Figure 1: US Home Sales as a Percent of Number of Households

Source: Bridgewater Associates
As can be seen from figure one annual home sales as percent of households is now at all time high. I am not suggesting that US housing cannot get even more over-heated but very clearly we are in housing not near a low such as was the case in 1971, 1982, and 1992. Moreover, from figure 2, we can see that since 1994, housing stocks rose actually more than the NASDAQ had risen between 1994 and 2000.
Figure 2: NASDAQ and HOME-BUILDING STOCK

Source: Elliott Wave International
Now, there are several interesting development in the housing markets. In Britain home prices are no longer rising and turnover is down. In Australia, in many markets home prices are already down and in the US, on record home sales in March, stocks of homebuilders failed to make a new high (see figure 3).
Figure 3: Lennar Corp, 2004 - 2005

Source: www.DecisionPoint.com
Usually if a new high in a physical market is not confirmed by the stocks in the respective sector - that is if there is a divergence in the performance between physical and financial market we call it a non-confirmation. If the non-confirmation occurs following a long term up or down trend it frequently leads to a very sharp reversal whereby an uptrend is followed by a collapse in prices and a downtrend is followed by an explosive upward move. There is another reason to be negative about US homebuilding stocks.
As can be seen from figure 3, homebuilding companies have traced out a Head and Shoulders top, which is an important reversal pattern. I must stress that there are occasions when prices break out on the upside from a Head and Shoulders formation, but usually they will not rise significantly above the "Head" of the Head and Shoulders pattern. Thereafter they reverse very quickly and break down almost vertically. But there is another reason I am inclined to think that the housing boom is nearing its end. From figure 4, we can see that international liquidity (FRODOR) has been diminishing.
Figure 4: Foreign Official Dollar Reserves and CRB Metals Prices

Source: Ed Yardeni www.yardeni.com
FRODOR is a creation of my friend Ed Yardeni and stands according to him for "Foreign Official Dollar Reserves of central banks" and is "the sum of U.S. Treasury and U.S. Agency securities held by foreign central banks. It is probably the best available measure of world liquidity because foreign central banks tend to transmit and to amplify U.S. monetary policy globally (emphasis added). The yearly growth rate of FRODOR is extremely pro-cyclical. It tends to rise during global economic expansions and to fall during recessions." When FRODOR expands asset markets including stocks, commodities and real estate tend to perform well while the US dollar tends to decline. Conversely, when FRODOR growth decelerates, asset markets come under pressure while the US dollar strengthens. From figure 4 and figure 5, we can see that commodity prices and oil demand correlate very closely with the rate of change in FRODOR.
Figure 5: Foreign Official Dollar Reserves & Crude Oil Demand

Source: Ed Yardeni, www.yardeni.com
Since the takeoff in commodity prices in 2000 coincided with the takeoff in homebuilding stocks I assume that shrinking global liquidity will not only have a negative impact on industrial commodity prices - including oil - but also on other asset markets such as housing. Now, I admit that it is always possible that Mr. Greenspan will ease once again massively - if the economy weakens. That should almost certainly be the case if home prices begin to weaken since housing inflation was driving consumption or more appropriately put over-consumption in the last few years. But this might be one of the rare moments in financial history were "printing money" becomes totally ineffective because any easing move now would hurt the bond market. Why would that be so if the economy weakens? Because commodity prices would soar and the US dollar tumble as investors would once and for all recognize that paper money under the guardianship of central bankers is no longer a store of value but a recipe for impoverishment due to paper money's loss of purchasing power. Needless to say that if the Fed engages one more time in "printing money" the decline of the US dollar will lead to soaring import prices, accelerating consumer price inflation and higher interest rates. Hardly a favorable environment for the highly priced and highly leveraged US stock and real estate markets!
I do admit that my expectation, a month ago, of an April stock market rally was plainly wrong (there was a rally but it only lasted for one day and pushed the Dow up by 200 points). Still, stocks around the world remain from a near term point of view somewhat oversold and rallied in the first few days of May. I believe that a better shorting opportunity will arise in the course of this rebound, which may extend into May 10th to May 15th. However, I strongly feel that for the most stock markets new 2005 highs will be very difficult to achieve. For the S&P 500 there is strong resistance between 1195 and 1230 and numerous stocks have already broken down and inflicted serious technical damage to the entire market. So, I would use any strength to liquidate stock positions around the world. The risk reward ratio remains unfavorable. Moreover, based on the deceleration of growth in FRODOR I would avoid all industrial commodities including oil.
Lastly it will be fascinating to watch whether the "newest economy", which is characterized by bubbles everywhere and was the creation of the destructor of the value of paper money, Mr. Alan Greenspan, will last for much longer than the "new economy of the late 1990s!
Marc Faber
Editor and Publisher of "The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report,"
and author of the bestselling "Tomorrow's Gold".
www.gloomboomdoom.com/gbdreport/indexgbdreport.htm
5 May 2005