Posts Tagged ‘David Oakley’

Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (January 12 – 18, 2009)

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Investor sentiment around the globe was negatively impacted during 2009’s second full week of trading as a barrage of bleak economic and corporate news offered more confirmation of a deepening recession, bringing risk aversion to center stage.

The US dollar and government bonds (excluding emerging markets and countries on the periphery of the Eurozone) gained, but global equities and commodities were on the defensive as nervous investors tried to gauge the likely damage of the economic malaise.

Global bourses concluded a whipsaw week with hefty losses, but stemmed some of the downside as a relief rally came to the rescue towards the end of the week. The MSCI World Index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index declined by 6.2% and 5.8% respectively.

The US indices all dropped over the week as shown by the major index movements: Dow Jones Industrial Index -3.7% (YTD -5.6%), S&P 500 Index -4.5% (YTD -5.9%), Nasdaq Composite Index -2.7% (YTD -3.0%) and Russell 2000 Index -3.1% (YTD -6.6%). As a matter of interest, the year-to-date returns at the same point last year (i.e. after 11 trading days) were -6.0% for the Dow and -6.5% for the S&P 500.

Adding a spark of hope on Thursday, the US Senate voted to release the second and final $350 billion tranche of the TARP funds, whereas the House Democrats unveiled a much-awaited $825 billion stimulus package aimed at halting the economic rot. Meanwhile, in a speech at the London School of Economics, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said Barack Obama’s economic package could provide a “significant boost” to the US economy.

18-jan-v1.jpg

Source: Daryl Cagle

But back to the stock market. The bar chart below shows the US sector performance for the past week, and specifically how defensive sectors such as consumer staples, healthcare and utilities outperformed other sectors on a relative basis.

The financial sector plummeted by 16.3% as several US banking shares fell to multi-year lows amid growing concerns that they will battle to cope with increasing credit losses as the global recession intensifies.

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Source: StockCharts.com

The nascent earnings season saw a glut of fourth-quarter losses. These included larger-than-expected losses from Bank of America (BAC) and Citigroup (C), resulting in their respective share prices plunging by 44.7% and 48.2% over the week.

18-jan-v3.jpg

Citi announced plans to break up the bank into two businesses, following the decision to sell a controlling interest in the valuable Smith Barney brokerage to Morgan Stanley (MS). On the other hand, Bank of America will receive an additional $20 billion of TARP funds to bed down its troublesome acquisition of Merrill Lynch, as well as a guarantee on $118 billion of potential losses on distressed assets. Elsewhere, the Irish government nationalized Anglo Irish Bank, and HSBC was rumored to be seeking fresh capital of $30 billion.

As far as the US housing situation is concerned, I am keeping a close eye on the mortgage situation. According to Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey, the national average rates for a US 30-year fixed mortgage last week declined to 4.96% from 5.33% two weeks ago and 6.46% in October last year. However, the rate is still 378 basis points higher than the three-month dollar LIBOR rate. This spread averaged 97 basis points during the 12 months preceding the crisis, indicating that lower rates are not being passed on to consumers.

Despite the interbank lending rates having declined from their peaks, banks have significantly curtailed the amount of money they are actually lending. The US Depository Institutions Aggregate Excess Reserves continue their ascent at levels far in excess of the amount that banks need to keep on deposit to meet their reserve requirements (see chart below). This measure indicates that the balance sheets of banks remain under pressure, especially in view of the fact that the value of some assets is not known. A peak in the Excess Reserves graph should coincide with a turning point in the recovery of banks. (Also see my post “Credit Market Watch“.)

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Source: Fullermoney

Next, a quick textual analysis of my week’s reading. No surprises here with keywords such as “economy”, “market”, “bank”, “China”, financial” and “prices” featuring prominently.

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On the issue of corporate bonds, I received a number of questions after referring to the iBoxx Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund (LQD) and High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG) in last week’s “Words from the Wise” review. In the short term, a further correction of both investment-grade and high-yield corporate bonds looks likely, but the sector is worth watching for opportunities arising at lower levels. Also, the high-yield instruments – under intense pressure because of an avalanche of defaults predicted by the ultra-wide spreads – could see spreads contracting markedly if the defaults are not as bad as priced in.

Turning to the outlook for the stock market, Bennet Sedacca (Atlantic Advisors Asset Management) issued a short-term buy signal on Thursday: “We are once again increasing exposure to equities from 0% to a near fully invested posture. I fully recognize the bad news that is out in the marketplace, but given Treasuries at 0-2.25% and Mortgage Backed Securities at 3-4%, high quality large cap growth stocks (self-financing companies purchased via IVW – the S&P large cap growth ETF) look attractive to me.

“We also like healthcare via PPH (pharma holders ETF), USO (oil ETF), XLV (broader healthcare ETF), but have a negative bias towards bonds and have taken substantial profits in recent days in the Mortgage Backed Securities space, where government intervention has led to artificially high bids. We also added a smallish position in XLF (financials). We believe quality is king and that ‘a’ low , but not THE low has been reached in stocks.”

Key resistance and support levels for the major US indices are shown in the table below. The immediate upside target is the 50-day moving average, followed by the November 4 highs about 16% to 18% from current levels (not shown on table). On the downside, the December 1 and all-important November 20 lows must hold in order to prevent considerable technical damage.

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An analysis of the number of stocks trading above their 50-day moving averages makes for interesting reading. “With the S&P 500 back into oversold territory and even approaching its November lows, it’s actually surprising to see this breadth measure at 40%,” said Bespoke. “At the prior lows, the number got down to zero! The fact that the overall declines have been limited to a smaller area of the market is a positive for those hoping that the lows will hold.”

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“As January goes, so goes the year”, is one of the most frequently quoted seasonal trends of the stock market. With the S&P 500 down by 5.9% after two weeks of the month, January is not off to a promising start. According to Jeffrey Hirsch (Stock Trader’s Almanac), every down January since 1950 has been followed by a new or continuing bear market or a flat year. Further research is provided by Jay Kaeppel of Optionetics.
The last word goes to Charles Kirk (The Kirk Report): “With the market closed Monday to observe Martin Luther King Jr., we are set to have another four-day work week and, in my experience, they tend to be some of the toughest. Not only will we have Obama’s inauguration, but lots of earnings reports to sort through.

“While the market managed to end the week above S&P 850, we still have a lot of work to do to confirm that we can manage at least a decent counter-trend rally during earnings season. We are still oversold, but we need to see the buyers return in force and with confidence. Both have been missing so far in 2009.”

For more discussion about the direction of stock markets, also see my post “Video-o-rama: Gloomy news batters investor sentiment“.

Economy
“Global business confidence remains very negative, but has improved a bit since hitting bottom at the very end of 2008. It is still too early to conclude that sentiment is improving in any measurable way,” said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted by Moody’s Economy.com. “Businesses are nearly equally pessimistic across the globe and across all industries. Hiring intentions have turned particularly negative in recent weeks. Pricing power has collapsed, suggesting that deflation is a significant threat.”

As far as the US is concerned, the Fed’s January Beige Book indicated continued and broad-based weakening throughout the nation. The latest round of economic data also confirmed that the recession was intensifying.

- Industrial production declined by 2% in December, with output falling in all three major categories – utilities, mining and manufacturing – for the first time since October. For the fourth quarter as a whole, industrial production fell at an annual rate of 11.5%, more than twice as fast as at any time during the 2001 recession. All indications are that manufacturers will further reduce production in order to bring inventories in line with free-falling final sales.

- Retail sales in December were significantly worse than expected, plunging by 2.7% – the sixth consecutive month of falling sales.

- The US trade deficit narrowed substantially to $40.4 billion (consensus $51.5 billion) in November, marking the fourth straight month of declining gross exports and gross imports.

News on the US inflation front was relatively good with both the PPI and CPI continuing to retreat in December, falling by 1.9% and 0.7% respectively. Core prices barely managed to stay in positive territory, with core CPI rising by 0.1% for 2008 – the lowest increase since 1954.

Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, predicted in an interview with the Financial Times that the US financial and economic crisis would worsen this year as hard-hit consumers default on credit cards and other loans. “The worst of the economic situation is not yet behind us. It looks as if it will continue to deteriorate for most of 2009,” said Mr Dimon.

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Source: Daryl Cagle

Elsewhere in the world, evidence mounted that the recession was widespread and deepening.

- In a sign that the decline in economic activity in Japan was worsening, core machinery orders by Japanese businesses slumped by 16.2% in November – the sharpest monthly contraction since records began in 1987.

- Germany’s coalition parties agreed on a second economic stimulus package totaling €50 billion (including €36 billion in infrastructure investment and tax cuts), to be put into place in an effort to pull the economy out of its worst recession since the end of the Second World War, according to CEP News. The package also includes a €100 billion “Germany fund” that would guarantee the debt raised by cash-starved businesses.

- The European Central Bank on Thursday cut its main policy interest rate by 50 basis points to 2% – the lowest level ever. The total reduction since mid-October amounts to 225 basis points and highlights the Eurozone slipping deeper into recession and inflation dropping sharply.

- Eurozone manufacturing continued to fell for the seventh straight month in November, amounting to a decline of 7.7% in year-ago terms.

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Source: Moody’s Economy.com

The International Monetary Fund’s managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, “chided European leaders for failing to grasp the depth of the coming slump in their region, creating the risk of social upheaval,” said Bloomberg.

RGE Monitor reported that China had revised its 2007 GDP growth up to 13% from the 11.9% it previously reported. “With Chinese exports, industrial production and other economic indicators slowing sharply, there is speculation that Chinese officials might smooth growth statistics. Uncertainty about Chinese economic statistics has led many analysts to use proxies for economic output which are more difficult to doctor. These proxies include electricity demand, construction, etc. However, there is a consensus that Chinese economic statistics have improved,” said Nouriel Roubini’s research team.

Week’s economic reports
Click here for the week’s economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic Data.

Date

Time (ET)

Statistic

For

Actual

Briefing Forecast

Market Expects

Prior

Jan 13

8:30 AM

Trade Balance

Nov

-$40.4B

-$51.0B

-$51.0B

-$56.7B

Jan 13

2:00 PM

Treasury Budget

Dec

-$83.6B

NA

-$83.0B

-$48.3B

Jan 14

8:30 AM

Export Prices ex-ag.

Dec

-1.9%

NA

NA

-2.9%

Jan 14

8:30 AM

Import Prices ex-oil

Dec

-1.1%

NA

NA

-1.8%

Jan 14

8:30 AM

Retail Sales

Dec

-2.7%

-1.0%

-1.2%

-2.1%

Jan 14

8:30 AM

Retail Sales ex-auto

Dec

-3.1%

-1.2%

-1.4%

-2.5%

Jan 14

10:00 AM

Business Inventories

Nov

-0.7%

-0.5%

-0.5%

-0.6%

Jan 14

10:30 AM

Crude Inventories

01/09

1144K

NA

NA

6682K

Jan 14

10:35 AM

Crude Inventories

01/09

-

NA

NA

NA

Jan 14

2:00 PM

Fed Beige Book

-

-

-

-

-

Jan 15

8:30 AM

Core PPI

Dec

0.2%

0.1%

0.1%

0.1%

Jan 15

8:30 AM

PPI

Dec

-1.9%

-1.7%

-2.0%

-2.2%

Jan 15

8:30 AM

Initial Claims

01/10

524K

NA

503K

470K

Jan 15

8:30 AM

Empire Manufacturing Index

Jan

-22.20

-

-25.00

-27.88

Jan 15

10:00 AM

Philadelphia Fed

Jan

-24.3

-35.0

-35.0

-36.1

Jan 16

8:30 AM

Core CPI

Dec

0.0%

0.0%

0.1%

0.0%

Jan 16

8:30 AM

CPI

Dec

-0.7%

-1.0%

-0.9%

-1.7%

Jan 16

9:15 AM

Capacity Utilization

Dec

73.6%

74.6%

74.5%

75.2%

Jan 16

9:15 AM

Industrial Production

Dec

-2.0%

-1.0%

-1.0%

-1.3%

Jan 16

9:55 AM

University of Michigan Sentiment -Preliminary

Jan

61.9

61.0

59.0

60.1

Source: Yahoo Finance, January 16, 2009.

In addition to the Bank of Japan’s interest rate announcement (Thursday, January 22), the US economic highlights for the week, courtesy of Northern Trust, include the following:

1. Housing starts (January 22): Permit extensions for new homes fell 15.8% in November, inclusive of a 11.9% drop in permits issued for single-family homes. The weakness in permits is indicative of fewer housing starts in December (595,000 versus 625,000 in November). Consensus: 615,000.

2. Other reports: NAHB Survey (January 21).

Click the links below for the following reports:

- Wachovia’s Weekly US Economic & Financial Commentary (January 16, 2009)

- Wachovia’s Global Chartbook (January 2009)

Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during the past week.

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Source: Wall Street Journal Online, January 16, 2009.

Chinese philosopher Lau-Tzu said: “Those who have knowledge, don’t predict. Those who predict, don’t have knowledge.” Wise words indeed, but hopefully thorough research and a dose of common sense will cast some light on the lie of the investment land.

On Tuesday a new President will be inaugurated in the US, but the old concerns about financial markets will unfortunately still be around. In the meantime, have a great long weekend in the US!

That’s the way it looks from Cape Town.

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Source: Daryl Cagle

Clusterstock: Roubini – you’re all fools for buying into a sucker’s rally
“Yesterday Nouriel Roubini weighed in on the recent rally and said anyone that thought the worst was behind us is ‘delusional’ and as a matter of fact the worst is yet to come, citing the gruesome macro data that’s been released as of late, and the fact that that trend won’t reverse until at least the fourth quarter of 2009.

RGE: For a few weeks since late November equity markets ignored the onslaught of much worse than expected macro news (and all the news were really worse than awful) and had a nice 25% bear market sucker’s rally. But the drumbeat of terrible – and worse-than-expected – macro news and earnings news and financial news has finally taken a toll on the delusional market belief that the worst was over for financial markets and for equity markets and that the US and global economy would recover in the second half of 2009. So equity prices have already reversed more than half of their most recent bear market rally as the lousy macro news have finally shocked in the last week the wishful thinkers.

“Indeed, the retail sales figures published today confirmed a shopped-out, saving-less and debt-burdened US consumer is now faltering as job losses, income losses, fall in home wealth, fall in equity wealth, high and rising debt and debt servicing ratios and a severe credit crunch take a severe toll on the ability of consumers to spend. And reduction in spending and deleveraging of the US consumer will take years to rebuild the savings rate of a household sector now hit by a severe shock to its net worth (as equity and home values fall while debts have been rising) and shocked in its ability to generate income as job losses mount and the unemployment rate surges.

“Our research at RGE Monitor suggests that the US and global recession will continue at least all the way until Q4 of 2009 (a nasty 24 months U-shaped recession) and that the recovery in 2010-11 will be very weak with growth in the 1% range that is well below a potential of 2.75%. And we cannot rule out that a more severe L-shaped stag-deflation (as in Japan in the 1990s) will take hold.”

Click here for CNBC video.

Source: Jay Yarow, Clusterstock, January 15, 2009.

CNBC: Pimco’s El Erian on the markets
“Discussing the global economic situation, with Mohamed El-Erian, Pimco co-CEO and Michael Spence, Philip H. Knight economics professor/Nobel Laureate.

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Source: CNBC, January 15, 2009.

Barron’s: Roundtable – hang on tight
“Our go-to group of investment experts sees tough times for the economy – but good fortune for stockpickers.”

Click here for full article.

Source: Barron’s (via Fullermoney), January 13, 2009.

Grace Cheng (Daily Markets): Exclusive interview with Jim Rogers
Do you think the period of forced liquidation has ended or does it still have a ways to go?

Rogers: I’m sure it has not ended. It certainly has not ended for many asset classes and it probably has not ended for most. It may be over for a few things but it still has a long way to go.

As you’ve said many times, the US government is printing a lot of money right now, when do you think inflation will come around and bite us?

Rogers: Well there is inflation now in many things. There’s temporary deflation in raw material prices and in some property. But throughout history, whenever you’ve had gigantic printing of money and spending of borrowed money, it has always led to higher prices. Unless something is dramatic, it’s going to happen again. When I don’t know. It’s already happening in some things. I don’t know if you’ve bought any sugar recently or some other things, prices are up and that will continue and it will get worse.

You’ve been bullish on commodities for a long time, recently you said you’re buying the Rogers Metal Index. Do you think that the Obama stimulus plan will create more demand for commodities?

Rogers: Well of course, anything that causes a revival of economic activity causes a revival of demand for everything including commodities. I mean if you’re gonna build bridges you’ve got to build them out of something you cannot build virtual bridges you have to build real bridges, etc.

You’ve said that over the long term, the US dollar is doomed. What are your thoughts on the British Pound?

Rogers: More doomed. It will disappear sooner. If it weren’t for the North Sea, the British Pound would have already disappeared. It’s more doomed. The UK has been exporting oil for 26 years; within the decade, the UK will be a net importer of oil again, and they have nothing else to sell to the world once the oil dries up.

Do you think China will scale back on buying US bonds? And if that happens, how will it affect the US economy and the US dollar?

Rogers: Well if I were China, I would scale back. If I were everybody, I would scale back. The US bonds yield virtually nothing, the dollar is a flawed currency, inflation is coming, higher interest rates are coming. I would think everybody would be scaling back including China. We’re going to have higher interest rates down the road because somebody’s gonna scale back. If not China, Japan or Korea, or who knows, somebody.

Source: Grace Cheng, Daily Markets, January 15, 2009 (hat tip: Investorazzi).

Bloomberg: Bernanke urges “strong measures” to stabilize banks
“Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks about the possible need for more capital injections and guarantees to further stabilize and strengthen the financial system. Bernanke, speaking at the London School of Economics, warns that a fiscal stimulus won’t be enough to spur an economic recovery and that the government may need to buy or guarantee banks’ tainted assets to revive growth. Bernanke also discusses the Fed’s balance sheet, inflation expectations and US unemployment.”

18-jan-2.jpg

Click here for Financial Times article.

Source: Bloomberg, January 13, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Bernanke explains Fed’s options
“In the context of financial market stability, Bernanke calls on history to stress that a ‘modern economy cannot grow if its financial system is not operating effectively’. Bernanke noted that in order to support and mend the fragile financial system ‘more capital injections and guarantees may become necessary to ensure stability and normalization of credit markets’.

“He suggested that purchases of troubled assets, a provision of asset guarantees, and/or purchase of assets from financial institutions in exchange for cash and equity in bad banks are other avenues through which fiscal policy could support the financial system. Also, reducing preventable foreclosures would be useful in reducing mortgage losses and promoting financial stability.

“In sum, the conclusion we draw here is that additional fiscal policy stimulus is necessary to ensure the working of the financial system and revival of economic activity.”

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 13, 2009.

Financial Times: Democrats unveil $825 billion stimulus package
“Democratic lawmakers on Thursday unveiled a much-awaited $825 billion stimulus package to halt America’s vertiginous economic slide which Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House, said was only the ‘first step’ in a process that could take weeks to pass into law.

“The bill, which Barack Obama, the incoming president, wants enacted before mid-February when Congress goes into a short recess, comes in at $50 billion higher than the initial ceiling set by his transition team. But economists said they expected it to climb towards the important psychological threshold of $1,000 billion by the time it becomes law.

“The package was divided between $275 billion in tax cuts, mostly going towards a $1,000 tax credit for middle-class families and $500 for individuals, and $550 billion in public spending, which includes money for ‘shovel-ready’ infrastructure projects, aid to state governments and investments in information technology upgrades for healthcare and a drive to make federal buildings energy-efficient.

“Thursday’s bill coincided with Mr Obama’s announcement that he would hold a ‘fiscal responsibility’ summit next month that would address entitlement reform – an issue that has long been avoided by leaders from both sides of the aisle. ‘We’ve kicked this can down the road and now we are at the end of the road,’ he told an editorial board meeting of the Washington Post. ‘We need to send a signal that we are serious.’

“He said he did not know how long it would take for the proposed fiscal stimulus to take effect. ‘We are in uncharted waters here. I don’t have a crystal ball,’ he said.”

Source: Edward Luce, Financial Times, January 15, 2009.

Economix (The New York Times): Stimulus pie chart

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Source: Catherine Rampell, The New York Times – Economix, January 15, 2009.

The New York Times: Senate releases second portion of bailout fund
“President-elect Barack Obama’s economic agenda advanced rapidly in Congress on Thursday as the Senate voted to release the second half of the financial industry bailout fund and House Democrats unveiled an $825 billion fiscal recovery plan aimed at putting millions of unemployed Americans back to work.

“The Senate action, by a vote of 52 to 42, spares Mr. Obama a messy legislative fight just as he takes office and gives him a $350 billion war chest to further stabilize the financial sector. The vote came amid renewed distress in the banking industry, including further deterioration of Citigroup and a pitch for more government aid by the Bank of America.

“Mr. Obama had personally lobbied reluctant senators to release the money. His top economic adviser, Lawrence H. Summers, made three visits to the Capitol and sent two letters to reassure lawmakers that the program would be better managed.

