Attack Of The Fifty Foot Woman

Stuck
In The Middle...It seems much more than clear that equity investors of the moment have
more than warmly embraced the Goldilocks thesis regarding the
domestic US economy. After all, what else could equities be
discounting right here? You know the routine.
Prescient Fed, a slowing in economic growth to be followed by
reacceleration, falling inflationary pressures, continued
meaningful expansion in corporate earnings, a soft landing for
housing, and the thought that this perfect world will lead to
valuation/stock price expansion. Don'tcha wish life could
always be this way? We suggest that implicit in this
assumption is a reacceleration in consumer borrowing and spending.
At least so far, we have not yet seen the reacceleration in rate
of change of household borrowing as per the consumer credit and
HELOC numbers. Moreover, messages from the retail sales
world post Black Friday have been mixed at best. We'll just
have to see what happens ahead. But clearly also implicit in
the Goldilocks assumption thesis is the thought that the US
economy experiences nothing more than a "mid-cycle"
slowdown in terms of official economic growth. Wonderful.
In other words, no negative GDP quarters. As many a pundit
has pointed to again and again as of late, the mid-cycle slowdown
periods of the mid-1980's and mid-1990's were accompanied by
relatively meaningful expansions in stock prices. So the
conclusion is naturally drawn in our present experience that if we
indeed achieve the fabled mid-cycle economic slowdown, which may
in fact have already begun, just like in 1995 and 1985, we're in
for a big equity rally. Simple enough? Let's have a
look at some history.
Although
the flow of logic above certainly appears appealing, it's missing
one key fact. The mid-cycle economic slowdown periods of the
mid-1980's and mid-1990's that gave us such wonderful equity
performance were also quite importantly accompanied by more than
meaningful declines in long term interest rates. In the
following charts we are using the ten year US Treasury yield as a
proxy for longer dated interest rates. And as always,
declining long term rates are a very powerful equity market
aphrodisiac. Have a look.

From mid-1984
through early 1986, we saw the ten year yield decline by close to
650 basis points. In turn, the S&P rallied over 65%.
The decline in the ten year yield was close to a 46% decline.
That's powerful stuff. On to the mid 1990's.
Conceptually, it's pretty much the same story as appears clear
below. From late 1994 through 1995, ten year Treasury yields
dropped close to 240 basis points, or roughly 30%, while equities
were up close to 45% over the same period.

Let's fast
forward to the present. In the following chart we've
combined the S&P and the ten year Treasury yield experience
over what's close to the last three years. It's clear, and
as you already know, the rally in the major equity indices since
summer has, up to this point, been accompanied by declining ten
year yields. We've shaved 75 basis points off the ten year
yield, or an approximate 14.3% decline, since summer. In
very rough terms, many equity indices have rallied by a similar
amount. So, where to from here?

We
suggest that rather than focusing on the lore of mid-cycle
economic slowdowns theoretically being big positives for equities
in the aggregate, we instead keep our eyes on the ten year UST
yield. We suggest that's the bigger key for equities as
opposed to achieving some type of recessionary near miss, so to
speak. Referring back to the examples of the mid-1980's and
mid-1990's, the average decline in ten year Treasury yields that
sparked the fabled equity rallies of size was 38%. Of course
we need to remember that this is based on a whopping statistical
sample size of two. Nonetheless, we pose the question, if we
are to achieve the fabled mid-cycle slowdown at present,
accompanied by a further large move in equity prices upward, is
the ten year Treasury yield about to drop to 3.25%, near the prior
multi-decade lows? 3.25% from the summer yield highs of near
5.25% is a 38% decline, the average ten year UST decline in the
prior two mid-cycle slowdown periods. It seems very hard to
believe ten year yields would experience this type of plunge
without either a mean recession to come or a cliff dive by the US
dollar, or both. Simply put, in our book long bond yields
are the ticket as to whether a meaningful equity rally lays ahead,
not absolute quarterly GDP experience. History appears
pretty darn clear on the concept, despite a lot of current
mainstream focus on the economic "mid-cycle" slowdown
thesis. Enough said?
Attack Of The Fifty Foot
Woman…It’s been a
very good while since we’ve checked in on the goings on with the
Japanese monetary base. Important why? Global
liquidity, global liquidity and global liquidity. And did we
forget to mention global liquidity? You’ll remember that
at a G7 meeting in April of this year, global central banking
heavyweights joined hands and pointed their collective fingers at
the Bank of Japan in response to $80 oil, quadrupling copper
prices, and the levitating act of far too many commodities across
the planet. As you know, when excess global liquidity is
finding its way into equities and bonds, that’s wealth creation.
When residential housing prices are the manifestation of a runaway
mortgage credit bubble, that’s prosperity. But when
commodity prices are levitating due to white-hot excess credit
related economic expansion in far-flung locales such as China,
well that’s “unwanted inflation”, right? So the Bank
of Japan did what any self-respecting central bank would do
(except for maybe one Central Bank we can think of) when called on
the global carpet for “creating” too much liquidity, they
stopped. And not only did they stop, they began an immediate
program of erasing their quantitative easing (printing money)
efforts of the last half decade by beginning to shrink the
Japanese monetary base in very big and rapid fashion. The
following is a quick update of a chart we have shown you in the
past. It’s the long-term history of the Japanese monetary
base with the year over year rate of change overlaid on top.

