. Murphy's Law says the majority gets it. Picture all that debt. Debt gets paid in cash. Cash is liquidity. The worst thing that can happen to a debtor is that liquidity dries up and he is unable to pay the interest on his debt. Bankruptcy ensues. Here's the debtor's worst-case scenario, the Murphy's Law prediction: Bond traders keep pushing bond prices higher. This is exactly the kind of trade bond vigilantes like, because it puts the Fed over a barrel. The more prices on 10-year and 30-year Treasury bonds rise - prices the bond vigilantes control - the tighter the rope around the economy's neck becomes. That's because when short-term bond prices are higher than long-term bond prices - a situation known as an inverted yield curve - there's no incentive for banks to make loans and they pull money out of the system. Liquidity dries up. Debt still needs to be serviced. The country will be screaming out for cash to pay its debts like a junkie screams for more drugs as he's being strapped to his bed. Anyone with debt feels the pain, and in America, that's most people. A self-fulfilling circle will have been put in motion. Higher bond prices will choke the economy of even more liquidity as the curve inverts further. Consumerism will grind to a halt. The U.S. economy will hit a wall. Assets that went up will come down fast. You'll get bankruptcies, profit warnings and unemployment
A cash crunch ensues. People panic and rush into safe haven investments. Treasury bonds are still the most trusted instruments in the world; they will be popular and their prices will spike even higher. People will talk about a bubble in bonds. Here's the Fed's problem. They'll do anything to avoid this "deflationary" scenario and the bond market knows it. So by choking the economy, the bond market essentially forces the Fed to pump more artificial liquidity into the economy or face financial reckoning day. The bond market has a golden opportunity to put the Fed in this tight spot. Buying bonds is a bet they take it. [Ed. Note: There is another law we are all familiar with, "what goes up
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? By Justice Litle Bulls continue to dominate the broad market, with bears thin on the ground. The attitude continues to be: "Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow who cares." Gold stocks have been unable to hold their gains in this surreal environment, and so we are on the sidelines there once again. Citigroup fired a shot across the bow on Monday, with earnings hit by a flattening yield curve. Nor is Bank of America faring too well. Considering that financial activity makes up close to half of all S&P profits, this is a clear sign that cracks are beginning to show. But for now, the market has chosen to focus on the good news from IBM
ignoring the fact that Big Blue has taken a trick from GM's playbook and cannibalized future earnings. In this dangerously lopsided environment, few sectors are facing real selling pressure. One group that is experiencing heavy pressure, however, is that of the health care providers of the hospital variety. The Morgan Stanley Health Care Providers Index (RXH) has broken down, treading water at the 50 day MA, on an earnings warning from hospital leader HCA (HCA:NYSE). The news was exceptionally troubling because it foreshadows what's to come. HCA is expecting poor earnings due to, among other things, "bad debt from the uninsured." (We will find out just how bad on July 27th, when HCA reports.) Deteriorating credit is not just hurting wall street giants like Citigroup
it is wending its way to main street
and an influx of new patients may bring more credit problems to hospital balance sheets. Large hospital operators are also losing patients to smaller outpatient facilities, seen as more friendly and accessible. Last but not least, the arrival of hurricane season in Florida-the retirement mecca of the US-is putting a dent in hospital earnings. As industry leader, HCA is now leading the group down after a gap lower on July 13th. [Ed. Note: The preceding is an extract from Justice Litle's latest email to his trading service subscribers. The service is called Macro Trader and it's free and automatically available to all subscribers of Outstanding Investments. You can learn more about it all here
Outstanding Investments ------------------------- And the Markets
| Tuesay | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,647 | 10,575 | 356 | -1.3% | S&P | 1,229 | 1,221 | 39 | 1.4% | NASDAQ | 2,173 | 2,145 | 128 | -0.1% | 10-year Treasury | 4.19% | 4.22% | 0.28 | -0.02 | 30-year Treasury | 4.43% | 4.46% | 0.23 | -0.39 | Russell 2000 | 669 | 659 | 41 | 2.7% | Gold | $420.20 | $420.95 | -$19.80 | -4.0% | Silver | $6.96 | $6.99 | -$0.25 | 2.1% | CRB | 304.79 | 306.93 | -6.58 | 7.3% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $57.46 | $57.32 | -$3.08 | 32.2% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 112.72 | JPY 111.93 | -3.41 | -9.9% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2036 | $1.2053 | 124 | 11.2% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7395 | $1.7470 | 894 | 9.3% |
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