“In a statement, the president-elect applauded the outcome.

“‘I know this wasn’t an easy vote because of the frustration so many of us share about how the first half of this plan was implemented,’ Mr. Obama said. ‘Now my pledge is to change the way this plan is implemented and keep faith with the American taxpayer.’”

Source: David M. Herszenhorn, Financial Times, January, 2009.

Bloomberg: Seattle FHLB short of capital on mortgage ebt
“The Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle said it will suspend dividends and ‘excess’ stock repurchases, becoming the second of the government-chartered lending cooperatives to say its capital may be running low.

“The likely capital shortfall as of December 31 was caused by ‘unrealized market value losses’ on residential mortgage bonds without government backing, the bank said in a US Securities and Exchange Commission filing today. Washington Mutual and Merrill Lynch had been the biggest stakeholders and borrowers in the Seattle Federal Home Loan Bank, or FHLB.

“Seattle joins the San Francisco FHLB in taking steps to guard its reserves after the US housing market collapse sent mortgage-backed bonds tumbling. The declines may leave as many as eight of the 12 FHLBs below capital requirements, Moody’s Investors Service has said, eroding a below-market rate source of about $1 trillion in financing for Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and other companies that participate in the cooperatives.”

Source: Jody Shenn, Bloomberg, January 13, 2009.

BCA Research: It’s called credit easing, not quantitative easing
“Fed Chairman Bernanke argued in a key speech recently that the Fed’s current policy will not lead to an inflation problem.

“Bernanke explained how the Fed’s current policy, which he dubbed ‘Credit Easing’, differs from ‘Quantitative Easing’ (QE), as pursued by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) earlier this decade. Under QE, the BoJ set targets for excess bank reserves in the hope that the banks would increase lending. In contrast, the Fed is targeting an improvement in the functioning of the credit markets, an increase in the flow of credit, and lower private sector borrowing costs. There is no target for the size of the Fed’s balance sheet or the monetary base; both will fluctuate with the liquidity needs of borrowers who are using the Fed’s facilities.

“To the extent that banks keep excess liquidity on deposit at the Fed, Bernanke argued that there is little inflation risk in the near term. In terms of the exit strategy from the current policy, the Chairman explained that excess reserves and the monetary base will naturally decline when credit market conditions improve and recourse to the Fed’s liquidity facilities wanes.

“The Fed also plans to eventually sell the private sector assets it is purchasing, which will also soak up excess liquidity.

“Bottom line: The Fed’s ‘Credit Easing’ policy will not necessarily be inflationary, as long as the excess reserves are re-absorbed in a timely manner once the economy resumes growing.”

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Source: BCA Research, January 14, 2009.

Paul Kedrosky (Infectious Greed): Dramatic changes in credit quality
“A fairly remarkable sea-change in Fitch Ratings’ view of rated companies/countries/sectors over the last two years. The stresses in Europe, in particular, caught my eye.”

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Source: Paul Kedrosky, Infectious Greed, January 16, 2009.

BBC News: US banking giants in tie-up deal
“Struggling US banking giant Citigroup and its rival Morgan Stanley have agreed a deal which sees the tie-up of their brokerage operations. Morgan Stanley is paying Citigroup $2.7 billion for a 51% stake in the joint venture while Citigroup will have a 49% stake.

“Observers say the deal showed how much Citigroup wanted to slim down its operations and build up cash reserves. It received the largest government bail-out of any US bank last year.

“Citigroup’s retail brokerage, Smith Barney, was formerly a key part of its wealth management business.

“The new unit – to be called Morgan Stanley Smith Barney – will have more than 20,000 advisors, $1.7 trillion in client assets, and serve 6.8 million households around the world, the firms said.

“The Financial Times reports Citigroup will separate its higher risk US consumer finance and securities businesses from its global commercial banking operations.

“Analysts suggest that the government will end up buying some struggling parts of the business with the next tranche of its financial rescue programme. ‘I think within 12 months, Citigroup no longer exists. The new CEO of this company is the government,’ said William Smith of Smith Asset Management.”

Source: BBC News, January 13, 2009.

Barry Ritholtz (The Big Picture): The 45 billion dollar club
“The United States of Wall Street just added another major holding to its portfolio of financial garbage: Bank of America.

“Like Citi, B of A has now received MORE IN BAILOUT MONEY than its actually worth (BAC = $53B; C = $21B). How this can ever be a profitable investment, as some mathematically challenged Congress-critters have suggested, is all but impossible to imagine.

“Blaming ‘previously undisclosed losses from its Merrill Lynch’, B of A threatened to kill their purchase of Mother Merrill. Treasury made an emergency capital injection of $20 billion, on top of the $15B and $10B already received by B of A and MER respectively. The taxpayers will also backstop $118 billion of assets, setting up what is likely to be a jumbo money losing trade.

“What should have happened in both instances was an orderly liquidation, selling off the pieces to competent managers who understand risk, and can manage smaller portions of the firm. Instead, the same idiots who helped destroy all of companies involved are still running the show.

“The amazingly bad Bank of America plan mirrors an even worse bad deal made by the Feds with Citigroup in November. There, the taxpayers explicitly insured the bank against losses on 90% of $306 billion of toxic assets – Citigroup’s real-estate loans and securities.

“Like Citi, the B of A monies are a terrible deal for the taxpayer – not a lot of bang for the buck, and leaving the same people who created the mess in charge.

“Organ transplant medicine understands certain truths: You do not give a healthy liver to a raging alcoholic, as they will only destroy the organ via their disease/bad judgment/lifestyle.

“Why do we give billions of taxpayer dollars to incompetent managers who failed to protect their assets, who destroyed shareholder value? These people have demonstrated a marked INABILITY to run these firms. Why reward them with 10s of billions of dollars?

“Its nothing short of madness …”

Source: Barry Ritholtz, The Big Picture, January 16, 2009.

CNBC: Bair – banks in crisis
“Discussing big problems for big banks including Citi and Bank of America, with Sheila Bair, FDIC chairman.”

18-jan-6.jpg

Source: CNBC, January 16, 2009.

Bloomberg: Shilling says banks may need “a lot more” government help
“Gary Shilling, president of A. Gary Shilling & Co., talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu about the potential for additional government aid for US banks. Shilling also discusses the future of Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp., the state of the US economy, and the outlook for stocks.”

18-jan-7.jpg

Source: Bloomberg, January 16, 2009.

CEP News: Trichet – central bankers see global economic recovery in 2010
“Central bankers expect the global economy to recover in 2010 according to European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet speaking as head of the Bank for International Settlements on Monday morning.

“While the central banker declined to comment on the European Central Bank’s monetary policy ahead of the rate decision this Thursday, Trichet said that the global economic slowdown was due to a lack of confidence and pledged that the group would ‘do whatever is appropriate to reinforce [it].’

“He also said that attending members had not discussed exchange rates at the meeting, but agreed that emerging market growth continues to play an important role for the global economy.

“Earlier on Monday, in an interview with Bloomberg, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said that Europe is ‘behind the curve’ regarding stimulus packages, and that governments are underestimating how such measures are needed to help economies recover.”

Source: CEP News, January 12, 2009.

Financial Times: Larry Fink on what could derail recovery
“Larry Fink chief executive and chairman of BlackRock, talks to Henny Sender, FT’s international financial correspondent, about monetary policy, securities and risk management. He also discusses corporate governance, oversight and stabilizing troubled assets.”

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Source: Financial Times, January 8, 2009.

Financial Times: JPMorgan chief says 2009 will be bleak
“The US financial and economic crisis will worsen this year as hard-hit consumers default on credit cards and other loans, Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, has predicted in an interview with the Financial Times.

“Mr Dimon, whose bank will report fourth-quarter results on Thursday, gave his bleak assessment as shares on both sides of the Atlantic tumbled on rising fears that banks would need more capital and a larger-than-expected fall in US retail sales.

“‘The worst of the economic situation is not yet behind us. It looks as if it will continue to deteriorate for most of 2009,’ said Mr Dimon. ‘In terms of our sector, we expect consumer loans and credit cards to continue to get worse.’

“Mr Dimon told the FT that JPMorgan was prepared for an expected deterioration in consumer-oriented businesses but added that if things were to get worse than expected it would have to cut costs again.

“Mr Dimon said the bursting of the credit bubble would force the banking industry to refocus on its traditional businesses of advising on deals and lending to companies and individuals.

“‘When we look back at industry excesses in areas such as highly leveraged lending and securitisation, it is clear that some of these markets will never come back,’ he said. ‘In the next few years, the industry will go back to basics: serving individual and corporate customers as best as we can.’”

Source: Francesco Guerrera, Financial Times, January 14, 2009.

Charlie Rose: A conversation with Lee Scott, CEO of Wal-Mart

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Source: Charlie Rose, January 14, 2009.

CNBC: Nobel debate on the economy
“Weighing in on the economy with Edmund Phelps, 2006 Nobel Prize winner from Columbia University, and Michael Spence, 2001 Nobel Laureate from Stanford University.”

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Source: CNBC, January 15, 2009.

Times Online: Leading economist fears decade of weakness in US
“One of the world’s leading economists has given warning that the United States is facing a decade of financial misery, with the number of unemployed Americans set to continue to rise for years.

“Robert Shiller, Professor of Economics at Yale University, who predicted the end of the internet bubble seven years ago, said: ‘We could have many years of a very weak economy. Big recessions are followed by years of weakness and typically unemployment keeps rising.

“‘To say that this will last years is not a dramatic statement. What is happening now is much worse than 1990. We could be facing a decade of real weakness. This is no ordinary recession. There are signs that people see this as a different story. People are talking about a depression, something that we haven’t seen previously.’

“Some economists, such as Kenneth Rogoff, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and now a Professor of Economics at Harvard University, believe that America will be lucky if unemployment peaks at 9% of the workforce and that there is a high chance that it will reach at least 10%.

“Professor Shiller, who said that he has talked to the incoming Obama Administration about possible solutions to the housing crisis in the US, took a swipe at the Federal Reserve.

“He said: ‘This recession is by no means mechanical. People have lost a sense of confidence, a sense of trust in institutions and in each other. It is very hard for a central bank to address that by just cutting interest rates.’”

Source: Suzy Jagger, Times Online, January 12, 2009.

PRNewswire: Foreclosure activity increases 81% in 2008
“RealtyTrac today [Wednesday] released its 2008 US Foreclosure Market Report, which shows a total of 3,157,806 foreclosure filings – default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions – were reported on 2,330,483 US properties during the year, an 81% increase in total properties from 2007 and a 225% increase in total properties from 2006. The report also shows that 1.84% of all US housing units (one in 54) received at least one foreclosure filing during the year, up from 1.03% in 2007.

“Foreclosure filings were reported on 303,410 US properties in December, up 17% from the previous month and up nearly 41% from December 2007. Despite the spike in December, foreclosure activity for the fourth quarter was down nearly 4% from the previous quarter but still up nearly 40% from the fourth quarter of 2007.

“‘State legislation that slowed down the onset of new foreclosure activity clearly had an effect on fourth quarter numbers overall, but that effect appears to have worn off by December,’ said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. ‘The big jump in December foreclosure activity was somewhat surprising given the moratoria enacted by both Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, along with programs from some of the major lenders and loan servicers aimed at delaying foreclosure actions against distressed homeowners.

“‘Clearly the foreclosure prevention programs implemented to-date have not had any real success in slowing down this foreclosure tsunami. And the recent California law, much like its predecessors in Massachusetts and Maryland, appears to have done little more than delay the inevitable foreclosure proceedings for thousands of homeowners.’”

Source: PRNewswire, January 14, 2009.

Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): Campbell – housing to trough in 2012
“I read a great deal about real estate, and I follow real estate trends closely. By far the best real estate guidance that I’ve come across is Robert Campbell’s ‘The Campbell Real Estate Letter’. Nothing I’ve read compares with Campbell’s great record.

“Robert uses an unusual and unique combination of fundamental and historical material along with his own specialty of technical analysis in real estate timing. Bob Campbell called the exact top of the real estate cycle in his report of August, 2005.

“What does Bob Campbell say now? He notes that historically, housing prices fall by an average of 35% after a financial crisis. He further states that he believes housing across the land will fall by another 8% from here to the final low of the housing cycle. And when will the low come? Campbell states that using five years as the average length of a housing downturn, ‘we can expect the US housing market to trough in the year 2012. Robert expects housing to fall to the prices that existed back in 2001.

“Writes Campbell, ‘And as I’ve stated in previous letters, this is where the problem arose: borrowers took on far more mortgage debt than they could ever pay back, and that’s why the real estate prices are crashing, and we are witnessing the destruction of the biggest credit bubble in history. And in the absence of dramatic increases in household incomes that are needed to service this massive amount of mortgage debt – all the bailouts in the world are unlikely to stop housing prices from eventually reverting back to the 2001 pre-bubble years – or close to it.’”

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letters, January 15, 2009.

Bespoke: Expected change in home prices
“The CME housing futures that track the S&P/Case-Shiller median home price indices of 10 major cities offer a clue into how much more investors think home prices have to fall.

“In the chart below, we highlight the percentage difference between the October ‘08 actual Case-Shiller numbers (the most recent set of numbers) and the current price of the November ‘09 futures contracts. The composite 10-city November ‘09 contract is currently trading 12% below its October ‘08 level. San Francisco is expected to fall the most in 2009 at -18%, followed by Los Angeles (-16.6%), and Las Vegas (-13%). The rest of the cities are expected to fall less than the composite, with Boston home prices expected to fall the least at -6%. Miami, Denver, DC, and San Diego are all expected to see home prices fall by less than 10% from 10/08 to 11/09.”

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Source: Bespoke, January 12, 2009.

MarketWatch: 30-year mortgage under 5%
“The benchmark 30-year mortgage fell below 5% for the first time ever in Freddie Mac’s weekly rate survey as economic weakness continued to push interest rates lower, the mortgage agency said Thursday.

“The national average rate on the 30-year loan fell to 4.96% in the week ending January 15, down from 5.01% a week ago. That is the lowest on record. Freddie Mac began its rate survey in 1971. A year ago the loan averaged 5.69%.

“The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage, a popular refinancing choice, edged up to 4.65% from 4.62% a week ago. Last year at this time the loan averaged 5.21%. Refinancing activity has been strong as mortgage rates have plumbed historic lows.

“The two fixed-rate loans required the payment of an average 0.7 point to achieve the interest rate. A point is one percent of the loan amount, charged as prepaid interest.”

Source: Steve Kerch & Amy Hoak, MarketWatch, January 15, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Dreadful retail sales in December
“Retail sales in December were abysmal on every front. Total retail sales during December plunged 2.7% from 2.1% in November. Nearly all sub-components posted significant declines in sales.

“Retail sales have dropped at an annual rate of 24.6% in the fourth quarter versus a 5.1% drop in the previous quarter, a large part of it is due to the drop in gasoline prices. The weakness in retail sales supports expectations of a weak headline GDP number for the fourth quarter and also arithmetically consumer spending and GDP of the first quarter of 2009 are at a disadvantage.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 14, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Lower prices and weak non-oil imports translate to smaller trade gap
“The trade balance of the US economy narrowed to $40.4 billion in November from $56.7 billion in October. A 12.0% drop in nominal imports of goods and services partly due to lower imported oil prices was the main reason for the reduction in the trade gap. Weak economic conditions in the US have resulted in lower imports, while a similar status abroad has led to a 5.8% drop in nominal exports of goods and services.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 13, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Energy and food prices bring down headline wholesale price index
“The Producer Price Index (PPI) of Finished Goods fell 1.9% in December after a 2.2% drop in the prior month, reflecting lower prices for energy (-9.3%) and food (-1.5%). In 2008, the PPI fell 0.9% versus a 6.2% jump in 2007. The 20.3% drop of the energy price index was the main reason for a sharp reversal of the wholesale price index in 2008. The food price index climbed 3.7% in 2008 versus a 7.6% gain in 2007.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 15, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Inflation – issue of little importance, for now
“The Consumer Price Index (CPI) dropped 0.7% in December, the third consecutive monthly decline and the fourth drop in the last five months. During the twelve months ended December the CPI moved up only 0.1% (CPI rose 4.1% in all of 2007), which is the smallest gain on record in the post-war period with the exception of a 0.7% drop in the twelve months ended December 1954. The reversal of the energy price index (-21.3% versus +17.4% in 2007) is largely responsible for the significant deceleration of the CPI. The food price index fell 0.1% in December and advanced only at an annual rate of 1.4% during the three months ended December versus a 4.0% annualized increase in the prior three-month period.
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“… going forward, given the projections of weak economic conditions, inflation could move below levels that are consistent with price stability for a short period. At the same time, we should bear in mind that the large fiscal and monetary stimulus in place, and more in the pipeline, inflation could once again be problematic but much farther down the road.”

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 16, 2009.

Jim Sinclair (MineSet): The unavoidable face of hyperinflation
“It is horrifying what the Fed and Treasury injected in percentage terms. A true measure of comparison can be seen in the three months of 2008 when the Fed accomplished more than in the seven years from 1929 to 1937.

“This is beyond all reason, having its own new and terrible consequences well in excess of the consequences of the 1929 and 1932 breaks.

“Markets have been run now for years by algorithms, manipulators and seeded interests that are like summer thunderstorms. They are loud and scary, but quite short term and in the end quite meaningless and non-productive.

“The dollar cannot and will not remain strong, nor can a planetary Weimar experience now be avoided.”

Click here or on the image below for a larger chart.

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Source: Jim Sinclair, MineSet, January 14, 2009.

Bloomberg: Hedge fund assets fell record 36% in 2008
“Hedge fund assets fell a record 36% to $1.84 trillion in 2008 as tumbling global markets prompted investor withdrawals and fund liquidations, according to industry researcher HedgeFund.net.

“Hedge funds lost $512 billion through withdrawals and fund closures, while performance losses totaled $535 billion, the New York-based unit of Channel Capital Group said in an e-mailed statement. The decline is the biggest since Hedgefund.net began tracking the data in 2003.

“Funds suffered losses and client withdrawals last year, with some selling assets at fire-sale prices as the global credit crisis forced banks to withdraw loans to the industry. While defections and closures reached a record in December, a benchmark of performance rose for the month after declining in previous months, Hedgefund.net said.

“‘Investor asset flows lag performance, and the sharp rise of outflows in the fourth quarter are the result of yearlong aggregate losses,’ Hedgefund.net said in the statement. ‘Positive performance in December may be an indication that the biggest wave of investor outflows has passed.’”

Source: Tomoko Yamazaki, Bloomberg, January 15, 2009.

Bespoke: S&P sector returns year to date
“Below we highlight S&P 500 sector performance year to date through about noon today. As shown, just three sectors are underperforming the market so far this year, and the Financial sector is weighing heavily on the overall index’s declines. Energy, Health Care, Technology, Materials, and Utilities have actually held up pretty well.”

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Source: Bespoke, January 16, 2009.

CNBC: Doll’s outlook for 2009
“A look ahead of the possible double-digit equities growth in 2009, with Bob Doll, BlackRock vice chairman/global CIO.”

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Source: CNBC, January 12, 2009.

CNBC: Hendry – bonds still best bet
“Government bonds are still the safest bet for investors in these uncertain times, and the euro will face an uphill battle as weak economies will need more flexibility, Hugh Hendry from Eclectica told CNBC.”

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Source: CNBC, January 12, 2009.

BCA Research: US employment will cap Treasury back-up
“The US December employment report was grim and included further downward revisions to prior months. Our forecast for the next six months is equally bearish, which implies that Treasury yields will be capped for a long time.

“The contraction in payrolls were roughly in line with expectations, with a broad-based decline in all industries. Our Model forecasts significant weakness in the first half of the year, with no bottom in sight. Labor and income insecurity will continue to keep consumers from spending, and the already deflationary retailing environment will continue to worsen.

“Historically, Treasury yields sustainably rebound only once the annual growth in payrolls turns up significantly. Thus, any back-up in government bond yields over the next few months will prove short lived. Deflation and a contracting economy will be the primary drivers of trends in the Treasury market, underscoring that fears of higher yields driven by mushrooming budget deficits are premature.”

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Source: BCA Research, January 12, 2009.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): The bond bubble is an accident waiting to happen
“The bond vigilantes slumber. As the greatest sovereign bond bubble of all time rolls into 2009, investors are clinging to an implausible assumption that China and Japan will provide enough capital to keep the happy game going for ever.

“They are betting too that debt deflation will overwhelm the effects of near-zero interest rates across the G10 and nullify a £2,000 billion fiscal blast in the US, China, Japan, Britain, and Europe.

“Above all, they are betting that the Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke will fail to print enough banknotes to inflate the US money supply, despite his avowed intent to do so.

“Yields on 10-year US Treasuries have fallen to 2.4% – a level that was unseen even in the Great Depression. This is ‘return-free risk’, said bond guru Jim Grant.

“It is much the same story across the world. Yields are 1.3% in Japan, 3.02% in Germany, 3.13% in Britain, 3.26% in Chile, 3.47% in France, and 5.56% in Brazil.