To suggest that the year over
year rate of change in the Japanese monetary base has plunged is
an understatement. There’s no precedent for this anywhere
in the last three and one half decades at least.
Tangentially, as we’ve mentioned when discussing this subject in
prior missives, every single time the year over year rate of
change in the Japanese monetary base has experienced a sudden
decline of magnitude in the past, it has been right in front of
all official US recessions since 1970. Every single one.
Whether that’s to come ahead is another story.
As you also know, this plunge
in the Japanese monetary base since early this year was at least
initially accompanied by what was literally the coordinated
decline in global equity markets that began in May. In fact,
many blamed the spark that led to the collective equity market
declines directly on the magnitude of BOJ action in contracting
the monetary base. Of course what is interesting is that
while the Japanese monetary base continued its decline through
recent months, equity markets globally bottomed in the summer and
you know the story from there. The point being that despite
a Yen carry trade that is clearly still in force, Japan was not a
massive or proactive liquidity pump levitating global equity
markets in the last few months. As you may know, August
purchases of US financial assets by the foreign community was the
largest on record. That was certainly a huge support to the
summer rally beginnings in both bonds and stocks. (Last
month we fully discussed this global capital recycling
loop.) Secondly, for those of you that have been watching,
the Fed/Treasury dynamic duo have certainly done their part to
keep the liquidity party going in the months leading up to the US
elections with temporary open market operations and coupon passes
transpiring with more than a fair amount of frequency and
magnitude. But the reason we bring all of this up is that
shrinkage in the Japanese monetary base appears to be coming to an
end, at least for now. The chart below speaks to the fact of
short tem stabilization in the monetary base.

Is
the BOJ done in terms of the bulk of removing their prior
quantitative easing efforts of the last few years at least?
It sure could be. We fully expect more interest rate
increases to come from the fun folks at the BOJ, but they will be
gradual, if not glacial. So as we watch this change in the
rate of decline in the Japanese monetary base, we need to ask
ourselves whether Japan will once again heat up as a global
liquidity factory, so to speak? And if so, how can we
benefit, if at all? First, we need to remember that the
carry trade (borrowing at uber low interest rates in Japan,
hedging currency cross rates, and investing elsewhere in much
higher rate of return assets) has not stopped in the least.
The fact that the Japanese yen has been declining steadily since
really early summer is darn indicative of the fact that the carry
trade has anything but dissipated in aggregate. Just a few
weeks back, Japanese monetary authorities made some noise about
the need to more strictly monitor carry trade activities looking
ahead. Perhaps someday they will really mean it. But
at this point we have to continue to take a "we'll believe it
when we see it" attitude toward any BOJ effort to reign in
the carry trade action given their historical implicit don't ask,
don't tell policy. Moreover, it very well could be that the
action of contracting the Japanese monetary base is at least
temporarily over due to recent Japanese economic stats/indicators
turning down a touch. In the last few weeks we've seen year
over year rate of change declines in Japanese M2, vehicle sales,
machinery orders, CPI (core - ex food and energy), the leading
indicator, and now the second consecutive monthly decline in
retail sales. With this has come the stabilization, at least
for now, in the monetary base as BOJ authorities have clearly
taken their collective foot off of the monetary brakes.
Again,
why do we bring this up? At least in our minds, for a global
financial marketplace, and economy for that matter, that has been
relatively heavily dependent on excess liquidity availability, we
need to continue to try to monitor all available sources of
meaningful global liquidity generation. If the actions of
the BOJ are not a critical part of this larger exercise, then
we're missing something. As we've mentioned probably too
many times now, pre-election liquidity "availability"
has been a key characteristic of the US environment courtesy of
the Fed/Treasury/Administration. And that excess
availability, if you will, has found its expression in financial
asset prices, completely bypassing residential real estate
markets. The thought among certain
segments of the investment community has been that as the election
period passes, so too the need for the domestic monetary powers to
be so "generous" in their temporary and open market
operations activities. So far, we have not seen any
diminution in Fed/Treasury temporary or permanent open market
activities. Although the forward level and intensity of
Fed/Treasury actions ahead remains to be seen, could the BOJ
become an important source of forward short term global liquidity
generation once again, at perhaps the exact time US authorities
take a "time out"? For now, the stabilization in
the Japanese monetary base says "watch me".
So
just how will we know whether the BOJ monetary pump has again been
turned back on to some degree? Maybe it's as simple as
watching the Japanese stock market relative to major global equity
indices. Let's have a quick look at some very simple
observations. First, it's clearly the obvious anomaly that
YTD, the Nikkei is the standout equity index that has literally
gone nowhere. Outside of the obviously volatile Middle
Eastern equity markets, there have been very, very few pockets of
nominal global equity market weakness YTD. Here's just a little
example of what we're talking about.
| Equity
Market |
YTD
Price Performance Expressed In Dollars |
| |
| Dow |
14.1% |
| SPX |
12.1 |
| NASDAQ |
10.3 |
| Canada |
14.7 |
| Brazil
(Bovespa) |
35.3 |
| Mexico
(Bolsa) |
34.1 |
| FTSE |
22.6 |
| CAC |
26.9 |
| DAX |
30.8 |
| Nikkei |
1.2 |
| Hang
Seng |
25.9 |
| Australia |
22.2 |
This
list is very far from exhaustive, but you undoubtedly get the
picture. In very simple terms, has the contraction in the
Japanese monetary base hurt Japanese equity market performance YTD?
If not this influence, then what? So as we look forward, can
we make the case that price action and direction in the Nikkei
should be reflective of greater BOJ monetary policy vis-a-vis
liquidity availability? We certainly hope the answer is yes.
The bottom line here is that if the price action in the Nikkei
improves, we could very well be facing yet another global
liquidity shot in the arm that would only enhance what the
Fed/Treasury/Administration has already been providing. And
given the slowing in the US housing market and economy of the
moment (GDP), can we really expect US monetary authorities to
restrict liquidity availability in any meaningful manner? Of
course not.
A
few quick charts we hope are helpful, if you don't mind.
First, we hope monitoring the directional relationship between the
S&P and the Nikkei will be telling. You can see that YTD,
directional changes in prices have been pretty darn highly
correlated. There's certainly been a bit of divergence
recently that demands monitoring. And unlike many global
equity indices, but much like the US Transports and Russell 2000,
the Nikkei has as of yet not returned to its April 2006 highs.
Although hopefully not reaching for a rationale, it tells us that
the BOJ has stabilized the Japanese monetary base for now, but has
not yet become meaningfully stimulative. If this divergence
continues, the focus of how changes in liquidity will influence US
equity markets should continue to be centered on Fed/Treasury
action.

