The
Dow is priced at 29 times earnings! It is priced to sell, not buy, and
accordingly, it has been developing the largest top in history. Our
call for an imminent 4000 point crushing defeat for the Dow bulls remains
intact, firmly.
We
haven't cared much for the Nasdaq, nor have we commented much about
it, but it had started to come up for air again, last week, undoubtedly
brought to life on the Microsoft news and prior gains. The broad SP500
is still locked in a downtrend. The Russell 2000 and the AMEX, which
the bulls have been pointing to all week, have been somewhat better
performers, raising the prospect for a small cap rally. However, experience
with small caps shows that they will not be able to buck the trend in
the blue chips... which is still broadly down. Thus, when the Dow buckles,
so will they.
Bonds
got clobbered today (Friday), which is extremely important because they
have not been able to stay above the 200 day moving average - the approximate
trend line. It is also troubling because the dollar has been quite strong,
as you know.
In
fact, the overtly strong dollar has been one of the thorns in our analysis.
It has risen by about 5% since the start of May - against a basket of
international currencies with which the U.S. trades - which is why we
devoted such a long piece on the subject in The
Goldenbar Report this week.
In
that report - Say, Can You Hear - we discussed the effect
of the strong dollar and inflation policy duo, on the state of the economy,
and we concluded that the dollar deflation, while wholly
responsible for the decline in commodity indexes (since
January the CRB is down by 11% and the Dollar Index is up by exactly
the same - implying that the decline is a dollar induced "price" adjustment
rather than the result of falling demand), is not the same as
a real deflation, which happens when the supply of money contracts.
In fact, last week the Fed reported its money supply statistics for
the week and they continue to accelerate:
| 13
week rate of Increase till Jun 18: |
16.91%
|
| 6
week rate of Increase till Jun 18: |
16.79%
|
Nonetheless,
the break in the bond this week is that much more important, for it
confirms rather than rejects our analysis, so far. And let me tell you
something else, for the record: if bond yields begin to rise from here,
as we expect that they will, you can bet your fanny that the FOMC will
follow, sooner or later! Though probably sooner if the dollar starts
to decline. The moral of the story is that as an investor; if you're
watching the Fed and/or the CPI/PPI for your direction,
get a new broker.
Both
of them lag the markets!
Anyhow,
the point of last week's treatise was to have you think about how the
strong dollar policy will create shortages in markets where there may
exist less relative demand, for the moment, while the aggressive
inflation policy of the Fed will accelerate prices, and thus production,
of the assets or commodities, which are in higher relative demand. Indeed
many of the declining commodities, such as coffee and corn for instance,
we had found that both, consumption was on the rise in accordance with
Say's Law, and that their stocks to use ratios have been steadily
declining over the past decade reflecting a persistent underestimation
of consumption trends by producers.
Yet
mainstream analysts not only continue to read lagging indicators, but
also claim that there is too much supply in many commodity markets.
In
1998, when oil prices were at $11 a barrel, analysts thought there was
too much oil. When (after) they rose to $30, the same analysts thought
there was a shortage. Now when prices have been retracing, they have
come to believe that there is too much oil again. They may be right
one of these times, but they haven't been so far. In fact, according
to Say's Law, there is no such thing as over supply.
Again,
as you look at most commodities, both consumption and production has
been rising, and it is only the price, which
helps us ascertain whether it is the result of a rise in demand or a
rise in production. Certainly, a rise in inventories
is a sign of something, but whether it is a sign that there is too much
oil and gas, or whether it is a sign of the inflation induced hoarding
behaviors we've been discussing remains to be seen.
That
said, the Fed continues to inflate, and we expect that concurrently,
the strong dollar policy, if it continues, will discourage producers,
in the industries that are affected by it, from investing in additional
natural resource capacity. Thus, we expect to see more upside in the
commodity markets, broadly, as the focus shifts from one imbalance to
another until one day, the resonance (Fekete) begins to move them all
together, higher.
We
further believe that the FOMC's more gradual rate reduction is a sign
of change to come. The ECB has made it clear that it cannot tolerate
inflation. They don't mean to be nasty, but the fact is that they're
dealing with a new currency, inflation rates are soaring in Europe,
and within the next year or so they will have to introduce Euro paper
into circulation.
Thus,
the policy that the Fed and Treasury have pursued, of exporting the
Fed inflation overseas, may soon come to a climactic ending. If US policy
makers want to persuade a rate cut in Europe then they will have to
let the dollar fall... if Europe chooses to submit to US pressure otherwise,
the Euro will collapse, and even more important, the dollar will soar.
Thus the U.S. may get what it wants without having to make it so. Collapsing
foreign currencies will induce a strong dollar all on their own.
However,
we've also noted last week, that collapsing foreign currencies have
an even greater potential to accelerate the price of gold, regardless
of how high the dollar goes.
If
dollar policy makers believe that the world will choose dollar over
gold at that point, when other world currencies are falling apart, they
will be under the same delusion that Congress was when it allowed Nixon
to break the dollar gold link… they were convinced that the dollar would
be the people's choice, and that it would rise against gold if they
broke the link. But there is a simple reason that it didn't work then,
and why it won't work today:
The
source of the problem is the dollar and Fed.