“‘Get out of Treasuries. They are very, very expensive,’ said Mohamed El-Erian, the investment chief at the Pimco, the world’s top bond fund, in a Barron’s article last week.

“It is lazy to think that China, Japan, the petro-powers and the surplus states of emerging Asia will continue to amass foreign reserves, recycling their treasure into the US and European bond markets.

“These countries are themselves bleeding as exports collapse. Most face capital flight. The whole process that fed the bond boom from 2003 to 2008 is now going into reverse. Woe betide any investor who misjudges the consequences of this strategic shift.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph, January 12, 2009.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): Government bond bubble will burst
“Objectively, there is no doubt that government debt yields in the UK, USA and a number of other countries have moved well outside their historic, normal price ranges and values. This indicates a bubble, which some have described as a ‘return-free risk’.

“We need no reminding today that dire economic circumstances have contributed to these ultra-low yields. Indeed, governments have encouraged the move, with rate cuts and talk of quantitative easing, as part of their reflationary efforts. We also know that governments need to issue considerably more debt to finance their programmes, and they want to do this as cheaply as possible.

“My conclusion is that those who are lending to governments at record or at least near-record low yields, are walking into a trap. The government bond bubble has yet to burst, judging from the charts, but it will burst. With bubbles, it seldom pays to delay one’s exit until the downtrend is evident to all.”

Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, January 14, 2009.

CNBC: Credit – still a good bet if yield curve steepens?
“Investment-grade credit looks very attractive to Richard Urwin, MD & head of asset allocation & economics research team at BlackRock. But what happens if the yield curve steepens by year-end? He gives his take CNBC’s Amanda Drury & Martin Soong.”

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Source: CNBC, January 16, 2009.

Eoin Treacy (Fullermoney): 10-year Treasuries show negative real yield
“It is interesting that this is the first time since 1980 that the US 10yr has shown a negative real yield. The fact is that it has not had anything close to the size of the move, relative to CPI, as seen in 1974 or 1980 is also worthy of notice. Of course back then, high inflation expectations were much more of a factor in the movement of the spread, but that is certainly not the case today.”

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Source: Eoin Treacy, Fullermoney, January 13, 2009.

Financial Times: Bond issuance by emerging nations surges
“Emerging market sovereign bond issuance has surged this week as governments take advantage of the dramatic drop in yields because of the sharply improving sentiment since the start of the year.

“The Philippines, Turkey, Brazil and Colombia have all issued debt in the past few days, raising a total of $4.5 billion. This compares with just one deal worth $2 billion from Mexico issued in the entire fourth quarter of 2008.

“Nigel Rendell, senior emerging markets strategist at RBC Capital Markets, said: ‘Sentiment has improved a great deal since January 1 in the emerging market space, so these countries see this as a window of opportunity to issue debt.’

“Since January 1, emerging market bond yields have fallen about 40 basis points compared with US Treasuries, the international benchmark for debt, close to eight-week lows, according to JP Morgan’s Embi+ Index. Emerging market bonds are now trading about 650 basis points above US Treasuries. Emerging market governments are also rushing to issue debt as they fear they could be ‘crowded out’ of the primary bond markets because of the record volumes of sovereign debt due from the industrialised nations.

“These emerging market countries need the cash, like their industrialized counterparts, to stimulate their economies.”

Source: David Oakley, Roel Landingin and John Aglionby, Financial Times, January 9, 2009.

Bespoke: US dollar testing resistance
“The US Dollar index has made a nice comeback after its free-fall from late November to mid December. The dollar is up 6.76% from its low on December 17, but as shown in the chart below, it is bumping up against key resistance at its 50-day moving average. If the dollar is able to break above its 50-day, a resumption of its multi-month uptrend will be solidified. If it fails to break through, however, the current level will be one peak of a newly formed downtrend.”

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Source: Bespoke, January 14, 2009.

Edmund Conway (Telegraph): Shipping rates hit zero as trade sinks
“Freight rates for containers shipped from Asia to Europe have fallen to zero for the first time since records began, underscoring the dramatic collapse in trade since the world economy buckled in October.

“‘They have already hit zero,’ said Charles de Trenck, a broker at Transport Trackers in Hong Kong. ‘We have seen trade activity fall off a cliff. Asia-Europe is an unmitigated disaster.’

“Shipping journal Lloyd’s List said brokers in Singapore are now waiving fees for containers travelling from South China, charging only for the minimal ‘bunker’ costs. Container fees from North Asia have dropped $200, taking them below operating cost.

“Industry sources said they have never seen rates fall so low. ‘This is a whole new ball game,’ said one trader.

“The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) which measures freight rates for bulk commodities such as iron ore and grains crashed several months ago, falling 96%. The BDI – though a useful early-warning index – is highly volatile and exaggerates apparent ups and downs in trade. However, the latest phase of the shipping crisis is different. It has spread to core trade of finished industrial goods, the lifeblood of the world economy.”

Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph, January 12, 2009.

Bloomberg: Frontline says ships storing the most oil in 20 years
“Frontline Ltd, the world’s biggest owner of supertankers, said about 80 million barrels of crude oil are being stored in tankers, the most in 20 years, as traders seek to take advantage of higher prices later in the year.

“Traders are seeking to profit from a market situation called contango where futures prices are higher than the cost of immediate supplies. A purchaser could buy oil now, keep it for months at sea and fetch better prices by selling oil futures that are higher than the spot price.

“‘In this current financial situation I guess it’s one of the more safe bets to do,’ Jens Martin Jensen, Singapore-based interim chief executive officer of the company’s management unit, said by phone today. Thirty to 35 very large crude carriers, each designed to haul 2 million barrels of crude, are storing oil, with the rest on ships half the size called suezmaxes, he said.

“The contango pricing structure has been caused by excess near-term oil supply as demand slows and speculation that output cuts by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will reduce the glut later this year.”

Source: Alaric Nightingale, Bloomberg, January 14 2009.

Victoria Marklew (Northern Trust): Eurozone – interest rates, inflation, the economy – all fall down
“As widely expected, the European Central Bank (ECB) lopped another 50 bps off its refi rate this morning [Thursday], taking it to 2.0%. Rates have now come down by 225 bps in four successive steps, including a 75 bps cut in December, as the Eurozone economy hits the skids and inflation drops sharply.

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“In his subsequent press conference, President Trichet acknowledged that economic data and surveys over the past month point to ‘a further weakening of economic activity around the turn of the year’ and warned that Eurozone demand is likely to be ‘dampened for a protracted period’ with growth risks to the downside. He also acknowledged that the slowing economy has reduced inflation risks, and that the rate of inflation is likely to ‘fall significantly’ in mid-year, in part because of base effects.”

Source: Victoria Marklew, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 15, 2009.

Financial Times: German GDP contracts sharply
“Germany’s economy could have contracted by as much as 2% in the final quarter of 2008, the country’s statistical office warned on Wednesday, deepening a recession that looks likely to be the worst since the second world war.

“The sharp contraction in Europe’s largest economy would sound alarm bells across Europe because of Germany’s role as Europe’s economic powerhouse.

“German exports had benefited from strong global growth in recent years ‘but now that process has gone dramatically into reverse’, said Andreas Rees at Unicredit in Munich.

“The latest data came just hours after Berlin unveiled a two-year $66 billion package of growth-boosting measures. Michael Glos, economics minister, argued on Wednesday that the plan would have a ‘noticeable effect’ by later this year.

“Gross domestic product increased by 1 per cent in 2008 as a whole, after a 2.6% rise in the previous year, the federal statistics office reported. But in the final three months of the year, preliminary estimates suggested that GDP fell between about 1.5% and 2%, it said.”

Source: Ralph Atkins, Financial Times, January 14, 2009.

CEP News: Germany’s coalition parties agree on €50 billion stimulus package
“Germany’s coalition parties have agreed on a second economic stimulus package totalling approximately €50 billion, to be put into place over the course of the next two years in an effort to pull the economy out of its worst recession since the end of the Second World War.

“The package of measures will include approximately €36 billion in infrastructure investment and tax cuts. The announcement was made following six hours of talks between the Christian Democratic Union, the Christian Social Union and the Social Democratic Party in Berlin late on Monday.

“The second stimulus package follows a €31 billion plan already in existence.”

Source: CEP News, January 13, 2008.

Financial Times: Spain hit by public finance warning
“The growing dangers for Europe’s sharply slowing economies were highlighted yesterday as Spain became the third eurozone country to be warned over its deteriorating public finances in the space of three days.

“Standard & Poor’s, the rating agency, said Spain’s top-notch triple A credit ratings could be downgraded because of pressure on its public finances after it entered what is likely to be a deep recession in the fourth quarter. On Friday, Greece and Ireland were also warned by the agency that their ratings could be downgraded as economic conditions worsen. The warning is likely to help drive up borrowing costs for those countries.

“The euro weakened against the dollar and the yen after the announcement, which underlined the challenges facing European countries seeking to stimulate their battered economies and pay for bank bail-outs. Analysts say other European countries could face warnings in the coming days or weeks as governments take on record debt levels, which could jeopardise the sustainability of their public finances.”

Source: David Oakley and Victor Mallet, Financial Times, January 12, 2009.

Financial Times: China sees “success” in offsetting crisis
“Wen Jiabao declared China’s efforts to offset the effect of the global economic slowdown an ‘initial success’ on Sunday as the economy performed ‘better than expected’ last month.

“The premier’s hints that the country’s economy might not be locked in a downward spiral will be seen as good news in the rest of the world, where Chinese growth is viewed as a potential palliative for the global recession.

“Speaking during a three-day visit to industrial regions in eastern China, Mr Wen said sales at some companies had begun to rebound, stockpiles were falling and electricity consumption was rising.

“‘We have achieved initial success from the policies we adopted to counter the financial crisis,’ the premier said, according to China National Radio.

“Beijing announced an economic stimulus package of Rmb4,000 billion ($585 billion) in November, heavily weighted towards construction and heavy industry. It was not expected to improve economic growth until the middle of this year but some industries, such as steel, have already shown more confidence since the stimulus package was announced. Scores of Chinese steelmakers have resumed production in the hope that it will lead to a sustained recovery in steel prices.

“Mr Wen vowed that the central government would take other measures, including large investments, to combat the crisis before the legislature’s annual meeting in early March, according to a speech published separately.”

Source: Patti Waldmeir, Financial Times, January 11, 2009.

US Global Investors: Rebound in Chinese bank lending
“A significant rebound in money supply growth and bank lending in China during December suggests that the government’s stimulating policies may have achieved some success. However, challenges for the economy are likely to be sustained in the foreseeable future.”
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Source: US Global Investors – Weekly Investor Alert, January 16, 2009.

Bloomberg: China passes Germany to become third-biggest economy
“China’s economy overtook Germany’s in 2007 to become the world’s third largest, underscoring the nation’s increasing economic and political clout.

“Gross domestic product expanded 13% from a year earlier, more than a previous estimate of 11.9%, to 25.731 trillion yuan ($3.38 trillion), the statistics bureau said on its website today. That topped Germany’s 2.424 trillion euros ($3.32 trillion), using average exchange rates for 2007.

“China’s economy is 70 times bigger than when leader Deng Xiaoping ditched hard-line Communist policies in favor of free-market reforms in 1978. After overtaking the UK and France in 2005, China became the third nation to complete a spacewalk, hosted the Olympic Games and surpassed Japan as the biggest buyer of US Treasuries.

“The figure was released as China faces the weakest economic expansion since 1990 after exports collapsed because of the global recession.”

Source: Nipa Piboontanasawat and Kevin Hamlin, Bloomberg, January 14 2009.

Financial Times: Jim O’Neill on the Bric economies
“Jim O’Neill, Chief Economist at Goldman Sachs, tells David Oakley about the reasons to be positive on China, finding value in Bric economies, and the problems facing Russia.”

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Source: Financial Times, January 9, 2009.

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Video-rama: Gloomy news batters investor sentiment

Friday, January 16th, 2009

Risk appetite around the globe deteriorated over the past few days as an avalanche of negative economic and corporate news battered already fragile investor sentiment.

A few of the more interesting video clips that attracted my attention are shared below. Amidst the grim reality of Bernard Madoff’s scam, we start off with Stephen Colbert’s take on Ponzi schemes. And as if we are not already confronted with enough absurdities, the last video, dealing with the porn industry’s plea for bailout money, caps it all. In between, a good dosage of clips on the economy and various asset classes provides stimulating viewing material.

Stephen Colbert: Ponzi schemes

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Source: Stephen Colbert, Colbert Nation, January 6, 2009.

CNBC: Roubini – doom & gloom in 2009

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Source: CNBC, January 15, 2009.

Bloomberg: Bernanke urges “strong measures” to stabilize banks
“Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks about the possible need for more capital injections and guarantees to further stabilize and strengthen the financial system. Bernanke, speaking at the London School of Economics, warns that a fiscal stimulus won’t be enough to spur an economic recovery and that the government may need to buy or guarantee banks’ tainted assets to revive growth. Bernanke also discusses the Fed’s balance sheet, inflation expectations and US unemployment.”

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Source: Bloomberg, January 13, 2009.

YouTube: Ben Bernanke holds Q&A session
Live from the London School of Economics, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke answers questions.

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Source: YouTube, January 13, 2009.

YouTube: Congressman Alan Grayson grills Fed Vice Chair Donald Kohn

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Source: YouTube, January 13, 2009.

CNBC: Obama on the TARP
“President-elect Barack Obama says many people are disappointed by the TARP’s lack of ‘transparency’.

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Source: CNBC, January 12, 2009.

Financial Times: Larry Fink on fiscal policy and the economy
“Larry Fink, chief executive and chairman of BlackRock, talks to FT’s Henny Sender about the forecast for 2009 and the implications for the financial markets. He also discusses deleveraging and his concern that it may be more destructive than the stimulus package.”

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Source: Financial Times, January 8, 2009.

PBS: Economists explain why hints of the economic crisis eluded them
“Some of the nation’s brightest economists failed to predict the foreclosure crisis and economic recession that followed. Paul Solman asks them why no one connected the dots in time to warn the public.”

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Source: PBS, January 9, 2009.

Barron’s: State of the credit crisis
“Barron’s Mike Santoli contends there has been a dramatic improvement in many credit conditions that have been at distressed levels. But have stocks priced in enough of the recession?”

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Source: Barron’s, January 12, 2009.

CNBC: Whitney on financials
“Banks may need another round of fresh capital this year, says Meredith Whitney, Oppenheimer & Co. director of research.”

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Source: CNBC, January 14, 2009.

Financial Times: Citi fighting for survival
“By splitting of its bad assets, Citi hopes to rescue investors and fight for survival.”

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Source: Financial Times, January 13, 2009.

Bloomberg: Biggs – US stocks may rise as economy stabilizes
“Barton Biggs, managing partner at Traxis Partners, talks with Bloomberg’s Matt Miller about the outlook for the US stock market and economy. Biggs, speaking from New York, also talks about the hedge-fund industry, Bernard Madoff’s alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme and emerging market stocks.”

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Source: Bloomberg, January 8, 2009.

CNBC: Doll – “risk assets” will outperform in 2009
“US stocks will see double-digit percentage gains this year, says Bob Doll, CIO of global equities at BlackRock. He adds that 2009 will be a year where ‘risk assets’ outperforms safe assets. He talks strategy, with CNBC’s Martin Soong & Karen Tso.”

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Source: CNBC, January 15, 2009.

John Authers (Financial Times): Santa Claus rally is over
“The US financial sector is again dragging down markets.”

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Click here for the article.

Source: John Authers, Financial Times, January 14, 2009.

CNBC: Bonds still best bet – Hendry
“Government bonds are still the safest bet for investors in these uncertain times, and the euro will face an uphill battle as weak economies will need more flexibility, Hugh Hendry from Eclectica told CNBC.”

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Source: CNBC, January 12, 2009.

CNBC: Cash in on debt
“Besides being overweight on high quality investment-grade corporate bonds, Chew Soon Gek, CIO, Asia at Deutsche Bank Private Wealth Management also likes government bonds for safety.”

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Source: CNBC, January 13, 2009.

CNBC: Pickens on renewable energy
“Boone Pickens is taking his renewable energy plan back to Capitol Hill today, and the billionaire oil man discusses the plan with CNBC.”

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Source: CNBC, January 13, 2009.

Financial Times: Jim O’Neill on emerging market investments
“Chief economist at Goldman Sachs, tells FT’s David Oakley where to find value in emerging market investments.”

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Source: Financial Times, January 9, 2009.

Business Week: A Chinese depression?
“Business Week Chief Economist Mike Mandel explains why China, so far relatively unscathed, could be badly hurt by the rapid fall in global trade.”

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Source: Business Week, January 14, 2009.

CNBC: The porn economy
“The ‘Girls Gone Wild’ creator is asking the government for bailout cash, reports CNBC’s Melissa Lee.”

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Source: CNBC, January 9, 2009.

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Posted in Bonds, Credit Markets, Economy, Emerging Markets, Energy & Natural Resources, Gold, Markets, Oil and Gas, Outlook | Comments Off


Jim O’Neill Discusses World, BRICs

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Jim O’Neill, Chief Economist, Goldman Sachs , who invented the “BRICs” asset class is interviewed by FT.com’s David Oakley regarding world markets, BRICs and Emerging Markets. Click on the image to watch Part I (the player will automatically play all three segments:

Jim O'Neill, Goldman Sachs

Click here for the second video on the BRIC economies.

And click here for his view on investment in emerging markets.

Here is a synopsis of the interview, which is worth watching:

Part I: World Markets

  • I suspect [2009] its not going to be as bad as 2008.
  • The worst quarter for the world economy may very well be the 4th quarter of 2008.
  • In some ways it was extremely bad, with -4-5% GDP growth annualized drop.
  • Indicators suggest that there’s been a huge improvement since November.
  • In the first 5 days of the year there was a slight gain in the S&P500, and those of us who look at that believe that as goes the first 5 days so goes the year.
  • 80% of our clients are very negative about the world economy.
  • Markets are markets, and if that is truly representative, then aren’t that many more who can get negative and improvements in anything will be a surprise.
  • In think its possible for the US to have a similar outcome as Japan, and because of the Japanese experience, US policymakers have learned from their mistakes, and I don’t think that’s going to the case in America.
  • After all the financial shocks that we got last year, especially during September and October, where it was one every two or three days at one point, which were so demanding. I’m assuming we got all the surprise shocks; if there is another surprise shock at this stage, then I would be once again concerned, that would be extremely worrying, it would force me to have a different view.

Part II: Regarding the BRICs (O’Neills favourite subject)

  • Manchester United is actually Jim O’Neill’s favourite subject.
  • BRICs come close to favourite.
  • If you look at last year in the context of where its come from, its pretty obvious that in the midst of a major slump in the developed markets the BRICs would be affected.
  • At the beginning of 2008, the BRICs, at least India and China, were trading at 2X the valuation of the US market. There’s no way they could cope with a 20-30% drop in a major markets with that valuation and slowing.
  • When we started this thing [BRICs] the idea that these markets would go up every year forever was something we never believed.
  • If you actually look at the returns, they’re still showing over 120% total returns since we started 7 years ago, and the S&P 500 is down 25% over the same period.
  • Anybody who thinks the BRICs thing is over because of last year is living in a dream world, its just because they may have gotten in late.
  • I think Russia is the independent weak link and the Russian story is by and large an oil price story, plus some political view as well.
  • I’ve always believed for the last 3 years that we needed to see commodity prices dropping in order to see what would happen to Brazil and Russia who are very dependent on commodities.
  • Clearly with the price of oil going down, that was not good for Russia. What you need to see there is a quicker changes about policy, or for oil prices to go up otherwise they’re going to have another tough year.
  • One of my favourite ideas across the board, not just for the BRIC, is investing in Chinese domestic demand.
  • Look at the fiscal and monetary policy response in China. It’s huge. There is some evidence already of monetary growth is already picking up in China. The freight indices such as the Baltic Dry Index and others have started to turn around again. I suspect that is a sign of Chinese demand already starting to turn for commodities which ultimately is going to be good for places like Russia (and Brazil); at its worst it will take a while; Russia will look like it’s in a recession, but the idea that Russia is finished is risky in itself.
  • I’m surprised at the attention the bad Chinese export numbers are getting, given what’s happened to the US economy; obviously Chinese exports are going to be weak given that at one point China was exporting up to 10% of its GDP to the US.
  • What you need to do is look at what’s happening going forward with China’s domestic demand policy, and on that score, I am very optimistic.