Alternatively,
if the Nikkei rallies from here in trying to "catch up"
to the upward movement in the SPX and other major global indices,
then we need to at least question whether the BOJ monetary
restriction efforts have come to a dramatic conclusion for now
with some type of stimulation in process. In other words,
could the BOJ be the next key provocateur in any type of liquidity
driven upside for global equities and bonds? Although it
might sound hard to believe, we need to "follow the
money".
It
just so happens that the Nikkei appears at a relatively critical
technical juncture as we speak. You can clearly see the long
term declining tops trend line we've drawn in the monthly chart
below. Without sounding melodramatic, this is fifteen years
worth of very key resistance. Do you think an upside
breakout from here would catch the attention of chartists across
the planet? That would be an understatement, if we're not
incorrect. Secondly, since 1997, the 200 month moving
average of the Nikkei has been key upside resistance for this
headline equity average. We stand roughly within 600 points
of this very significant demarcation line as we speak. Is
the monthly RSI overbought? Sure it is. But excess
liquidity can maintain such a circumstance for a longer period
than most would suspect.

A quick look
at the daily chart. The upside channel since the rally began
in June of this year couldn't be more well defined.
Meaningful support lies 500-600 points below. Not earth
shattering downside by any means. And on the monthly chart
above, key decade and one half long technical support lies near
the June 2006 lows.

One last
circumstance to monitor should be the health, or lack thereof, of
Japanese small caps. A sector that historically has been
very responsive to excess macro liquidity. In the following
chart we're using the Japan Small Cap fund as a proxy for this
sector. Based on weekly RSI and MACD, Japanese small caps
appear oversold and potentially turning up.
But what is also clear is that we appear to have a meaningful
trend break. A trend dating back to early 2003. At
least on the weekly chart, a back test has already occurred and
failed for now. If Japanese small caps cannot mount a
convincing move to the upside, the BOJ again becoming a meaningful
liquidity generator will be in question.

So
we hope the conclusion of this little exercise is relatively
simple. If the Nikkei breaks out to new multi-year highs
above the 17,500 level and Japanese small caps can rally from
here, it's a good bet that happens in concert with stimulative BOJ
actions. Actions that could have big meaning for more macro
global liquidity sponsorship. Sponsorship we have to take
into investment consideration regardless of short term fundamental
"news". Alternatively, if the Nikkei were to break
down from here, and especially below key support, we'd have to
conclude that one big piece of what has been multi-year liquidity
support to the global economy and financial markets has been
removed for more than just a temporary pause. And that would
put the spotlight directly on the Fed/Treasury/Administration
liquidity support actions of the moment. Can the
Fed/Treasury carry the liquidity generation ball single handedly
without upsetting the dollar relative to it's global currency
peers? That's the $64 question, now isn't it? Maybe in
today's world, it's really the $370 trillion question (the
notional value of global derivatives outstanding), give or take a
few trillion here or there.
Contrary Investor
www.contraryinvestor.com
December 1, 2006
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