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If you happened to be in the equity markets during 1987, at least on the long side, there is little doubt that the stock market crash that October cost you some money. In the days that followed one economist after another popped out of their ivory towers to announce that North America, if not the entire world, was heading into a depression. Since we can’t recall the Great Depression of 1988 we suspect that the cause of the ‘crash’ was something other than what most suspected then and, most likely, what most understand even now.
But...to really understand how this evolved we need to step back in time even further. Why were bond prices rising in the first place? The answer has much to do with the impact on interest rates by energy prices. The oil price collapse at the end of 1985 and through into 1986 is often called the ‘Third Oil Shock’. With only a marginal increase in OPEC supply the price of West Texas Intermediate crude fell from $31.75 in November to $10- with some Persian Gulf cargoes selling for as little as $6. Daniel Yergin, in his Pulitzer Prize winning book, ‘The Prize’’ docu-ments the story of one Texas Exxon station that offered gasoline for free one day in April of 1986, attracting a line up that extended for six miles.
Our point here is that the stock market crash was a function of a series of events that extended back for years. Even if we start in 1984 we can see that short-term interest rates were forecasting a collapse in energy prices that would ‘bubble’ bond prices higher into 1986 and then push liquidity into the stock market through into 1987. As crude oil prices turned higher so did interest rates. As interest rates turned higher the stage was set for both the stock market’s bubble and its eventual col-lapse. When the dust cleared...it was business as usual- expect for the poor souls who had been blindsided by the markets into the crash and by the economists’ forecasts afterwards. Backing up even further we show, at top right, one of our favorite charts to highlight the fact that the entire series of events that created the stock market’s debacle in 1987 could actually be traced back as far as the bond market’s bottom in 1981- more than 12 months before the equity markets turned higher in August of 1982.
If nature abhors a vacuum, the financial markets seem to like to create divergences and then close them up- often with devastating results. The bubble created from 1981 into the end of 1986 pushed bank share values well above those of the commodity cyclicals and then, to the surprise of most, this divergence was wiped clean by the combination of rising interest rates- coming on the heels of the post-crash recovery in the energy markets- and escalating commodity prices. What we find most fascinating about this chart, however, is the way it acted right through the stock market’s crash. The JPM/PD ratio squeezed lower into the crash, through the crash, and for months after the crash. From that point of view one could argue that the 1000 point gain in the DJII into the summer of 1987 and the 1000 point decline during the autumn was more of a result than a cause.
First, is there or has there been a ‘bubble’ in the financial sector created by a prolonged decline in short-term interest rates? The chart at middle right of the JPM/PD ratio and U.S. T-Bill futures prices argues quite nicely that there has...and that it began in 1995. Second, has there been a more recent energy-oriented price collapse that helped lift the bubble to its final crescendo? At bottom right we show natural gas futures and T-Bill futures (scaled upside down once again). Notice that the concurrent with the decline in short-term interest rates from over 6% to under 2%- something largely ascribed to the excesses created in the tech and telecom sectors- natural gas prices fell by some 80%. Given that oil prices declined by about 70% in early 1986, perhaps this is just about right.
In fact, the chart does suggest that we are already close to 4 months into this process so a literal interpretation would call for continued strength into the late summer with fire works through into the autumn. The problem is...this time might be just enough different from 1987 to catch us all unawares. What exactly happened at the start of 1995 to justify not only the stock market’s rapid rise but the protracted decline in short-term interest rates that led to the valuation differential between the financials and true cyclicals? The answer lies in the foreign exchange markets.
At present the U.S. dollar is starting to weaken off. At middle right we show the euro futures and the S&P 500 Index futures over a shorter time frame. One intermarket conclusion would be that the first problem won’t necessarily be in the stock market- much like 1987’s pressure was largely a function of what was going on in the bond market- but rather in the currency markets. In other words, while stocks chop back and forth we could easily witness a ‘crash’ in the dollar with the euro shooting right through parity and heading, perhaps, towards around 1.08. Again, from an intermarket stand point, does this make any sense? Of course it does!
So, what does all this mean?
In the meantime, of course, the U.S. dollar’s decline will impact other markets in other ways. Gold and other commodity prices, for instance, tend to rise when the dollar falls. The most likely impact of a falling dollar would therefore be upward pressure on short-term interest rates as well as upward pressure on commodity prices. Given that we still have a fairly major divergence between the financials and commodity cyclicals, there is some logic- and indeed some elegance- to this sce-nario.
The most obvious relationship at the moment would be the inverse move between the U.S. dollar and commodity prices. We may or may not get a rapid decline in long-term bonds but the most likely outcome here is a rapid and unrelenting decline in the external value of the dollar- until the situation overwhelms the ‘inflation isn’t a problem’ psychol- ogy that permeates both ‘the street’ and the U.S. Federal Reserve. In other words, if there is one market that we can be ‘flat out, no holds barred’ negative on it is the dollar.
At bottom right we wrap things up with a ratio chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Index and the S&P 500 Index. While there are divergences and stresses between the currency, commodity, fixed income, and eq- uity markets, there are also problems within the equity markets. The DJII has been pushed upwards vis-a-vis the broader S&P 500 Index as money flowed has flowed away from ‘growth’ and back towards ‘safety’ or ‘value’. Previous peaks in this ratio have preceded the 1987 crash, the 1990 bear market, and the 1997 collapse of Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index.
In any event.. telecom problems are helping to hold short-term interest rates down even as other intermarket forces work to push them higher. While the Fed mumbles about the risks to the economy in the future, the markets are working hard to turn a relatively benign situation into a crisis. We could argue that it wouldn’t make any difference either way- that the market’s destiny has already been set- but that would take all the fun out of this.
In terms of gold, we are still trying to figure out of if a target near $350 is appropriate or if something closer to $400 is going to be more accurate. At middle right we show the S&P 500 Index (scaled upside down) and the gold futures. If 1995 was the pivot for both markets then perhaps something over $400 is indeed appropriate.
At bottom right is a chart of Inco (nickel producer and former DJII component) from Canada’s Toronto Stock Exchange and the DJII (in red). Frankly, we believe that this is one of the most powerful charts that we can show- not because of what it might say about the base metals and the DJII, but rather for what it tells us about the power of an underlying trend.
Inter-Market Relationships Analysis May 23, 2002 |