Pat III: Looking at opportunities in Sub-Saharan Africa

  • I don’t think of BRICs as emerging markets, in the traditional sense. I think of them as the lynchpin of the modern globalized economy, because they’re all so big in terms of population.
  • I do think it’s a different question to ask about emerging markets beyond the BRICs.
  • If what I said about some recovery in some of the world’s major equity markets doesn’t happen then I think that a lot of emerging markets will struggle, but if I’m right and we do see some shoots of recovery in major markets, I would guess even some of the riskier ones will end up surprising people by showing strong returns.
  • By and large, EM will be at the riskier end of the spectrum, so when things go down, they tend to suffer the most, and when things go up they tend to do the best.
  • Recovery in the emerging markets will depend on the risk appetites of foreign investors.
  • If things continue poorly in the US, I think that there are a number of places such as Eastern Europe that could become a really big problem, some parts of Asia and Latin America with large external deficits, would have major problems attracting funding.
  • Outside of the BRICs where I spend most of my time, I’m very intrigued about Africa.
    • We have (Jacob) Zuma coming on the scene in South Africa, and that could be a very big issue. Zuma could do a Lula, and surprises people positively, that he’s not some kind of raving lunatic, keeps sensible economic policies and South Africa does better than people think.
    • Obviously Zimbabwe. That’s been a mess. Will that change, and if it does, that will be another source of positive surprise for the continent in general.
    • The last one, which is the biggest in many ways, Nigeria. People started to warm to Nigeria, the past couple of years. It ended up struggling, there seems to be perennial problems about certain areas of geography about Nigeria and the politics. If that carries on then Nigeria might become a source of disappointment. On the flipside of that, if you get the governance on side, then maybe Nigeria’s the place to look at.
    • I have a bit of my money in Africa, I wouldn’t put too much of my safe money there, but its the one that I’m most excited about in terms of where I’m willing to take risk.
  • I think its time to take a bit of risk. We started by talking about how cautious people are, and that’s a good sign. Last year at the same time, there weren’t many people cautious, and when we got all the bad news we were all vulnerable to it. Now, people all over the world are scared, paranoid. Now, we’re going to climb a wall of worry, I suspect, so long as policy is helpful.



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Posted in Commodities, Economy, Emerging Markets, Energy & Natural Resources, Gold, India, Markets, Oil and Gas | Comments Off


Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (January 5 – 11, 2009)

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

Global stock markets reversed course during the last three days of the first full trading week of 2009 as investors were confronted with dreadful economic data, escalating layoffs and a bleak earnings outlook.

As investor sentiment soured, the MSCI World Index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index declined by 2.5% and 1.7% respectively during “turnaround week”.

The US stock markets – leaders among mature markets since the November 20 low – were on the receiving end of the selling orders and recorded relatively large weekly losses of 4.8% for the Dow Jones Industrial Index and 4.4% for the S&P 500 Index. On the other end of the performance scale, Brazil (+11.8%) and Ireland (+11.0%) brought investors cheer. (The Dublin ISEQ Index was the worst bear market performer, losing 76.8% from June 2007 to November 2008.)

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Source: Daryl Cagle

Elsewhere, the US Dollar Index (+1.0%) closed up for the week, but off its highs on the back of dismal US labor market data. As governments seek to raise record amounts of debt to stimulate declining economies, the increasing supply of sovereign paper pushed up yields of longer-dated bonds in the US, UK and eurozone. “The long-held assumption that US assets – particularly government bonds – are a safe haven will soon be overturned as investors lose their patience with the world’s biggest economy,” said respected economist Willem Buiter in The Telegraph.

Despite geopolitical problems and the disruption of European gas supplies, West Texas Intermediate Crude closed 11.9% down on the week as the severity of the global recession raised fresh concerns about demand. Platinum (+6.2%) made up lost ground relative to its precious metal cousins, gold (-2.8%) and silver (-1.5%). (Also see my post “Picture du Jour: Gold or platinum?“.)

The release on Tuesday of the minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee’s meeting of December 15 and 16 showed committee members very concerned about the economic outlook. It was decided to move beyond using the Fed funds rate as the key policy tool, expand the central bank’s balance sheet to buy assets to help reduce longer-term interest rates, and make it explicit to keep the Fed funds rate low for an extended period of time, also in an attempt to bring down longer-term rates.

The Fed on Monday started its $500 billion program of buying securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, resulting in a decline in home loan rates.

Meanwhile, President-elect Barack Obama’s incoming administration is planning an economic stimulus package worth more than $800 million, including $300 million of tax cuts. Obama said: “The economy is very sick. Economists from across the political spectrum agree that if we don’t act swiftly and boldly, we could see a much deeper economic downturn …”

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Source: Daryl Cagle

The past week saw some progress on the credit front, with the TED spread (down to 1.20% from 4.65% on October 10, 2008), LIBOR-OIS spread (down from 3.64% on October 10 to 1.07%) and GSE mortgage spreads having narrowed markedly since the record highs. More recently, high-yield spreads have also seen a strong improvement, with the Merrill Lynch US High Yield Index declining by 23.7% since its high of December 15 (see chart below).

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Although credit spreads still have to narrow considerably before the world’s financial system functions normally again, the recent action has been a step in the right direction.

With many analysts warning that the bubble in Treasuries looks ready to pop, corporate credit seems to beckon. According to a Financial Times survey of 30 leading asset managers and strategists “high-grade corporate bonds are set to outperform other asset classes in 2009″.

The iBoxx Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund (LQD) and High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG) both rallied over the past week and increased by 2.0% and 3.8% respectively. These Funds have performed excellently since their October/November lows, with LQD up by 26.7% and HYG by 26.2% from November.

Next, a quick textual analysis of the dozens of articles I have read during the past week. Interestingly, many reports were concerned with “bonds” and “yields”.

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Turning to the outlook for the stock market, Bennet Sedacca (Atlantic Advisors Asset Management) warned as follows in a guest post entitled “Setting the bull trap“: “The Fed has declared a war on savers, a war on prudence and provided the ultimate Moral Hazard Card – and with our money no less. They are also setting up the ULTIMATE BULL TRAP – a trap so large that when it is sprung, perhaps as early as the end of the first quarter/beginning of second quarter, there will only be sellers left.”

“It is difficult to see how equities can sustain an advance until the monetary transmission mechanism begins to function more normally,” added BCA Research. “In addition, the poor earnings outlook will be a persistent headwind for stocks throughout 2009 and analysts are likely to be disappointed in their overly optimistic profit forecasts: earnings could fall by as much as 25 to 30% as revenue growth slows and margins contract.”

Arguing the bullish case from Hong Kong, Puru Saxena’s MoneyMatters newsletter listed the following reasons to support his viewpoint that “the skies are clearing for a four- to five-year bull market”: surging liquidity, low interest rates, declining corporate bond yields, declining TED spread, low valuations, volatility has peaked, the US dollar rally has ended, global stock markets are making higher lows, and a huge amount of cash on the sidelines.

The short-term technical picture is tricky, with the Dow having pulled back below the 50-day moving average and the S&P 500 (shown in the graph below) testing both the 50-day line and the short-term trendline defining the bottom of a rising wedge (usually a negative chart pattern). The December 22 and 29 lows of 857 are also important initial levels for the uptrend to remain intact.

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Commenting on the chart, Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters) said: “My guess (and I do have to guess) is that the market will be doing work inside the bottom pattern. This is only natural since it takes a good deal of ‘work’ for stocks to break out of a bottom in the face of the ongoing abysmal news. It looks like we are going to have some bobbing and weaving inside the base that has formed. A breakout either way may be a matter of months away.”

An old stock market saw tells us the first five trading days of January sets the course for January, and if the month of January is higher, there is a good chance the year will end higher, i.e. the so-called “January Barometer”. So far so good, as the S&P 500 registered a gain of 0.7% over the first five days (although the Dow was down by 0.4%).

Jeffrey Hirsch (Stock Trader’s Almanac) said: “The return of seasonal bullish market action is encouraging. Since the week of Thanksgiving the market has been constructive. Thanksgiving week was bullish, as was the last half of December, the Santa Claus Rally and now the First Five Days. The final arbiter of these year-end/new-year indicators is of course the January Barometer at month-end.”

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While a sustained stock market advance will rely on the thawing of credit markets, I am of the opinion that selective buying in global markets is in order. However, make sure to winnow the wheat from the chaff. The current default rate on American high-yield bonds is less than 4%, but Barclays Capital is predicting a rate of 14.3% by the second half of 2009. “If 2008 was the year of systemic risk [i.e. risk affecting all assets], 2009 seems likely to be a year dominated by specific risk [i.e. risk that is unique to each asset],” said The Economist.

For more discussion about the direction of stock markets, also see my post “Video-o-rama: Figuring out the lie of the financial land“.

Economy
“Global business confidence began 2009 as dark as it has ever been. While sentiment has improved a bit during the last two weeks, it remains near record lows,” said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted by Moody’s Economy.com. “Businesses are nearly equally pessimistic across the globe and across all industries. Hiring intentions have turned particularly negative in recent weeks. Pricing power has collapsed, suggesting that deflation is a significant threat.”

The eurozone economy contracted by 0.2% in the third quarter of 2008, according to Eurostat. Following a similar decline in GDP in the previous quarter, the monetary union has officially entered a recession.

The latest industrial production data for the UK, Germany and France continued a downward spiral. It therefore did not come as a surprise that the Bank of England (BoE) on Thursday lowered its repo rate by 50 basis points to 1.5% – the lowest level since the inception of the BoE in 1694. The European Central Bank (ECB) is also expected to lower interest next Thursday as a result of gloomy economic reports and the eurozone inflation rate last month falling below the ECB’s target.

Nouriel Roubini (RGE Monitor) said: “Manufacturing surveys reflect simultaneous contraction in manufacturing throughout the G7 and in key emerging markets like China, Brazil and Russia, verifying the global recession that is well on course. PMI and industrial production is at decade lows in key emerging markets, and the US and EU PMI surveys reflect the weakest levels in several decades.” The JPMorgan Global Manufacturing PMI, posting its weakest reading ever in December, bears this out.

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As far as the US is concerned, 2008 ended on a depressing note for the US labor market. Payroll employment declined by 524,000 jobs in December, slightly more than expected and the largest one-month decline since December, 1974. Payrolls shrank by 2.6 million jobs over the course of 2008, recording the largest annual decline since 1945. The unemployment rate rose to 7.2% – the highest level since the early 1990s.

“The Bureau of Labor Statistics employed seasonal adjusting chicanery to mitigate job losses. Not seasonally adjusted (NSA), 954,000 jobs were lost. Additionally, the BLS’s hokey Net Business Birth/Death Model unfathomably created 72,000 jobs in December,” commented Bill King (The King Report).

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust) summarized the US economic situation as follows: “The Fed is expected to stay on hold for all of 2009 in terms of implementing monetary policy changes via adjustments of the target Fed funds rate, but other non-interest avenues to support/ease financial market conditions remain open. The details of the employment report are grim and provide ample evidence for proponents of a large fiscal stimulus package to revive economic activity.”

Week’s economic reports

Economatrix, January 11, 2009

Click here for the week’s economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic Data.

Source: Yahoo Finance, January 9, 2009.

In addition to a speech by Fed Chairman Bernanke at the London School of Economics (Tuesday, January 13) and the European Central Bank’s interest rate announcement (Thursday, January 15), the US economic highlights for the week, courtesy of Northern Trust, include the following:

1. International Trade (January 13): The trade deficit is predicted to have narrowed in November ($54.5 billion versus a trade gap of $57.2 billion in October), largely reflecting lower prices of imported oil. Consensus: $51.5 billion.

2. Retail Sales (January 14): Auto sales moved up slightly in December (10.7 million versus 10.3 million in November). But lackluster non-auto retail sales and lower gasoline prices should bring down the headline reading. Consensus: -1.2% versus 0.3% in January; non-auto retail sales: 0.2% versus 0.3% in January.

3. Producer Price Index (January 15): The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods is expected to have declined by 1.7% in December, reflecting lower energy prices. The core PPI is most likely to have risen by 0.1% after a 0.2% increase in November. Consensus: -2.0%, core PPI +0.1%.

4. Consumer Price Index (January 16): A drop in the overall CPI, due to lower energy prices, is nearly certain. The core CPI is expected to have increased by 0.1% after holding steady in November. Consensus: -0.9%, core CPI +0.1%.

5. Industrial production (January 16): The 2.4% drop in the manufacturing man-hours index in December is indicative of a large decline in industrial production (-1.3%). The operating rate is projected to have dropped to 74.5 in December. Consensus: -1.2%; Capacity Utilization: 74.5 versus 75.4 in November.

6. Other reports: Inventories, Import prices (January 14), Consumer Sentiment Index (January 16).

Click here for a summary of Wachovia’s weekly economic and financial commentary.

Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during the past week.

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Source: Wall Street Journal Online, January 9, 2009.

And now for a few news items and some words from the investment wise that should be of help in keeping our investment portfolios on a winning path. As the Irish say: “Go n-éirí an bóthar leat. May the road rise with you.”

That’s the way it looks from Cape Town.

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CNN Money: The wealthy self-destruct
“Millionaires and billionaires are turning to suicide in the wake of the financial crisis.”

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Source: CNN Money, January 9, 2009.

CNBC: Marc Faber – markets to rally, but retest lows

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Click here for article.

Source: CNBC, January 9, 2009.

Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis: Themes for 2009
“Looking ahead in 2009 here are some things I see as likely.

“Obama will pass a stimulus package of $850+ billion but $300 billion will be ‘tax relief’ amounting to $19 a week per household at most. $19 a week is not going to stimulate much of anything but it will add to the budget deficit. People will use that money to pay down bills, which is exactly what they should be doing with it.

“The first 3-5 months are going to be extremely weak on the jobs front with 400,000 or more jobs lost each month. Obama is going to need to create 2-3 million jobs just to counteract job losses in first half of the year. There is no way he is going to create jobs that fast given implosions in state budgets and retailers.

“In 2009 consumers will continue to retrench, housing will continue to decline, and as many as 100 small or regional banks will implode over falling commercial real estate prices. The Fed may arrange shotgun marriages with these banks instead of letting them go under.

“I am sticking with a thesis that says we are currently in a sucker rally in the stock market that will end soon after inauguration or moments after Obama signs a new stimulus package. My target is 600 on the S&P but 450 is not out of the question. However, it is better to think of this in ranges and that range would roughly be 450-700.

“It is quite possible the lows in treasury yields are in. Unlike 2008 where I was constantly beating the drums for lower yields, 2009 could be different. Here are the facts: 3 month and 6 month yields hit 0% and the 10 year came close to hitting 2%. Could there be lower yields still? Yes, quite easily. Is it worth playing for other than as a hedge or part of an overall investment strategy? No.

“Should treasuries be shorted? No, it is too early. Yields can easily make lower lows. Just because something is not a good long, does not make it a good short. Look at how long yields stayed low in Japan. I doubt we see a print of 4 on the 10-year treasury for a long time. If one wants to bet on yields rising for a reflation trade, there are better plays such as going long energy stocks that yield a nice dividend as well.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Mike “Mish” Shedlock, Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis, January 6, 2009.

CNBC: President-elect Obama on the economy

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Source: CNBC, January 8, 2009.

BBC News: Obama says US economy “very sick”
“US President-elect Barack Obama has described America’s economy as ‘very sick’ and has said that the situation was worsening. Earlier, he met politicians in Washington to discuss ways to boost the economy and create new jobs.

“US media reports say he is planning a stimulus package worth more than $800 billion, including $300 billion of tax cuts.

“Mr Obama has said he wants a plan that will create 3 million jobs by 2011.

“The president-elect hopes to be able to enact the package shortly after his inauguration on 20 January.

“‘The economy is very sick,’ he said. ‘We have to act and act now to break the momentum of this recession. We’ve got an extraordinary economic challenge ahead of us, we’re expecting a sobering job report at the end of the week.’

“‘Economists from across the political spectrum agree that if we don’t act swiftly and boldly, we could see a much deeper economic downturn that could lead to double-digit unemployment and the American dream slipping further and further out of reach,’ Mr Obama said.”

Source: BBC News, January 06, 2009.

CNBC: Barney Frank on TARP
“Rep. Barney Frank comments on the revisions to the TARP.”

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Source: CNBC, January 9, 2009.

Fox Business: Outraged! – Peter Schiff on the economy

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Source: Fox Business, January 7, 2009.

Financial Times: New York Fed starts $500 billion home loans aid
“The Federal Reserve Bank of New York on Monday said it had started its $500 billion plan to drive down US mortgage rates by buying securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, the government-run mortgage financiers.

“Mortgage bond yields fell sharply as a result, extending a dramatic decline that followed the New York Fed’s announcement of the programme on November 25. Thirty-year agency mortgage securities yielded 190 basis points over Treasuries on Monday, compared with 208bp on Friday.

“The Fed did not disclose the amount of its purchases on Monday, but said it would provide weekly updates on its buying programme from Thursday.

“Last week, the New York Fed pushed forward with its plan by setting a goal of buying $500 billion in mortgage-backed securities by mid-2009, part of a sustained effort to help the US weather the financial crisis.

“A reduction in financing costs for the mortgage agencies translates into lower rates for US home loans. Average interest rates on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages have fallen from 6% to about 5.3% since the program was announced in November, according to Bankrate.com.”

Source: Saskia Scholtes, Financial Times, January 5, 2009.

The Seattle Times: Steel industry hopes for big stimulus shot
“The steel industry, having entered the recession in the best of health, is emerging as a leading indicator of what lies ahead. As steel production goes, and it is now in collapse, so will go the national economy.

“That maxim once applied to the Big Three car companies. Now they are losing ground in good times and bad, and steel has replaced autos as the industry to watch for an early sign that a severe recession is beginning to lift.

“The industry itself is turning to government for orders that, until the collapse, came from manufacturers and builders.

“Its executives are waiting anxiously for details of President-elect Obama’s stimulus plan and adding their voices to pleas for a huge public investment program – up to $1 trillion over two years – that will lift demand for steel to build highways, bridges, power grids, schools, hospitals, water-treatment plants and rapid transit.

“New spending should provide an immediate jolt to the steel business, which has already gone through the painful makeover now demanded of the Big Three.”

Source: Louis Uchitelle, The Seattle Times, January 2, 2009.

Financial Times: US deficit set for postwar record
“The US budget deficit will hit nearly $1,200 billion this fiscal year even without the cost of Barack Obama’s planned fiscal stimulus, Congress’s budget watchdog warned on Wednesday.

“The warning came as the president-elect said that the stimulus would be ‘on the high end of our estimates’ – implying close to $775 billion over two years – but ‘will not be as high as some economists have recommended, because of the constraints and concerns we have about the existing deficit’.

“The estimate, published by the Congressional Budget Office, threw into stark relief the dilemma facing the president-elect, highlighting the urgent need for stimulus and the fraught state of public finances.

“The CBO said that the budget deficit for the fiscal year 2009 would ‘shatter the previous post-World War Two record’ relative to the size of the US economy. Without a stimulus, it said that the deficit would reach 8.3% of gross domestic product. Its numbers imply that the proposed stimulus could push the US fiscal deficit close to or over 10% of GDP.”

Source: Krishna Guha, Edward Luce and Andrew Ward, Financial Times, January 7, 2009.

Financial Times: Auto sales hit fresh lows in December
“Motor vehicle sales plumbed fresh lows around the world last month, adding to pressure on carmakers, their suppliers and dealers.

“General Motors, Toyota, Ford and Honda all reported declines of more than 30% in the US, the biggest market, compared with December 2007. Total fourth-quarter sales were the lowest since 1981.

“Car sales in Japan, including buses, dropped 22% to the lowest December level on record, according to the Japan Automobile Dealers Association.

“In Europe, registrations in Spain plunged by almost half, in France by 24% and Italy 13.2%.

“The slump in the US and Europe reflected flagging consumer confidence and tight credit.”

Source: Bernard Simon, Financial Times, January 5, 2009.

Bloomberg: Nouriel Roubini – worst is still ahead of US
“The global financial system in 2008 experienced its worst crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Major financial institutions went bust. Others were bought up on the cheap or survived only after major bailouts. Global stock markets fell by more than 50% from their 2007 peaks. Interest-rate spreads spiked. A severe liquidity and credit crunch appeared. Many emerging-market economies on the verge of a crisis had to ask for help from the International Monetary Fund.

“So what lies ahead in 2009? Is the worst behind us or ahead of us?

“Unfortunately, the worst is ahead of us. The entire global economy will contract in a severe and protracted U-shaped global recession that started a year ago. The US will certainly experience its worst recession in decades, a deep and protracted contraction lasting at least through the end of 2009. Even in 2010 the economic recovery may be so weak – 1% growth or so – that it will feel terrible even if the recession is technically over.

“There also will be recessions in the euro zone, the UK, continental Europe, Canada, Japan and the other advanced economies.

“A hard landing for emerging-market economies may also be at hand. Among the so-called BRICs, Russia will be in an outright recession in 2009. Growth in China will slow to 5% or less, representing a hard landing for a country that needs expansion of close to 10% to move 10 million to 15 million poor rural farmers into the urban industrial sector every year. Brazil will barely grow in 2009. Even India will experience a sharp slowdown.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Nouriel Roubini, Bloomberg, January 1, 2009.

E.S. Browning (The Wall Street Journal): Rebound Wrinkle – recession
“Since the Great Depression, only two recessions have run longer than this one, the first ending in 1975 and the other in 1982. Each lasted 16 months, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the government-designated recession tracker.

“The current recession, beginning in December 2007, has run 13 months and could easily surpass those two. If it goes past March, as many economists expect, it will become the longest-running since the 43-month beast that ended in 1933.”

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Source: E.S. Browning, The Wall Street Journal, January 5, 2009.

