

CRB/BOND RATIO HAS BOTTOMED... Chart 3 plots the CRB/T-bond price ratio, which shows which market is in the lead. The ratio has been rising since the fourth quarter of 2001. Over the past month, the CRB/bond ratio has risen to the highest level in more than two years. What's more, Chart 4 plots the ratio all the way back to the early 1980s when bonds started to outperform commodity markets. Chart 4 shows that the twenty-year down trendline has been broken. That suggests that a major shift has taken place in favor of commodity markets. (A similar line has been broken in the CRB/Dow ratio in favor of commodity markets). This seems to support the view that commodity markets have become a stronger asset class than either bonds or stocks. I suspect that change will continue for sometime. The shift in leadership from bonds to commodities also affects sector rotation strategies. It means that commodity-related stocks should outperform interest-sensitive stocks. That's why basic material stocks have been so strong lately, while financial stocks (and homebuilders) have been showing relative weakness.


August 31, 2003
John J. Murphy, CNBC-TV's technical analyst for many years, and Greg Morris offer money managment and market services at MURPHYMORRIS.COM , email address orders@murphymorris.com .
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