BCA Research: FOMC Minutes – Fed’s balance sheet to balloon further
“The Minutes from the mid-December FOMC meeting confirmed that policymakers are very concerned about the possibility of a prolonged economic slump and a sustained bout of deflation.

“With the fed funds rate virtually zero, the Minutes highlighted that the policy focus would shift to unconventional tools. The first such tool is communication strategy. This includes signalling that the policy rate would stay ‘exceptionally low for some time’, in order to keep longer-term borrowing rates low.

“The Fed also would reinforce its commitment to keep inflation from falling below ‘desired levels’ on a sustained basis, in order to avoid an unwelcome rise in real rates of interest if expectations for deflation mushroom (as occurred in Japan).

“The second major unconventional tool is quantitative easing, in which the Fed’s balance sheet and excess bank reserves would grow as needed while purchasing large amounts of assets (including Agencies and Agency-backed MBS).

“Although not mentioned in the Minutes, the Fed’s next move could be to purchase high-quality corporate bonds if yields on these instruments do not fall in the near term. Bottom line: Investors should expect falling private sector bond yields and a long period of zero short-term rates.”

Source: BCA Research, January 8, 2009.

Trader Dan (JS Mineset): Fed monetizing US agency debt
“The reason they [the Fed] are being forced into buying the debt is because no one else wants it. We have been charting this for some time by monitoring the Custodial data from the US Federal Reserve system.

“… chart … see how foreign central banks are dumping Fannie and Freddie debt in large amounts onto the market. Without the Fed monetizing that debt, there would be a significant drop off in the amount of funds for mortgages.

“The Fed is going to need every bit of that $500 billion they are going to create out of thin air to acquire what the foreign central banks are unloading.”

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Source: Trader Dan, JS Mineset, January 5, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): December employment report – further deterioration of labor conditions
- Civilian Unemployment Rate: 7.2% in December versus 6.8% in November, cycle low is 4.4% in March 2007.

- Payroll Employment: -524,000 in December versus -584,000 in November, net loss of 154,000 jobs after revisions of payroll estimates for October and November.

- Hourly earnings: +5 cents to $18.36, 3.7% yoy change versus 3.8% yoy change in November; cycle high is 4.28% yoy change in December 2006.

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“The Fed is expected to stay on hold for all of 2009 in terms of implementing monetary policy changes via adjustments of the target federal funds rate but other non-interest avenues to support/ease financial market conditions remain open. The details of the employment report are grim and provide ample evidence for proponents of a large fiscal stimulus package to revive economic activity.”

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 9, 2009.

Paul Kedrosky (Infectious Greed): There’s unemployment, and then there’s unemployment
“I have been sent this Reuters story from yesterday umpteen times, so I may as well post it, as well as the underlying graph. The gist: If unemployment were being measured the same way as it was during the Depression, the US would be well on its way to similar numbers.

“Check the SGS line in the following graph from John Williams’ ShadowStats:

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“Eye-opening, is it not?

“A few quick comments:

- Unemployment by SGS’s measure is at almost 18%, but it’s also not been under 10% in recent history.

- The whole idea of employment/unemployment has changed a great deal over time, with, for example, there being more part-time and flex work etc., messing with figures.

- The existence of a social safety net has, for better or worse, made it possible for people to withdraw permanently from the workforce without having to live on the streets.

- There is no denying that there are far more able-bodied people out of work than the skewed-low US BLS figures purport to show.”

Source: Paul Kedrosky, Infectious Greed, January 9, 2009.

Bloomberg: Pimco’s McCulley says US economy in “nasty recession”
“Paul McCulley, managing director at Pimco, talks with Bloomberg’s Kathleen Hays about the outlook for the US economy in 2010. McCulley says the Fed is using the right policy response to the current crisis and that he has ‘very small’ concerns about inflation.”

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Source: Bloomberg, January 9, 2009.

Comstock Partners: The cycle of deflation

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Source: Comstock Partners, January 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Further declines in pending Home Sale Index
“The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI) of the National Association of Realtors dropped 4.0% to 82.3 in November after a 4.2% drop in the prior month. Although mortgage rates have dropped in recent months, the positive impact on the housing market in terms of an increase in sales is yet to be seen.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 6, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Non-manufacturing ISM Survey close to record low
“The Non-manufacturing ISM composite index increased to 40.6 in December from 37.3 in November. But the level is significantly below the expansion cut off mark of 50.0, implying that the non-manufacturing sector continues to lose momentum.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 6, 2009.

Bloomberg: US retail sales fell 0.8% in week after Christmas
“Purchases at US retailers declined last week as post-Christmas markdowns failed to overcome what may have been the worst holiday shopping season in four decades.

“Sales at stores open at least a year dropped 0.8% in the seven days through January 3, the International Council of Shopping Centers and Goldman Sachs Group said today [Tuesday] in a statement. ICSC Chief Economist Michael Niemira said November-December sales declined as much as 2%.

“‘December was relatively chaotic in price, with more discounts than retailers planned, especially in department stores,’ Richard Hastings, a consumer strategist at Global Hunter Securities, said in a telephone interview. ‘Consumers have discovered that the industry is responding with lower and lower and lower prices.’”

Source: Heather Burke, Bloomberg, January 6, 2009.

Bloomberg: US shopping mall vacancies reach 10-year high
“Vacancies at US malls and shopping centers approached 10-year highs in the fourth quarter, and are set to rise further as declining retail sales put more stores out of business, research firm Reis Inc. said.

“Regional mall vacancies rose to 7.1% last quarter from 6.6% in the third quarter. It was the highest vacancy rate since Reis began tracking regional malls in 2000, as well as the largest quarter-to-quarter jump in vacancies, according to New York-based Reis.

“More than a dozen retailers, including Circuit City, Linens ‘n Things and Sharper Image, filed for bankruptcy protection in 2008 as the credit squeeze and recession drained sales. Vacancies will rise further until the job market recovers, housing prices stabilize and lending resumes, restoring consumer confidence, said Reis.”

Source: Hui-yong Yu, Bloomberg, January 7, 2009.

Bespoke: “Official” 2009 strategist S&P 500 price targets
“Below we list the 2009 S&P 500 strategist price targets in the final Bloomberg survey of 2008 (on 29 December). The average 2009 year-end S&P 500 estimate of the 11 sell-side strategists that participated is 1,056, or 16.9% above the S&P’s year-end price of 903.25.

“UBS strategist David Bianco is the most bullish of the group with a year-end target of 1,300 (a 43.9% gain). Deutsche Bank’s Binky Chadha is the second most bullish with a target of 1,140, followed by Goldman, Strategas, and JP Morgan, who are all looking for a gain of 21.8%. Only one strategist, Barclays’ Barry Knapp, believes the S&P 500 will fall in 2009, but only by 3.2%.

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“The consensus estimate for year-end 2008 was 1,632 at the start of last year, which translated into an expected gain of 11.12%. Let’s hope the strategists are a little closer to the mark this year.”

Source: Bespoke, January 6, 2009.

Bespoke: Crazy gains since November 20 low
“While no one is calling it that, we are technically in a new cyclical bull market and have been since December 8. Since the 11/20 lows, the S&P 500 is up 24%, which meets the standard bull market definition of a 20% rally that was preceded by at least a 20% decline. But the unwillingness for the majority to call it a bull market is what bulls should be thankful for, since the market typically climbs a wall of worry where investors are full of doubt throughout the rally.

“Regardless of what you call it, some of the performance numbers since the 11/20 lows are downright crazy. Even though the S&P 500 is up 24% since 11/20, the average stock in the index is up 41.25%. This means the smaller cap names in the index are up much more than their larger cap brethren. And the stocks that were down the most during the 10/9/07 to 11/20/08 bear are up much more than the ones that were down the least. As shown below, the average performance since 11/20 of the 50 stocks that were down the most during the bear market is 112%! The 50 best-performing stocks during the bear market are only up an average of 8.3%.

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“And while 20 stocks in the S&P 500 are down since November 20, 29 of them are up more than 100%!”

Source: Bespoke, January 6, 2009.

Bespoke: Investor sentiment shows improvement
“When gauging investor sentiment, the two most popular surveys that track bullish sentiment are the polls conducted by Investors Intelligence of newsletter writers and the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) survey of its members. As shown below, both measures have shown improvement in recent weeks and have broken their downtrends of the last several months. Given that investor sentiment is typically a contrarian indicator, high readings of bullishness are generally considered negative for the market. However, with current bullish sentiment readings below 50%, these are hardly levels that can be considered extreme.”

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Source: Bespoke, January 8, 2009.

Investment Week: Mobius reduces cash holdings
“Franklin Templeton’s Mark Mobius has reduced his cash positions over the past couple of months, saying he is positive on the prospects for the global economy.

“Manager of the Emerging Markets Investment Trust, Mobius says he is ‘quite bullish on the future despite all the negative news’ and predicts the beginning of a recovery in the second quarter of this year.

“‘Valuations look good and with interest rates at one or below and stocks yielding up to 20% on dividends this looks very tempting for investors,’ he says.

“Mobius claims that while he is actively investing, others are not: ‘I don’t think this is the consensus – people have the feeling we are nearing the bottom but they are not putting their money there. Bull markets are built on a bull market, not a bear market. However we are being proactive.’

“Having ramped up his cash allocations going into the big fall, Mobius started reinvesting in November. He favours energy and emerging market consumer stocks – including banks which weren’t hit by the debt crisis – and maintains oil and commodities valuations are still strong.”

Source: Beth Brearley, Investment Week, January 6, 2009.

BCA Research: A challenging equity outlook
“Equity markets could have a healthy January effect this year after the fallout in 2008. However, the macro backdrop remains risky.

“Last year’s violent selloff left global equity prices down nearly 50% from their cyclical highs, making this the second deepest bear market in the past 40 years. In other words, a lot of bad news has been discounted as sentiment became crushed and investors rushed for safety. It now appears that selling pressures may finally be abating: equity prices have edged higher in recent trading days on the back of tentative improvements in the credit markets and an easing in implied option volatilities from sky-high readings.

“Upside momentum could persist in the weeks ahead as investors and money managers reposition their portfolios and redeploy some of the cash piled on the sidelines. That said, it is difficult to see how equities can sustain an advance until the monetary transmission mechanism begins to function more normally. In addition, the poor earnings outlook will be a persistent headwind for stocks throughout 2009 and analysts are likely to be disappointed in their overly optimistic profit forecasts: earnings could fall by as much as 25% to 30% as revenue growth slows and margins contract.

“Bottom line: Equities seem poised to edge higher from oversold levels but a sustained advance will rely on the stabilization of credit markets.”

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Source: BCA Research, January 5, 2009.

Bloomberg: Saut says “decent chance” equity markets have bottomed
“Jeffrey Saut, chief investment strategist at Raymond James Financial, talks with Bloomberg’s Carol Massar about his investment strategy in the stock market. Saut also discusses the outlook for the US economy and the impact of rising credit costs on corporate margins.”

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Source: Bloomberg, January 7, 2009.

The New York Times: China losing taste for US debt
“China has bought more than $1 trillion of American debt, but as the global downturn has intensified, Beijing is starting to keep more of its money at home, a move that could have painful effects for American borrowers.

“In the last five years, China has spent as much as one-seventh of its entire economic output buying foreign debt, mostly American. In September, it surpassed Japan as the largest overseas holder of Treasuries.

“But now Beijing is seeking to pay for its own $600 billion stimulus – just as tax revenue is falling sharply as the Chinese economy slows. Regulators have ordered banks to lend more money to small and medium-size enterprises, many of which are struggling with lower exports, and to local governments to build new roads and other projects.

“‘All the key drivers of China’s Treasury purchases are disappearing – there’s a waning appetite for dollars and a waning appetite for Treasuries, and that complicates the outlook for interest rates,’ said Ben Simpfendorfer, an economist in the Hong Kong office of the Royal Bank of Scotland.”

Source: Keith Bradsher, The New York Times, January 7, 2009.

Barron’s: Stay away from Treasury bonds
“The bubble in Treasuries looks ready to pop, sending prices on government debt sharply lower. But just about every other corner of the bond market beckons.”

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Click here for the article.

Source: Barron’s, January 3, 2009.

John Authers (Financial Times): A bond bubble?

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Source: John Authers, Financial Times, January 6, 2009.

Bloomberg: Treasury bond market not a bubble, Goldman Sachs says
“Goldman Sachs Group said the US Treasury market hasn’t turned into an asset bubble even as investors debate the wisdom of buying government bonds with yields near record lows.

“The US economy is likely to expand below its potential for the next six to eight quarters, resulting in lower ‘core’ inflation, according to a report released today by the New York- based firm. Inflation erodes the fixed payments of bonds.

“‘By mapping one-year ahead macro expectations to long-dated government yields through our Sudoku framework we find that global bonds are, in the aggregate, currently trading close to the model’s measure of fair value,’ Francesco Garzarelli, chief interest-rate strategist at Goldman Sachs in London, wrote in a research note.

“As the year progresses and investors’ focus shifts to the prospects for recovery into 2010, yields will likely drift higher, though in line with Goldman Sachs’ forecasts, Gazarelli wrote. Treasury 10-year note yields will likely trade at 3% to 3.25% by year-end, he said. During the current quarter, yields will trade in a 2.50% to 2.75% range, Goldman Sachs’ predicts.”

Source: Liz Capo McCormick, Bloomberg, January 8, 2009.

Financial Times: German bond sale’s fate signals trouble ahead
“A German sovereign bond auction failed on Wednesday as investors shunned one of the most liquid and safe assets in the world in a warning for governments seeking to raise record amounts of debt to stimulate slowing economies.

“The fate of the first eurozone bond auction of 2009 signals trouble ahead as governments around the world hope to issue an estimated $3,000 billion in debt this year, three times more than in 2008.

“The 10-year bonds failed to attract enough bids to reach the €6 billion the German government wanted. Bids of €5.24 billion, a cover of only 87%, amounted to the second worst auction on record in terms of demand.

“Analysts said the vast amount of supply is deterring investors and a growing number of countries, including those with deep and mature bond markets, such as Germany, the UK and Italy, are struggling to attract buyers.”

Source: David Oakley, Financial Times, January 7, 2009.

Financial Times: Asset managers turn to corporate bonds
“High-grade corporate bonds are set to outperform other asset classes in 2009, fund managers and market strategists surveyed by the Financial Times have forecast.

“More than half those surveyed said high-quality corporate credit was trading at cheap levels and that this was the asset class most likely to see a rally in 2009.

“In contrast, government bonds were the least-favoured asset class, with many of the 30 leading asset managers and strategists surveyed arguing that yields had plummeted too far in 2008, prompting talk of a possible price bubble.

“A majority of those polled said high-quality corporate bonds had been oversold after investors had abandoned corporate credit of all grades over the past year in favour of the safest and most liquid assets, such as government bonds and gold.

“Tim Bond, global head of asset allocation at Barclays Capital, said: ‘I like credit as an asset class the best. Investment-grade corporate bond spreads are at levels last seen in 1932, which happened to be an excellent point to buy credit – even though it was the middle of the Great Depression.’

“John Paul Smith at Pictet Asset Management said corporate credit offered the best potential returns while the severe global recession continued. ‘While we don’t anticipate any immediate improvement in the economic outlook, with corporate credit yields currently at unprecedented levels, investors are being paid to wait.’

“Credit market prices are consistent with an unprecedented risk of default, even for the highest quality corporate bonds.

“US investment-grade corporate bond prices, for example, imply a cumulative default rate of 36% over five years, assuming a typical recovery of 40 cents in the dollar, according to analysts at Morgan Stanley. This is more than 7.5 times higher than the worst default rate in any previous five-year period.”

Source: Esther Bintliff, Financial Times, January 5, 2009.

Bespoke: High yield spreads narrow for 13th straight day
“High yield bond spreads (based on Merrill Lynch indices) narrowed for the 13th straight trading day on Monday. This marks the longest streak of declines since April 2003, and the second longest streak since the series began in 1997.

“At a current level of 1,744 basis points above Treasuries, high yield spreads are now down 20% from their peak level from December 15 (2,182 basis points) and back to levels we saw before the election and the run on Citibank.

“Make no mistake that at current levels high yield spreads are still extremely high, but given the widespread view that the market cannot stage a meaningful rally until spreads begin to narrow, the current move is a step in the right direction.”

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Source: Bespoke, January 6, 2009.

Edmund Conway (The Telegraph): Willem Buiter warns of massive dollar collapse
“The long-held assumption that US assets – particularly government bonds – are a safe haven will soon be overturned as investors lose their patience with the world’s biggest economy, according to Willem Buiter.

“Professor Buiter, a former Monetary Policy Committee member who is now at the London School of Economics, said this increasing disenchantment would result in an exodus of foreign cash from the US.

“The warning comes despite the dollar having strengthened significantly against other major currencies, including sterling and the euro, after hitting historic lows last year. It will reignite fears about the currency’s prospects, as well as sparking fears about the sustainability of President-Elect Barack Obama’s mooted plans for a Keynesian-style increase in public spending to pull the US out of recession.

“Writing on his blog, Prof Buiter said: ‘There will, before long (my best guess is between two and five years from now) be a global dumping of US dollar assets, including US government assets. Old habits die hard. The US dollar and US Treasury bills and bonds are still viewed as a safe haven by many. But learning takes place.’”

Source: Edmund Conway, The Telegraph, January 06, 2009.

FT Alphaville: Beware, commodity index rebalancing ahead
“The major commodity indices rebalance their respective asset weightings once a year (or occasionally more) – and with that comes a mass dose of buying and selling. The 2009 rebalancing is expected to start sometime this week.

“Luckily, JP Morgan has produced its best guess of how the 2009 reweightings of the DJ AIGCI and the S&P GSCI indices will impact the market.

“The weightings for both indices are released ahead of time, but begin to kick in the first few working days of the new year. In the case of the DJ-AIGCI – which JP Morgan estimates has $25 billion in funds tracking it – the new weightings come into force during the roll period that begins January 9. The S&P GSCI index weightings kick-in after its January roll which commences January 8. JP Morgan estimates about $50 billion of investment into that index.

“JP Morgan see the most significant change coming in the DJ-AIGCI rebalance. Here the market weight of crude oil is expected to increase from 9.6% to 13.8%, gold from 10.8% to 7.9%, copper (COMEX) from 4.5% to 7.3%, live cattle from 6.4% to 4.3% and sugar from 4.7% to 3.0%. Meanwhile, S&P GSCI crude oil weight will go from 32% to 33.8%”.

Source: Izabella Kaminska, FT Alphaville, January 5, 2009.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): Merrill Lynch says rich turning to gold bars for safety
“Merrill Lynch has revealed that some of its richest clients are so alarmed by the state of the financial system and signs of political instability around the world that they are now insisting on the purchase of gold bars, shunning derivatives or ‘paper’ proxies.

“Gary Dugan, the chief investment officer for the US bank, said there has been a remarkable change in sentiment. ‘People are genuinely worried about what the world is going to look like in 2009. It is amazing how many clients want physical gold, not ETFs,’ he said, referring to exchange trade funds listed in London, New York, and other bourses.

“‘They are so worried they want a portable asset in their house. I never thought I would be getting calls from clients saying they want a box of Krugerrands,’ he said.

“Merrill predicted that gold would soon blast through its all time-high of $1,030 an ounce, and would hit $1,150 by June.”

Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph, January 9, 2009.

Reuters: Pickens – oil prices to top $100 by end of 2010
“Texas billionaire T. Boone Pickens said on Tuesday that oil prices will rise above $100 a barrel by the end of 2010 as the global economy recovers.

“Oil prices in the $40 a barrel range are ‘not going to be around much longer,’ Pickens told a gathering at Rice University in Houston.

“Oil prices have tumbled from over $147 a barrel in July to about $48 a barrel on Tuesday as demand in the United States and other developed countries slows due to the global economic crisis.

“By late 2010, Pickens sees a rebound in oil demand sparked by a global recovery, pushing prices higher. If the US continues to rely on imported oil for 70% or more of its supply, prices could reach $200 to $300 per barrel in another decade, Pickens said.

“As an investor, Pickens said he remains ‘on the sidelines’, with just 10% of his BP Capital hedge fund invested in energy. The fund lost $2 billion last year before shifting to cash as energy prices and stocks declined.”

Source: Reuters, January 6, 2009.

Bespoke: New bull market for oil
“Based on the standard bull/bear market move of 20%, oil is already well into a new bull market with its move of 44.7% since its closing low of $33.87 on December 19. Since 2000, the average oil bull market has seen the commodity rise 89%, while the average bear has seen oil decline by 39%.

“The 88-day decline in oil from 9/22 to 12/19 of 72% was by far the steepest drop the commodity has ever seen without a 20% rally. The last four bull and bear markets in oil have all come within 6 months, highlighting the extreme volatility in the commodities market.

“As shown in the bottom chart, the number of days that the last four market cycles have lasted has been much lower than normal. It’s likely that we’ll continue to see these big swings in short periods of time until the financial markets cool down.”

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Source: Bespoke, January 6, 2009.

CEP News: Euro zone services PMI falls to series low in December
“Following the release of Italian purchasing managers index figures, along with final estimates on both the French and German services PMIs, Markit Economics reported that the services sector in the euro zone continued to deteriorate as the services PMI fell to a series low in December with a revision to 42.1 from the original estimate of 42.0.

“December’s reading is much lower than November’s 42.5 print.

“‘The final euro zone PMI indicates a 0.6% fall in GDP in the fourth quarter. Although some encouraging – but only tentative – signs of a bottoming-out were evident in Spain and Italy, the downturn gathered momentum in Germany and France,’ said Markit Economics chief economist Chris Williamson.”

Source: CEP News, January 6, 2009.

Financial Times: Alistair Darling on the economy
“UK chancellor Alistair Darling talks to Chris Giles about the outook for the UK economy and what can be done by global governments.”

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Source: Financial Times, January 6, 2009.

Victoria Marklew (Northern Trust): UK – record low repo rate
“As widely expected, the Bank of England (BoE) cut its repo rate another 50bps today [Thursday], taking it to a record low 1.50%. In its rather terse statement, the bank noted that output is likely to keep falling sharply in the first half of this year, but also cited a ‘substantial’ decline in the pound as helping to offset the impact of a slower global economy. There was no obvious commitment to cut again at the February 5 Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, which probably explains the small bounce in sterling this morning.

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“Today’s policy statement from the BoE said that ‘further measures’ are needed to increase lending to business and consumers, but it did not specify what, and nor did it include any comment on quantitative easing. Boosting money supply would require the approval of the government but Chancellor Darling has dismissed the idea, telling reporters that ‘nobody is talking about printing money’.”

Source: Victoria Marklew, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, January 8, 2009.

Bloomberg: Is China’s economy crisis-bound?
“Anyone who said a year ago that China’s economy was crisis-bound was dismissed out of hand. Today, skeptics have lots of company.

“‘This year is going to be characterized by much, much weaker growth in China than I think people are anticipating,’ says Jim Walker, chief economist at Asianomics in Hong Kong.

“That may be news to the World Bank, which forecasts China will expand 7.5% in 2009. The government is targeting 8% growth, believing the $586 billion stimulus package it announced in November will boost the world’s fourth-biggest economy.

“Citigroup agrees. ‘The most important reason supporting our confidence about 8% growth is the government’s will and ability,’ says Huang Yiping, the bank’s chief Asia-Pacific economist in Hong Kong.

“That’s the problem. Chinese officials have done a masterful job generating growth, creating jobs and reducing poverty. They have done so with impressive regularity and earned the trust of many economists and investors. It’s important to remember, though, that external trends made China’s success possible.

“There’s no doubt that China’s leaders have the will to support growth. The question is their ability to do so while all of the world’s economic engines sputter. Yes, all.”

Source: William Pesek, Bloomberg, January 7, 2009.

US Global Investors: Below-trend economic growth in store for China
“2008 could register the first below-trend economic growth for China after five straight years of supernormal expansion. Based on China’s post-reform history, however, a cyclical downturn would typically last more than four years on average, which means a potential, multiyear cycle of growth moderation has yet to arrive.”

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Source: US Global Investors – Weekly Investor Alert, January 9, 2009.

Reuters: What is Russia’s end-game in gas row?
“Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin raised the stakes in his gas conflict with Ukraine by slashing supplies to Europe, a measure that has left some EU states struggling to heat homes in sub-zero temperatures.

“Russian gas export monopoly Gazprom said it was forced to take that step because Ukraine – locked in a dispute with Moscow over gas pricing – was stealing gas being pumped across its territory for customers in Europe.

“What was Putin seeking to achieve by reacting in this way? There is so far no consensus among diplomats and analysts about what Russia’s end-game is.

“The Kremlin started out with the modest aim of persuading Ukraine to pay closer to market prices for its gas, but has now been out-manoeuvred by Kiev.

“‘Russia and Gazprom have walked into a trap,’ said Fyodr Lukyanov, editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs.

“He said Ukraine – desperate not to pay more for its gas because of the fragile state of its economy – seized the initiative from Moscow by endangering exports to Europe.

“‘They are calculating, and I think not without basis, that the longer this drags on the more the blame will be laid at Moscow’s door,’ said Lukyanov.

“He said Gazprom, under pressure from a Europe angry its supplies are being disrupted and fearful for its reputation as an energy supplier, will now be forced to cut the price it is demanding Ukraine pay for its gas. ‘Ukraine wants to go back to the negotiations from a position of strength … And it is working,’ he said.”

Source: Reuters, January 7, 2009.

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Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (Dec 8 – 14, 2008)

Sunday, December 14th, 2008

Despite a litany of bleak economic and corporate news confronting investors during the past week, global stock markets digested the bearish fodder with a sense of aplomb. The MSCI World Index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index gained 4.4% and 10.9% respectively on the week, with other reflation trades such as gold (+9.1%) and oil (+20.4%) also putting in a strong performance.

But investor angst was never completely allayed as seen from the yields on US one- and three-month Treasury Bills briefly trading in negative territory for the first time since 1940, indicating the willingness of risk-averse investors to pay the government for the “privilege” of holding their money. Three-month T-Bills ended the week in positive territory but barely so at a minuscule 0.036% yield, indicating that liquidity was still being hoarded. (Also see my “Credit Crisis Watch“.)

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Source: Nick Anderson, Slate

The week kicked off on a positive note after US president-elect Barack Obama had spelled out his plans on Sunday for the biggest infrastructure investment in the US since the 1950s. According to CNN, Obama said: “We understand that we’ve got to provide a blood infusion to the patient right now to make sure that the patient is stabilized. And that means that we can’t worry short term about the deficit [which might surpass $1 trillion before his spending plans are included]. We’ve got to make sure that the economic stimulus plan is large enough to get the economy moving.”

“The resultant infrastructure and physical assets will be far better than endowing busted banks, insurance companies and other financial entities with US taxpayers’ cash, which effectively goes down a black hole,” remarked Bill King (The King Report).

Financial markets reacted negatively to the US Senate’s failure to agree on a $14 billion loan to the troubled automakers. The prospect of the biggest industrial failure in US history caused a sell-off on global stock markets, a widening of credit spreads and an onslaught on the US dollar.

However, the US Treasury was quick to signal its readiness to provide funds to prop up the “Big Three”, as quoted in the Financial Times: “Because Congress failed to act, we will stand ready to prevent an imminent failure until Congress reconvenes and acts to address the long-term viability of the industry.” This indication resulted in an improved tone on financial markets by the close of the week.

Next, a tag cloud from the plethora of articles I have devoured over the past week. This is a way of visualizing word frequencies at a glance. Key words such as “credit”, “debt”, “economy”, “Fed”, “government”, “market”, “rates” and “stock” occur often, but “gold” is also becoming increasingly prominent.

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Back to the issue of markets shrugging off bad news for the second week running. Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters) commented as follows: “On top of everything else, Lowry’s Selling Pressure Index dropped substantially yesterday [Wednesday] and is now in a definite declining trend. At the same time, Lowry’s Buying Power Index is trending higher. Thus, the odds are saying that the trend of the stock market is turning up.

“This is all the more dramatic since this potential upturn has arrived in the face of black-bearish news. Markets bottoming and rising in the face of bearish news are often the most profitable ones. I have never seen a bear market hit its low amid happy news headlines.”

On a fundamental note, 39% of the constituents of the MSCI World Index sell at a discount to shareholders’ equity. “The cash-rich companies allow investors to pay nothing for future earnings streams,” said Jean-Marie Eveillard in an interview with Bloomberg.

A positive for the bulls is that the period post Thanksgiving through the end of the year has usually been a bullish time for stocks, based on studies by Jeffrey Hirsch (Stock Trader’s Almanac). Should the bullish seasonal tendencies provide a tailwind on this occasion, possible first targets are the 50-day moving averages of 8,784 for the Dow Jones Industrial Index (current level 8,630) and 910 for the S&P 500 Index (current level 880).

The last word on equities goes to Hong Kong-based Puru Saxena: “I cannot say with any certainty whether we are already in the early stages of the next cycle. Under my best case scenario, we are in the very early stages of a new multi-year bull market. And under my worst case scenario, we are going to get a very strong rebound (30% move higher in the S&P 500) over a short period of time, which will probably take the markets back to their 200-day moving averages.”

Before highlighting some thought-provoking news items and quotes from market commentators, let’s briefly review the financial markets’ movements on the basis of economic statistics and a performance round-up.

Economy
“Global business confidence has been shattered. Sentiment is equally negative in North America, South America and Europe. Asian business confidence is not quite as dark, but it is falling rapidly,” said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted by Moody’s Economy.com. “Pricing power is quickly evaporating and approaching that which prevailed in 2003, the last time deflation was a concern.” According to the survey results, the global economy is suffering a severe recession.

Economic indicators released in the US during the past week mostly pointed to a deepening recession.

BCA Research said: “The year-end spending season will be the biggest bust in several decades, as consumers have been hit by a double whammy: a meltdown in financial and residential asset prices; and a sharp rise in layoffs. The government’s failure to deliver a fiscal stimulus plan and unfreeze the credit markets imply that the recession will deepen and any recovery will be pushed farther into the future.

“The contraction in payrolls and economic growth will persist until there are some signs that policy actions are finally becoming effective. The fiscal stimulus plan needed to stabilize the economy will be massive and policy rates will stay near zero for a long time.”

The precarious position of the US consumer is illustrated by a plunge of 21.9 points to 63.7 in the annual average of the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index – the largest annual average decline in the history of the Index which began in 1952, according to Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust).

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The Fed fund futures are pricing in a 76% chance of a 75 basis-point cut in rates from 1.0% to 0.25% when the FOMC meets on December 16.

However, Bill King questioned the Fed’s approach: “[Effective] Fed funds traded at zero late last night. We have screamed for months that the official or ‘target’ Fed funds rate was irrelevant because the effective funds rate was much lower, and near zero. Now Fed funds are trading at zero. Yet there will be pundits and experts that will assert that the Fed might cut its target funds rate this week to 0.50% or even 0.25% – even though the cut in the target rate is meaningless. Now that the Fed is paying interest to banks, why did the Fed allow the funds rate to trade at zero? Yep, they are terrified by something.”

Also, the Fed is considering issuing its own debt to further expand money supply without clogging up bank balance sheets and making it harder for the Fed to maintain interest rates at the desired level. RGE Monitor said: “… there are upper limits to Treasury issuance and lower limits to the amount of Treasuries the Fed can sell off from the asset side of its balance sheet. One hurdle to issuing Fed bills: The Federal Reserve Act doesn’t explicitly permit the Fed to issue notes beyond currency.”

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Elsewhere in the world, economic reports compounded anxiety about a severe global recession. Specifically, Chinese exports in November declined by 2.2% from a year earlier as a result of a drastic slowdown in demand in many of its main markets. The figures were far below forecasts and the +19% figure for October. “This is the worst collapse in Chinese exports since 1999 and is probably just the beginning of a prolonged export contraction,” said Isaac Meng, economist at BNP Paribas, as reported by the Financial Times.

Week’s economic reports
Click here for the week’s economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic Data.

Table of Economic Events, 12.13.08

Source: Yahoo Finance, December 12, 2008.

In addition to interest rate announcements by the FOMC (Tuesday) and the Bank of Japan (Thursday), next week’s US economic highlights, courtesy of Northern Trust, include the following:

1. Industrial Production (December 15): The 1.4% drop in the manufacturing man-hours index in November suggests a 1.0% decline in industrial production. The operating rate is projected to have dropped to 75.7. Consensus: -0.8%; Capacity Utilization: 75.7 versus 76.4 in October.

2. Consumer Price Index (December 16): A 0.7% decline in the CPI is forecast for November versus a 1.0% drop in October, reflecting largely lower energy prices. The core CPI is expected to have moved up by 0.1% after a 0.1% decline in October. Consensus: 1.3%, core CPI +0.1%.

3. Housing Starts (December 16): Permit extensions for new homes fell by 9.2% in October, inclusive of a 12.6% drop in permits issued for single-family homes. These figures suggest a sharp drop in housing starts (730,000). Consensus: 740,000 versus 791,000 in October.

4. Leading Indicators (December 18): Interest-rate spread and money supply are the only two components likely to make a positive contribution in November. Stock prices, initial jobless claims, manufacturing workweek, consumer expectations, vendor deliveries, and building permits are expected to make negative contributions. Forecasts of money supply and orders of consumer durables and non-defense capital goods are used in the initial estimate. The net impact is a 0.5% drop in the leading index during November, assuming building permits fell. Consensus: -0.5 %

5. Other reports: NAHB Survey (December 15), Current Account (Q4) (December 17), Philadelphia Fed Survey (December 18).

Click here for a summary of Wachovia’s weekly economic and financial commentary.

Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during the past week.

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Source: Wall Street Journal Online, December 12, 2008.

Equities
Global stock markets rallied strongly during the past week as bargain-hunters looked past the grim economic and corporate reports. Both mature and emerging markets participated in the rally, as shown by the gains of the MSCI World Index (+4.4%) and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (+10.9%). Notwithstanding the improvement, these indices were still down by 47.4% and 58.8% respectively since the peaks of October 2007.

Particularly noteworthy, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has been outperforming the Dow Jones World Index since late October (rising green line), after a period of solid underperformance from May to October (falling line).

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The chart below shows the performance of the four BRIC countries since the November 20 lows. Brazil (orange line), India (green) and Russia (red) have all recovered sharply, but China (blue) has underperformed after initial outperformance following the climactic[MR2] November 10 sell-off.

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Click here or on the thumbnail below for a (pleasantly green) market map, obtained from Finviz, providing a quick overview of last week’s performances of global stock markets (as reflected by the movements of ADR stocks).

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The Dow Jones Industrial Index was one of the few major indices to record a negative return during the past week, with US markets in general lagging other bourses as shown by the major index movements: Dow -0.1% (YTD -34.95), S&P 500 Index +0.4% (YTD -40.1%), Nasdaq Composite Index +2.1% (YTD ‘41.9%) and Russell 2000 Index +1.6% (YTD -38.8%).

The bar chart below shows the US sector performances over the week, and specifically how strongly energy and materials have recovered. Nine of the ten best-performing groups were related to commodities (diversified metals & mining, coal & consumable fuel, aluminum, steel, gold, oil & gas drilling, oil & gas exploration & production, gas utilities[MR3] , and oil & gas equipment & services).

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Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase’s (JPM) chief executive, prompted a sharp fall in financial shares with a warning that his bank was having a tough fourth quarter after a “terrible” November and December. Goldman Sachs’ (GS) earnings report on Tuesday is keenly awaited.

Based on the outperformance of emerging-market stocks and the sharp recovery of commodity-related groups, it would appear that investors are becoming less risk averse. Another example is the outperformance of small caps since the November 20 lows. A study published by Bespoke on December 8 highlighted the decile performance of stocks in the S&P 500 Index based on market cap. As shown by the chart below, the two deciles of the largest-cap stocks in the S&P 500 increased by about 17%, while the decile of the smallest-cap stocks was 54% higher.

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Fixed-income instruments
The yields on government bonds generally edged up during the past few trading days after a record-breaking plunge since the beginning of November.

The UK ten-year Gilt yield increased by 17 basis points to 3.60% and the German ten-year Bund rose by 26 basis points to 3.30%. Although the US ten-year Treasury Note yield declined by 7 basis points to 2.59% on the week, the yield edged up from an earlier five-decade low of 2.48%.

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John Hussman (Hussman Funds) expressed his concern about the level of Treasuries: “The problem with Treasury yields here is that while there are good economic reasons for the downward yield pressures, the levels are low enough to invite explosive spikes that can easily wipe out a year or more of yield-to-maturity in a few days.”

Emerging-market bonds moved in an opposite direction to mature bonds, with the JPMorgan EMBI Global Index gaining 2.4% during the week.

US mortgage rates were almost unchanged on the week, with the 30-year fixed rate rising by 2 basis points to 5.71% and the 5-year ARM declining by 1 basis point to 5.95%

The CDX and iTraxx credit indices, US Treasury Bills and high-yield spreads are still at distressed levels. Some improvement has been seen as a result of the central banks’ actions, notably the tightening of the TED and LIBOR-OIS spreads, and lower mortgage rates. However, credit spreads need to narrow further to indicate that liquidity is moving freely again and credit markets are starting to thaw. (Also see my “Credit Crisis Watch“.)

Currencies
The US dollar fell sharply as the recent relationship between risk aversion and dollar strength weakened as a result of US-specific factors like the deterioration in the US trade balance and the automaker woes. The greenback plummeted to a 13-year low against the Japanese yen and touched its lowest level against the euro for seven weeks.

As shown by the chart below, the dollar has broken below its 50-day moving average and seems to be topping out. Are foreign investors coming to the conclusion that the US currency, which briefly last week yielded a negative yield, is no longer an attractive option?

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Over the week the US dollar lost ground against the euro (-5.0%), the British pound (-1.8%), the Swiss franc (-3.6%), the Japanese yen (-1.8%), the Canadian dollar (-2.0%), the Australian dollar (-3.0%) and the New Zealand dollar (-2.2%). The US currency also fell against emerging-market currencies[MR4] , like the South African rand (-2.0%).

The British pound came under renewed pressure as the worsening economic situation triggered concerns of a currency crisis. Sterling’s trade-weighted index fell to its lowest level since record-keeping began in 1981.

Commodities
The Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index (+8.8%) closed higher by the end of the week – only its sixth positive week since commodities peaked early in July. The Baltic Dry Index – a benchmark for shipping major raw materials including coal, iron ore and grain – bounced by 15.2% from very oversold levels.

The graph below shows the movements of various commodities over the past week, indicating an improvement across the whole complex (with the exception of natural gas) as a weak US dollar pushed prices higher.

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The International Energy Agency urged a “substantial” cut in Opec output when the oil cartel meets next week, as global oil demand this year is expected to contract for the first time in 25 years. The price of West Texas Intermediate crude surged by 20.4% in expectation of a cut of at least 1 million to 1.5 million barrels a day.

Gold bullion (+9.1%) remained in favor with investors as a result of a solid supply/demand situation, store-of-value considerations and a weaker US currency. The chart below illustrates the strong inverse relationship between gold (green line) and the dollar (red line). In addition, gold has broken above its 50-day moving average (blue line) and trades at about the same level it started off in January 2008 – quite a feat in these difficult markets. Platinum (+4.9%) and silver (+8.5%) improved in tandem with the yellow metal.

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After the storm comes the calm. With only 12 more trading days remaining before we wish the tumultuous 2008 goodbye, let’s hope the calm lies just ahead. And as Richard Russell reminds us: “Calm after a bearish trend is usually bullish.” Meanwhile, the news items and words from the investment wise below will hopefully assist in steering our portfolios on a profitable course.

That’s the way it looks from Cape Town.

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Source: Dave Granlund

YouTube: The twelve days of bailouts
A bailout song for the holidays.

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Source: YouTube, December 6, 2008.

New York Magazine: Oracles of doom
They always knew the economy would collapse. What do they think will happen next?

FORTUNE TELLER: Gerald Celente
Trends Research Institute founder; owner of collapseof09.com

TRACK RECORD
Predicted 1987 crash, 1997 Asian currency crisis; said in 2007 that US was headed for “economic 9/11″ in 2008.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“Products are going to be cheaper to buy, but guess what? You’re going to need more dollars to buy them because your dollar’s going to be worth less. There is no fiscal or monetary policy that can save this. You cannot save it by printing more money.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Nouriel Roubini
NYU business professor; chairman of RGE Monitor

TRACK RECORD
Predicted this year’s crisis in 2006, pointing to a housing bust, oil shocks, and interest-rate increases.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“It’s becoming a global recession. I expect it to be the worst US recession of the last 50 years. I expect a cumulative fall in output from the peak of 4% and the unemployment rate going all the way to 9%.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Peter Schiff
President of Euro Pacific Capital

TRACK RECORD
Published “Crash Proof: How to Profit From the Coming Economic Collapse in February 2007″; star of YouTube video “Peter Schiff Was Right 2006-2007.”

CURRENT PREDICTION
“I predicted that the economy would collapse. The bigger risk I saw was the government’s attempt to solve the problem by doing exactly what they’re now doing. They’re going to create another Great Depression, but worse, because the cost of living will go through the roof.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Richard Russell
Founder of the Dow Theory Letters

TRACK RECORD
Predicted bottom of 1974 bear market; exited market before crashes in 1987 and 2000.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“As long as we can hold the Dow above 7,470, I think the situation is hopeful. That’s the halfway level from when the bull market started in 1982 and when it ended in 2007. My guess is that it will break that level. Most bear markets have wiped out more than 50% of a bull market.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Barry Ritholtz
CEO and equity research director of Fusion IQ; blogger at The Big Picture

TRACK RECORD
Predicted downturn last year.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“In March, the first-quarter numbers start coming out, and that’s potentially a problem. It’s just going to be an issue of dealing with the market. If earnings continue to drop and you end up with multiple contractions, that basically takes you to a really bad, ugly place, which is an S&P at 400 or 500. I don’t think that’s likely, but it’s certainly possible.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Jeremy Grantham
Co-founder and chairman, GMO LLC

TRACK RECORD
His 1998 ten-year forecast showed severe market declines in 2007 and 2008; warned of global bubble in April 2007.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“I would think, just to guess, that the period of heroic volatility will end pretty soon and will be replaced by a rather 1974-ish environment, where you quietly get bitterly resigned to your steady diet of bad news.”

Source: Jeff VanDam, New York Magazine, December 7, 2008.

CNBC: Merrill Lynch – outlook for 2009
“An economic and investment outlook for 2009, with Merrill Lynch’s Richard Bernstein and Davis Rosenberg.

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Source: CNBC, December 11, 2008.

Financial Times: Obama to focus on stimulus not deficit
“Barack Obama on Sunday spelled out his plans for the biggest infrastructure investment in the US for half a century. The president-elect argued that with the economy reeling, his incoming administration could not afford to worry about a spiralling budget deficit.

“Mr Obama’s proposals for government works on roads, bridges, internet broadband and school buildings, together with energy efficiency measures and health spending, are far more detailed than the normal announcements during a time of transition.

“At a time of deepening economic gloom – with half a million jobs lost last month alone – president George W. Bush has been largely absent from the recent economic debate. Mr Obama is highlighting his concern at the depth of the recession he will inherit, while fast-tracking his plans to counter it.

“‘Things are going to get worse before they get better,’ Mr Obama said on Sunday on NBC’s Meet The Press. He emphasised that his plans represented the largest US infrastructure programme since the federal highway system in the 1950s.

“‘The key is making sure we jump-start the economy in a way that doesn’t just deal with the short term, doesn’t just create jobs immediately, but also puts us on a glide path for long-term sustainable economic growth.’

“Noting the US budget deficit might surpass $1,000 billion before his spending plans are factored in, Mr Obama added: ‘We understand that we’ve got to provide a blood infusion to the patient right now to make sure that the patient is stabilised. And that means that we can’t worry short term about the deficit. We’ve got to make sure that the economic stimulus plan is large enough to get the economy moving.’

“He wanted a strong set of financial regulations to make banks, credit ratings agencies, mortgage brokers and others ‘much more accountable and behave much more responsibly’.

“‘I am absolutely confident that if we take the right steps over the coming months that not only can we get the economy back on track but we can emerge leaner, meaner and ultimately more competitive and more prosperous,’ Mr Obama said at a subsequent press conference.”

Source: Daniel Dombey, Financial Times, December 7, 2008.

Bill King (The King Report): Obama Plan one of the better plans
“The Obama Plan to spend massive amounts of money on infrastructure in the US is one of the better plans being proffered to keep the US out of a depression. But it has its drawbacks.

“Other stimulus plans put money or entitlements in US consumers’ pockets. Most of the money ends up in China, Japan or OPEC. Most infrastructure spending will remain in the US. And instead of just passing out checks or larger entitlements, jobs, mostly temps, will be created and permanent assets will result.

“The resultant infrastructure and physical assets will be far better than endowing busted banks, insurance companies and other financial entities with US taxpayers’ cash, which effectively goes down a black hole.

“Obama’s Plan will boost blue collar employment, provided a limited number of illegals are hired. This will produce an income shift to blue collar and lower middle class households. But fired employees of financial, high tech and other high-end jobs are unlikely to participate. So the multiplier effect of increased income will be less on the economy in general.

“The negatives of the plan, besides the massive debt and likely corruption, is that it does not remedy structural problems in the US economy and financial system. There will be few new industries spawned and therefore few permanent well-paying jobs. Nothing addresses the savings and investment problems.

“There is too much capacity in the world. There are hundreds of empty or abandoned factories in China alone. Until excess capacity is scuttled and new industries appear, stable employment is a fantasy.

“The real problem, the one that solons will not address, is the US welfare state is busted. The Keynesian and monetary stimuli that were abused over many decades to paper over welfare state spending are now being escalated to an unsustainable degree in a last grand attempt to salvage the welfare state system.

“Like all state attempts to stave off a debt deflation by running the printing press and nationalization, it will likely result in a massive inflation that destroys the nation’s fabric and the financial assets of the upper middle class and elites. The middle and lesser classes have few financial assets.”

Source: Bill King, The King Report, December 9, 2008.

Financial Times: Treasury signals rescue for carmakers
“The US administration was on Friday scrambling to save Detroit’s troubled car industry, as General Motors said it was closing most of its North American manufacturing plants for the month of January in the wake of the Senate’s failure to agree a $14 billion loan for GM and Chrysler.

“The US Treasury signaled it was ready to step in with funds intended to prop up the financial system to prevent the biggest industrial failure in US history.

“‘Because Congress failed to act, we will stand ready to prevent an imminent failure until Congress reconvenes and acts to address the long-term viability of the industry,’ the Treasury said.

“GM’s bonds fell to a new low of 9-10 cents on the dollar on fears of a bankruptcy by America’s largest domestic carmaker, before recovering to 15 cents on the news that the Bush administration was looking for alternative financing.

“For weeks George W Bush, the US president, has resisted using the $700 billion troubled asset relief program to provide aid to the carmakers, arguing that such an interventionist step would be a misuse of funds.

“However, facing the prospect of the collapse of one or more of the Detroit companies, the White House indicated it had few other options. ‘A precipitous collapse of this industry would have a severe impact on our economy and it would be irresponsible to further weaken and destabilize our economy at this time,’ said Dana Perino, White House spokeswoman, specifically noting the possibility of using Tarp funds.

“A Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by GM, the world’s biggest carmaker, would mark the biggest industrial failure in US history.”

Source: Daniel Dombey, John Reed and Bernard Simon, Financial Times, December 12, 2008.

Reuters: Fed mulls issuing own debt
“The US Federal Reserve is considering issuing its own debt for the first time, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.

“Fed officials have approached Congress about the move, which could include issuing bills or some other form of debt and would provide the central bank with more flexibility to tackle the financial crisis, the Journal said.

“The Fed can already print as much money as it wants, but issuing debt is largely the province of the Treasury Department.

“The Fed stepped in with emergency credit for investment bank Bear Stearns in March and insurer AIG in September, and threw open its direct loan window to Wall Street firms this year in a bid to stabilize financial markets amid a credit freeze.

“But with the credit crisis showing no signs of abating, and the narrow scope for further interest rate cuts from the present levels of 1%, economists expect the Fed to look at new ways to boost the supply and circulation of money to avoid a deflationary slump.”

Source: Reuters, December 10, 2008.

Paul Kasriel (Northern Trust): The credit rating on a benevolent counterfeiter’s debt – infinity A?
“Why would the Fed be contemplating issuing its own debt? To soak up in the future some of the massive credit the Fed has created in the past year or so. Why would the Fed not just sell US Treasury securities from its portfolio in order to soak up this excess Fed credit? Because, as shown in the chart below, the Fed’s outright holdings of US Treasury securities has dropped from a shade under $800 billion to about $475 billion as Fed credit outstanding has risen from a little over $800 billion to about $2.1 trillion. In percentage terms, the Fed’s outright holdings of US Treasury securities has gone from a bit over 90% of reserve bank credit outstanding to about 22-1/2%. The Fed is afraid it might run out of US Treasury securities to sell!

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“I can see nothing sinister about all this. It is not a conspiracy to print money. Just the opposite. It is a way to destroy some of the paper the Fed already has ‘printed’.”

Source: Paul Kasriel, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, December 10, 2008.

Bloomberg: Fed refuses to disclose recipients of $2 trillion
“The Federal Reserve refused a request by Bloomberg News to disclose the recipients of more than $2 trillion of emergency loans from US taxpayers and the assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.

“Bloomberg filed suit November 7 under the US Freedom of Information Act requesting details about the terms of 11 Fed lending programs, most created during the deepest financial crisis since the Great Depression.

“The Fed responded December 8, saying it’s allowed to withhold internal memos as well as information about trade secrets and commercial information. The institution confirmed that a records search found 231 pages of documents pertaining to some of the requests.

“If they told us what they held, we would know the potential losses that the government may take and that’s what they don’t want us to know,” said Carlos Mendez, a senior managing director at New York-based ICP Capital, which oversees $22 billion in assets.

“The Fed stepped into a rescue role that was the original purpose of the Treasury’s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The central bank loans don’t have the oversight safeguards that Congress imposed upon the TARP.

“Congress is demanding more transparency from the Fed and Treasury on bailout, most recently during December 10 hearings by the House Financial Services committee when Representative David Scott, a Georgia Democrat, said Americans had ‘been bamboozled’.

Source: Mark Pittman, Bloomberg, December 12, 2008.

The Wall Street Journal: Mayors get in line for US funds
“Big-city mayors will arrive on Capitol Hill Monday to lobby for more federal spending to be funneled to urban areas that they say drive the country’s economic engine.

“The push comes after a strong Democratic turnout in metropolitan areas helped President-elect Barack Obama – who is set to become America’s first urban president in almost half a century – win by such a decisive margin in November.

“A delegation of mayors, including Michael Bloomberg of New York and Antonio Villaraigosa of Los Angeles, plans to ask the federal government to distribute funds directly to cities instead of going through state governments. The group is set to present a list of more than 4,600 infrastructure projects that they say are ‘ready to go’.

“Tom Cochran, executive director of the US Conference of Mayors, which is organizing Monday’s event, said the next administration has signaled that it will coordinate financing for projects for an entire metropolitan area instead of dealing with cities and suburbs separately.

“‘I am of the opinion, based on our conversations with President-elect Obama, that he gets it,’ said Mr. Cochran. ‘You can’t just have a transportation system that stops at the city line.’

“Mr. Obama’s transition office is drawing up plans to create a White House office on urban policy, which would report directly to the president, to coordinate funding for cities from different federal agencies. Mr. Obama has pledged to provide new funding for job training, education and grants for local governments and organizations.”

Source: T.W. Farnam, The Wall Street Journal, December 8, 2008.

Bloomberg: Interview with Martin Feldstein
“Harvard University professor Feldstein discusses auto bailout, how to fix the housing market as well as Fannie and Freddie, and 3-month T-Bill rates below zero.”

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Source: Bloomberg (via YouTube), December 9, 2008.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): Deflation virus is moving the policy test beyond the 1930s
“Debt deflation is tightening its grip over the entire global system. Interest rates are creeping towards zero in Japan, America, and now across most of Europe.

“We are beyond the extremes of the 1930s. The frontiers of monetary policy are being pushed to limits that may now test viability of paper currencies and modern central banking.

“You cannot drop below zero. So what next if the credit markets refuse to thaw? Yes, Japan visited and survived this policy hell during its lost decade, but that was a local affair in an otherwise booming global economy. It tells us nothing.

“This time we are all going down together. There is no deus ex machina to lift us out. Certainly not China, which is the most vulnerable of all.

“As the risk grows, officials at the highest level of the British Government have begun to circulate a six-year-old speech by Ben Bernanke – at the time of its writing, a garrulous kid governor at the US Federal Reserve. Entitled ‘Deflation: Making Sure It Doesn’t Happen Here’, it is the manual of guerrilla tactics for defeating slumps by monetary means.

“‘The US government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost,’ he said.

“His point was that central banks never run out of ammunition. They have an inexhaustible arsenal. The world’s fate now hangs on whether he was right (which is probable), or wrong (which is possible).

“As a scholar of the Great Depression, Bernanke does not think that sliding prices can safely be allowed to run their course. ‘Sustained deflation can be highly destructive to a modern economy,’ he said.

“Bernanke’s central claim is that the big guns of monetary policy were never properly deployed during the Depression, or during the early years of Japan’s bust, so no wonder the slumps dragged on.

“The Fed can create money out of thin air and mop up assets on the open market, like a sovereign sugar daddy. ‘Sufficient injections of money will ultimately always reverse a deflation.’

“Bernanke said the Fed can ‘expand the menu of assets that it buys’. US Treasury bonds top the list, but it can equally purchase mortgage securities from US agencies such as Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie, or company bonds, or commercial paper. Any asset will do.

“The Fed can acquire houses, stocks, or a herd of Texas Longhorn cattle if it wants. It can even scatter $100 bills from helicopters. (Actually, Japan is about to do this with shopping coupons).”

Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph, December 9, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Household net worth is shrinking rapidly
“Household net worth in the third quarter of 2008 was $56.5 trillion, down 4.7% from the second quarter. This is the largest quarterly decline since the second quarter of 1962 when net worth of households dropped 5.0%.

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“Household spending will suffer as setback a household net worth shrinks, which is already visible in consumer spending data, and the proclivity of households to borrow will show a reduction. The chart below indicates that growth of both mortgage and consumer debt have fallen in the third quarter. The sharp drop in mortgage debt (-2.4%) reflects the impact of mortgage foreclosures and a drop in home purchases, while consumer debt grew at a 1.2% pace in the third quarter versus a 7.2% jump a year ago.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, December 11, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Weak trajectory for retail sales
“Retail sales fell 1.8% in November, after a 2.9% decline in the prior month. Retail sales have dropped for five straight months, the longest string of declines since record keeping for retail sales began in 1967. The wide swings of gasoline prices influence the headline of retail sales. Excluding gasoline, retail sales dropped 0.2% in November after a 1.6% plunge in the prior month. Retail sales excluding gasoline have recorded six consecutive monthly declines. Unit auto sales have fallen in ten out of eleven months of the year.

“The upshot is that with or without gasoline and autos, retail sales show an extraordinary weakness that is seen the overall consumer spending data and this weak trajectory for retail sales and overall consumer spending is predicted to prevail in the near term.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, December 12, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Consumer spending in post-war recessions
“The chart below illustrates the history of consumer spending during recessions. Consumer spending typically declines in recessionary periods with the exception of the 1948 and 2001 recessions.

“Our forecast includes five consecutive quarterly declines in consumer spending, possibly another record for the books if our forecast is accurate. The highly leveraged household balance sheet of households underlies this prediction.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, December 8, 2008.

Bloomberg: Inside look – housing crisis
“From Housing Forum in Washington D.C.: Interview with PIMCO Managing Director Scott Simon.”

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Source: Bloomberg (via YouTube), December 8, 2008.

BusinessWeek: Unretired – retirees are back, looking for work
“They saved. They planned. Then housing tanked and the markets melted. Now they need jobs, and there aren’t any.

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“Six years ago, Paul Nelson gave up his long career in the defense industry for what he thought would be a peaceful retirement in Tucson. The weather was mild, the neighbors friendly. He had plenty of time to volunteer and garden.

“But retirement hasn’t worked out the way he planned. In 2006 his wife of 46 years died unexpectedly. He tried to swap their house for a smaller one and lost a chunk of his retirement savings in the process. Then this year the stock market cratered, wiping out almost everything he had left. Now the 71-year-old is looking for work at local hardware stores and Home Depot and contemplating filing for personal bankruptcy. ‘I have nothing left,’ says Nelson, a former Raytheon engineer. ‘I am not alone, I think.’

“Far from it. An increasing number of people who retired in recent years, confident they had set aside enough to live on comfortably, are finding themselves strapped. The stock market plunge and the housing downturn have affected many Americans, of course. But retirees have been particularly pinched because their homes and investments are the primary assets they depend on for income. As a result, many of the country’s elderly are finding themselves in Nelson’s situation, low on money and looking for work. ‘Suddenly the rug has been pulled out from under them,’ says Alicia H. Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Heather Green, Business Week, December 4, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Oil imports lead to wider trade gap in October
“The trade deficit widened to $57.2 billion in October from $56.6 billion in September. During October, exports (-2.2%) and imports (-1.3%) of goods and services fell.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, December 11, 2008.

Reuters: Jim Rogers calls most big US banks “totally bankrupt”
“Jim Rogers, one of the world’s most prominent international investors, on Thursday called most of the largest US banks ‘totally bankrupt’, and said government efforts to fix the sector are wrongheaded.

“Speaking by teleconference at the Reuters Investment Outlook 2009 Summit, the co-founder with George Soros of the Quantum Fund, said the government’s $700 billion rescue package for the sector doesn’t address how banks manage their balance sheets, and instead rewards weaker lenders with new capital.

“Dozens of banks have won infusions from the Troubled Asset Relief Program created in early October, just after the September 15 bankruptcy filing by Lehman Brothers. Some of the funds are being used for acquisitions.

“‘Without giving specific names, most of the significant American banks, the larger banks, are bankrupt, totally bankrupt,’ said Rogers, who is now a private investor.

“‘What is outrageous economically and is outrageous morally is that normally in times like this, people who are competent and who saw it coming and who kept their powder dry go and take over the assets from the incompetent,’ he said. ‘What’s happening this time is that the government is taking the assets from the competent people and giving them to the incompetent people and saying, now you can compete with the competent people. It is horrible economics.’

“Rogers said he shorted shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the government nationalized the mortgage financiers in September, a week before Lehman failed.

“Now a specialist in commodities, Rogers said he has used the recent rally in the US dollar as an opportunity to exit dollar-denominated assets.

“While not saying how long the US economic recession will last, he said conditions could ultimately mirror those of Japan in the 1990s. ‘The way things are going, we’re going to have a lost decade too, just like the 1970s,’ he said.

” … Rogers said sound US lenders remain. He said these could include banks that don’t make or hold subprime mortgages, or which have high ratios of deposits to equity, ‘all the classic old ratios that most banks in America forgot or started ignoring because they were too old-fashioned’.

“‘Governments are making mistakes,’ he said. ‘They’re saying to all the banks, you don’t have to tell us your situation. You can continue to use your balance sheet that is phony … All these guys are bankrupt, they’re still worrying about their bonuses, they’re still trying to pay their dividends, and the whole system is weakened.’

“Rogers said he is investing in growth areas in China and Taiwan, in such areas as water treatment and agriculture, and recently bought positions in energy and agriculture indexes.”

Source: Jonathan Stempel, Reuters, December 11, 2008.

CNBC: Meredith Whitney – outlook grim for banks

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Source: CNBC, December 7, 2008.

Financial Times: Post-Lehman company defaults to soar
“Default rates for speculative grade companies are forecast to jump threefold next year following the fall of Lehman Brothers, the world’s biggest bankruptcy, according to Moody’s, the US ratings agency.

“The implosion of Lehman on September 15 is widely regarded as a significant milestone, turning the credit crunch into a fully blown economic crisis.

“Jim Reid, credit strategist at Deutsche Bank, said: ‘We are at a turning point for default rates, with much bigger monthly rises from now on.

“‘Two or three months after Lehman’s collapse, we are starting to see the impact on the real economy, particularly for those companies on short-term funding.’

“European companies defaulting on their bonds are also set to outpace those in the US, although analysts suggest this is because the European junk-grade market is smaller, meaning any rise in defaults has a greater impact in percentage terms, rather than pointing to a deeper recession.

“Global default rates are forecast to rise to 10.4% by November 2009 – from 3.1% last month – to levels last seen in 2001 following the dotcom crash. Rates are forecast to jump to 4.2% by the end of this year.

“A year ago, the global rate was 0.9 per cent.

“The ratings agency’s distressed index, which measures the number of companies with bonds trading at more than 1,000 basis points over government paper, rose to 51.8% at the end of last month, up from 48.5% at the end of October, and the highest level since Moody’s launched the index in 1996. This reflects the deepening problems for company funding. Even some investment grade companies are now trading at distressed levels.”

Source: David Oakley and Paul J Davies, Financial Times, December 8, 2008.

Bespoke: 10-Year Treasuries overbought
“It’s an understatement to say that Treasuries are overbought at current levels. We’ve been monitoring the spread between its price and its 50-day moving average, and the 10-year Note has finally gotten to a level that is usually met with selling pressure in the near term. Since 1977, the 10-year has only gotten more than 12% above its 50-day moving average on three different occasions. As shown in the table below, the returns over the next week, month, and 3 months lean to the negative side. The average change of the 10-year over the next three months when getting this overbought has been -3.23%.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 9, 2008.

Bespoke: Want to lend money to uncle Sam? It’s going to cost you
“What would your reaction be if you had a friend who had reached the limit on 20 different credit cards and then came to you to borrow $100? Then imagine that you actually said yes, and when you went to give your friend the $100, he or she actually asked for $101 just for the privilege of loaning the money. Well, that is exactly what is happening (to a lesser degree) in the US T-bill market. As just another example of the crazy times we are living in, the yield on 3-month Treasuries went negative today. There was a time when an event such as this was unimaginable. Today it barely gets noticed.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 9, 2008.

John Hussman (Hussman Funds): Unusually unfavourabale yield levels for Treasuries
“In bonds, the market climate last week was characterized by unusually unfavorable yield levels and generally favorable yield pressures. As I have frequently noted, yield levels are much more important than market action in driving subsequent total returns in bonds. This is because bonds are less susceptible to ‘bubbles’ as a result of their payment stream being known, so favorable market action can’t be taken as evidence of favorable surprises in those payments.

“The problem with Treasury yields here is that while there are good economic reasons for the downward yield pressures, the levels are low enough to invite explosive spikes that can easily wipe out a year or more of yield-to-maturity in a few days.

“Corporate yields have increased significantly, but default rates tend to pick up in the later stages of recessions, and there isn’t much historical evidence to suggest that corporate bonds reach their lows any earlier than stocks do. For that reason, corporate bonds are essentially equity-equivalents here, and the same considerations about quality apply as well here as they do for stocks. Generally speaking, corporate bonds are currently priced to deliver both lower long-term returns than stocks, but as a group, will probably have lower volatility than stocks as well.”

Source: John Hussman, Hussman Funds, December 8, 2008.

Bloomberg: US Treasury risk surpasses Campbell Soup as debt increases
“The cost to hedge against losses on US Treasuries surpassed the price of default protection on bonds from Campbell Soup and drug-maker Baxter International as government spending on stimulus packages grows.

“Credit-default swaps protecting US government debt in euros for five years are trading at 65 basis points, according to CMA Datavision, meaning costs 65,000 euros ($84,200) to protect 10 million euros of debt. Contracts on Campbell were at 52.5 basis points and Baxter contracts were 57.5 basis points at the close of trading [on Wednesday] in New York.

“The Federal Reserve’s assets have more than doubled from a year ago to $2.14 trillion as the central bank seeks to revive credit markets. Economists including Harvard University professor Kenneth Rogoff and Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz say President-elect Barack Obama should push for a stimulus package of at least $1 trillion to lift the economy out of a yearlong recession. The US government’s total cost to bail out the economy may exceed $4 trillion, according to strategists including Ira Jersey at Credit Suisse Group AG in New York.

“Contracts protecting U.K. government debt for five years were quoted at a mid-price of 114.75 basis points today [Wednesday], according to CMA. Swaps on Italy are at 190, and the Netherlands at 99.5. France was quoted at 58.75 and Germany at 51.5, CMA data show.

“Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent if a borrower fails to meet its debt obligations. A basis point on a credit-default swap contract protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years is equivalent to $1,000 a year.”

Source: Shannon D. Harrington, Bloomberg, December 10, 2008.

Jean-Paul Calamaro (Deutsche Bank): Credit markets offer stunning opportunities
“The crisis gripping financial markets has produced some stunning investment opportunities in credit markets. Among the best is the returns available on ‘basis trades’ between corporate bonds and credit default swaps, says Jean-Paul Calamaro, global head of quantitative credit strategy at Deutsche Bank.

“‘Investors buy a corporate bond and also buy default protection on the issuer via a CDS. When the basis is negative [CDS protection costs less than the bond’s spread to swaps] this produces protected cash flows and further profits if the difference between the bond and CDS narrows, or if the issuer defaults. The basis between bonds and CDS has been at historic wides recently, giving significant returns without using leverage,’ he says.

“‘The trade works for many investment grade and high yield issuers in Europe and the US, but high yield trades look most attractive.

“‘This is because investors can earn high returns more quickly when an issuer defaults and at this point in the credit cycle we think defaults are more likely. The trades also work in investment grade, not because we expect defaults but because we expect the basis between bonds and CDS to narrow.

“‘The major cheapening of bonds versus CDS across corporate credit has been due to the heightened funding crisis since the Lehman bankruptcy in mid-September. We believe conditions will start to ease after year end, which makes these types of trades unusually attractive now.’”

Source: Jean-Paul Calamaro, Deutsche Bank (via Financial Times), December , 2008.

Bloomberg: Cheapest stocks since 1995 show cash exceeds market
“Stocks have fallen so far that 2,267 companies around the globe are offering profits to investors for free. That’s eight times as many as at the end of the last bear market, when the shares rose 115% over the next year.

“Bank of New York Mellon in New York, Danieli in Italy and Seoul-based Namyang Dairy Products hold more cash than the value of their stock and debt as the slowing world economy wiped out $32 trillion in capitalization this year. Companies in the MSCI World Index trade for an average $1.17 per dollar of net assets, the lowest since at least 1995, and 39% sell at a discount to shareholder equity, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“The cash-rich companies allow investors to pay nothing for future earnings streams, providing opportunities to buyers concerned about deflation, according to Jean-Marie Eveillard, whose $16 billion First Eagle Global Fund has beaten 98% of competitors this year. Microsoft and Novo Nordisk, which generate the most money compared with debt, can expand even if lower consumer demand erodes profits.

“‘Cash is king, not necessarily for the investor but for corporations,’ Eveillard said in an interview from New York last week. ‘It’s useful to sit on a ton of cash, No. 1 to survive, as opposed to going bankrupt, and No. 2 to seize opportunities either to make acquisitions cheaply or to squeeze competitors.’”

Source: Michael Tsang and Alexis Xydias, Bloomberg, December 8, 2008.

Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): “I’m beginning to like what I see”
“If they create enough of it, will they come and spend it? That’s what Mr. Bernanke is going to find out. The government has created over a trillion dollars of currency. There’s now over $8 trillion on the sidelines in money markets and T-bills – all frozen with fear and waiting for something better and safer to come along. There’s too much money now in relation to the quantity of goods and merchandise available. This is the formula for inflation or even hyper-inflation. What’s holding it all back? Lack of confidence, fear.

“What would change that? The stock market rising steadily would bring back confidence. Which is why I monitor the stock market so closely. Yes, it’s quite a game, and it’s the most important and fascinating game in the world. No wonder I’m in this business. I read the markets, and I’m beginning to like what I see!

“My guess is that the market is establishing a tradeable bottom with a rally that will last into the first quarter of next year. What we’re seeing now might not be the final bottom but it will serve until the real one comes along.”

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letters, December 8, 2008.

Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): Adding some selected stocks
“Up to now, our favored position has been cash and gold (preferably physical gold). Our new position is cash, gold and, for the bolder crowd, a few selected stocks (DIA if you’re a fearless, speculative type).

“Backing off: Subscribers may think Russell’s lost his mind. He’s turning just a bit bullish. The answer is that I’m reporting exactly what I’m seeing. And if what I see doesn’t jibe with what I’m reading in the newspaper and it doesn’t jibe with prevailing sentiment, then I think it’s that much more important. I keep hearing the most horrendous stories about unemployment and companies in trouble, and my thought is always, ‘Has this been discounted by one of the worst bear markets since the ’30s?’ Which is why I report every item that I see, every item that might suggest that the market has already discounted the bad news. The question always is ‘cut through the BS, what is the market saying?’”

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letters, December 11, 2008.

Puru Saxena: Sowing the seeds
“This nasty bear-market is in its latter stages and I suspect that the bulk of the declines are now behind us. Although it is premature to claim that the bear-market definitely ended on October 10, it does look increasingly likely that the lows recorded on November 21, were in fact a successful ‘test’ of the prior month’s lows.

“History shows that following a major bear-market, it is common for the major indices to retest the lows. In a recent study undertaken to review recovery patterns, JP Morgan examined all the bear-markets going back to 1900 and it came up with a few interesting observations. The study revealed that market bottoms were almost always retested and that such ‘tests’ resulted in a new marginal low about 40% of the time.

“The study also found that 75% of the retesting events occurred within 44 days of a major bottom; so if October 10 marked the bottom of this bear-market, the retest on November 21 was bang on target from a timing perspective.

“At this stage, I am only guessing that October 10 was the pivotal turnaround of this bear-market. It may well be that this market breaks below those lows in the days ahead, however given the favourable technical and sentiment data, at the very least, there is a strong possibility that we will get a multi-month rally from these oversold conditions.

“It is worth noting that new bull-markets are always born amidst abject pessimism; at a time when the majority are convinced that economic activity will never pick up again. Furthermore, it is interesting to note that frightening economic news continues to surface, long after a new bull-market has begun. So, the time to buy is during such scary times. This was also highlighted by Warren Buffet who recently wrote – ‘If you wait for robins, spring will be over’.

“Now, I cannot say with any certainty whether we are already in the early stages of the next cycle. However, the recent rout in the markets has set the stage for above-average long-term returns. Under my best case scenario, we are in the very early stages of a new multi-year bull-market. And under my worst case scenario, we are going to get a very strong rebound (30% move higher in the S&P500) over a short period of time, which will probably take the markets back to their 200-day moving averages.”

Source: Puru Saxena (via Fullermoney), December 10, 2008.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): S&P 500 at extreme divergence from its 200-day moving average
“We first posted this indicator on October 10 when the relevant spreadsheet was created for us by a subscriber. The indicator remains at a historically low level but has risen considerably from its early October nadir. This has been achieved by the relevant indices having gone mostly sideways for the last two months. The moving average is now starting to come down towards the price and while it still has a long way to go, mean reversion is taking place.

“This is not a guarantee that the market will not go lower later but, historically, when the market has diverged from its mean by such a margin, important stock market lows have occurred relatively soon afterwards.”

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Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, December 8, 2008.

Bespoke: Percentage of stocks above 50-day moving averages
“Even though the S&P 500 is in a new bull market, the percentage of stocks in the index trading above their 50-day moving averages is still at oversold levels. As shown in the chart below, at 26%, this indicator has a long way to go before becoming overbought.

“On a sector basis, Telecom, Utilities, and Consumer Discretionary have the highest percentage of stocks above their 50-days, while Energy and Financials have the lowest.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 10, 2008.

Bespoke: Third worst bear market on record
“The S&P 500 finally had its first 20%+ rally in 408 days yesterday [Monday], which means we’re currently in a bull market by the standard definition (20% rally preceded by a 20% decline).

“… below we highlight historical bear markets for the S&P 500 since 1927. As shown, the bear market that ran from 10/9/07 to 11/20/08 is the third worst ever with a decline of 51.93%. The bears that ended in June of 1932 (-61.81%) and March of 1938 (-54.47%) are the only two that had bigger declines without a rally of 20%.”

Source: Bespoke, December 9, 2008.

Bespoke: US sector and stock buy ratings
“Below we highlight the average percentage of buy ratings for stocks in each of the ten S&P 500 sectors. As shown, Financial stocks have the lowest percentage of buy ratings of any sector at 35%, while Energy has the highest at 63%. Consumer Discretionary, Materials, and Consumer Staples are the three other sectors (along with Financials) that have below average buy ratings compared to all stocks in the S&P 500.

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Source: Bespoke, December 8, 2008.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): Commodities – are they the most promising asset class today?
“I do think commodities have significant recovery potential, despite the global economic slump, deflation threat and depression fears. Moreover, I believe that the fundamentals for commodities have now improved more than for all other asset classes.

“Consider the following bull points:

1. Interest rates have fallen, which is currently better for commodity speculators than commodity producers, because contangos have shrunk considerably, lowering rollover costs.

2. However, the credit crunch means that it is now more difficult for commodity producers to obtain necessary financing. Consequently, miners and oil producers are deferring development projects and laying off workers, while farmers find it more difficult to finance the purchase of fertilizers and equipment. These problems are not fully offset by the lower cost of energy.

3. Prices for all commodities are much lower today than during the first half of 2008, not least because speculators have been shaken out and traders are actually short. This is good news for those who wish to buy oversold commodities. However it is a big disincentive for commodity producers, many of whom are now reducing production.

4. While the global economic slump has reduced demand for commodities somewhat, these are essential resources which the world cannot do without, unlike luxury goods, the latest fashions, lavish holidays or expensive restaurants.

5. The US dollar has peaked and commenced what is likely to be a significant retracement of gains seen since July. This is bullish for commodities because most are priced in US dollars.

“What could significantly delay or even prevent a big rally for commodities? The reflationary efforts could fail, or more likely take many more months before they turn a global economy that is still contracting. If so, there could be some additional downside risk and base formation development would most likely be lengthy. The US Dollar Index could fail to maintain its downward break. Improved weather patterns could lead to increased supplies of agricultural commodities.

“For these reasons, Fullermoney maintains that commodities are best purchased following setbacks. Positions are most safely built incrementally.”

Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, December 11, 2008.

Financial Times: So long, super-cycle
“The severity of the crisis has surprised natural resources companies’ executives, commodity traders and Wall Street bankers alike. After all, the commodities boom of 2003-08 has been the most notable for a century in its magnitude, duration and the number of commodities whose prices it has lifted. The sudden plunge poses a fundamental question: is this just a temporary blip within an upward trend, with prices likely to rebound in the medium term, or is it the conclusion of another commodities cycle of boom and bust, with a period of relatively stable prices coming ahead?

“The common belief in the industry itself, and among most Wall Street analysts, is that the market is undergoing a correction but that the boom years have not ended. As many point out, the main drivers of what many have come to see as a commodities super-cycle – such as strong pent-up demand in emerging countries and supply constraints caused by a lack of investment over the past 20 years, along with the rise in resource nationalism – are intact. The current drop is, in the words of one senior mining executive, a ‘reset’ of the boom, not the end of it. Prices will rebound, in this view, and continue rising.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Javier Blas and Krishna Guha, Financial Times, December 9, 2008.

Bespoke: Consensus gold estimates
“Below we provide the consensus price target for gold through 2012. These target prices are based on the median of 21 gold analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. As shown, analysts currently aren’t expecting a big rally or a big decline in gold over the next few years. By mid-year 2009, analysts are expecting gold to be at $825/ounce, which is less than $10 from its current price of $816. At the end of 2011, analysts expect gold to be down to $790, and then down to $762 by the end of 2012.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 12, 2008.

Casey’s Charts: Gold stocks – time to bottom feed
“The previous low point for the ratio of the XAU gold stock index to the price of gold was 0.16, when gold was trading around $270 an ounce in October of 2000. Today, the XAU is trading a mere 57% higher than it was in October of 2000, compared to a gold price that has increased by 184%. As a general rule of thumb, anytime the ratio is above the 25-year average is the time to sell, and below its average says gold stocks are cheap. With the ratio bouncing off the lowest level since the inception of the XAU index, it signals a SCREAMING buy for gold stocks!

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“Picking the bottom of any market is near impossible, but knowing when something is grossly undervalued can be easy. Gold has long been considered a hedge against inflation, and with trillions of new government bailout dollars ready to circulate into the system, buying precious metal stocks at these distressed prices is the chance of a lifetime.”

Source: Casey’s Charts, December 5, 2008.

Profit NDTV: Asia beats US in gold futures trading
“Asia, which accounts for 60% of the world gold imports, has overtaken the US in gold futures trading, with Mumbai and Shanghai exchanges growing rapidly, leading trade magazine Futures Industry has reported.

“According to the latest edition of the US-based magazine, data from the first eight months of this year show that the combined volumes in gold futures trading at exchanges in Shanghai, Tokyo, Taiwan and Mumbai reached 49.8 million contracts, far ahead of the 34.3 million contracts traded in the US.

“‘From January through August this year, seven of the top 10 gold contracts in the world were Asian,’ it said, adding that much of that growth was in Mumbai and Shanghai.

“‘Some of the boom is undoubtedly driven by the search for a safe haven as the value of stock investments continues to evaporate,’ the magazine said noting that Asian investors may also have a greater cultural predisposition toward gold than Westerners.

“Asia imports 60% of the world’s gold and its exports 40%. India is the largest consumer of physical gold in the world, followed by the US, and then China. And this year, China became the world’s largest gold producer – a title south Africa had held for more than 100 years.”

Source: Profit NDTV, December 9, 2008.

BBC News: UK economic slowdown “worsening”
“The UK economy contracted 1% between September and November, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) has estimated.

“This fall followed after a 0.8% drop in the three months to the end of October, said the think tank. Indicating that the rate of output decline is ‘accelerating’, the NIESR now expects a fall of more than 1% in the last three months of the year.

“Official data showed that the economy shrank 0.5% from July to September. But it will not be until January that the Office for National Statistics reports on the final quarter’s GDP.

“If it reports a decline for the three months to December, then the UK will be in officially in recession under the generally accepted definition of two consecutive quarters of decline.

“The NIESR says it has a good track record in forecasting GDP growth in advance of the official figures. The latest data from NIESR is just the latest indication that the UK economy is most probably falling into a recession.”

Source: BBC News, December 10, 2008.

Victoria Marklew (Northern Trust): Swiss rates head toward zero
“The Swiss National Bank (SNB) effectively lopped another 50bps off its main policy rate today, lowering its target band for three-month Swiss franc LIBOR to 0.0-1.0% (down from 0.5-1.5%) and aiming for the mid-point of 0.5%. This brings the easing total to 225bps since October 8.

“The SNB warned that the sharply worsening global climate will push Switzerland into recession next year. Chairman Roth stated that growth is likely to be negative, not just in the first two quarters of 2009 but for the year as a whole. The bank is now forecasting a contraction in real GDP of between 0.5% and 1.0% next year. The inflation forecast was also revised down, with the bank now seeing the annual rate averaging 0.9% next year and 0.5% in 2010.”

Source: Victoria Marklew, Northern Trust – Daily Global Commentary, December 11, 2008.

Financial Times: Japan contracts faster than expected
“Japan’s gross domestic product contracted much more rapidly in the third quarter than previously thought, official data showed on Tuesday, amid new indications of distress in the world’s second-biggest economy.

“The revised GDP data showed a quarter-on-quarter fall of 0.5% for the three months to September, compared with last month’s preliminary estimate of a 0.1% decline.

“The economy contracted at an annualised rate of 1.8% between July and September – a much more precipitous pace than the annualised 0.5% decline suffered in the same quarter by the US, centre of the global financial crisis.

“Analysts said the revision, though bigger than expected, reflected relatively technical factors involving inventories and government spending rather than worrying new information and so would not dramatically change assessments of the economy’s prospects.

“‘The downgrade in headline growth does not look as bad as the headline suggests,’ UBS said in a research note.

“However, the news the recession was deeper than thought came as the Cabinet Office said its latest composite index of business conditions showed the economy ‘worsening’.”

Source: Mure Dickie, Financial Times, December 9, 2008.

Financial Times: China’s export fall worse than predicted
“The impact of the global financial crisis on China became clear on Wednesday when the government revealed that exports fell in November for the first time in almost seven years.

“With demand in many of its main markets slowing sharply, Chinese exports declined 2.2% from a year earlier. Imports also fell 17.9% from a year earlier, according to Chinese customs figures, prompting the government to announce plans to further boost the economy.

“The Chinese data shocked economists. The figures were far below forecasts, even in the light of sharp slumps in exports in November from both Taiwan and South Korea.

“‘This is the worst collapse in Chinese exports since 1999 and is probably just the beginning of a prolonged export contraction,’ said Isaac Meng, economist at BNP Paribas.

“The drop in imports, the biggest since the early 1990s, helped push the monthly trade surplus to a record $40 billion, the fourth month in a row that the surplus has broken records.

“The government pledged on Wednesday to do everything it could to maintain ‘stable, healthy’ growth next year. At the conclusion of the three-day Central Economic Work Conference, an annual meeting of top policy-makers, officials said they would boost public spending in order to promote domestic demand.

“A report on state radio about the meeting said the government had reaffirmed its policy of keeping the exchange rate ‘basically steady’, but would take other measures to deal with falling domestic demand.

“Until last month, China’s exports had held up much better than most observers had expected, increasing by 19% in October compared to the same month last year.”

Source: Geoff Dyer and Jamil Anderlini, Financial Times, December 10, 2008.

Financial Times: China inflation falls as growth slows
“China’s consumer price inflation fell to a 22-month low of 2.4% in November, giving the central bank free rein to cut interest rates further to offset an abrupt slump in the world’s fourth-largest economy.

“Economists had expected inflation to moderate to 3.0% from 4.0
% in the year to October. In the event, the reading was the lowest since January 2007.

“Nie Wen, an analyst with Huabao Trust in Shanghai, said the plunge meant real, inflation-adjusted interest rates in China were now back in positive territory even though the economy had run into fierce headwinds.

“‘The government will become more decisive in cutting rates,’ Nie said.

“Jing Ulrich, head of China equities at J.P. Morgan agreed. ‘We believe there is further scope for the central bank to ease monetary policy in an effort to avoid an excessive slowdown and stave off deflation,’ she said in a note to clients.

“‘Definitely we are going to move into a deflationary environment in China, probably through the first six months of the year,’ said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia-Pacific economist for Societe Generale in Hong Kong.”

Source: Financial Times, December 11, 2008.

Bespoke: Deflation coming in China?
“It wasn’t too long ago that one of the biggest worries facing the global economy was that improved standards of living in China would lead to higher wages for its workers. This, it was feared, would cause the country to begin exporting inflation around the world. As recently as August, PPI data from China showed that inflation was running at a rate of 10.1% year over year (y/y). Since then, however, pricing power in China has collapsed as evidenced by last night’s [Tuesday] release of the November PPI, which showed that prices are now up by just 2.0% y/y. At this rate, it won’t be long before we start seeing minus signs.”

13-dec-22.jpg

Source: Bespoke, December 10, 2008.

Financial Times: Rouble exodus hits Russia’s credit rating
“Russia on Monday became the first G8 country since the start of the financial crisis to have its credit rating downgraded after Standard and Poor’s took fright at the recent exodus from the rouble and sharp drop in oil prices.

“S&P said it had lowered Russia’s foreign currency credit rating by one notch from BBB+ to BBB because of the ‘rapid depletion’ of the country’s foreign exchange reserves and the ‘difficulty of meeting the country’s external financing needs’. It said the outlook for the rating was negative.

“Russia’s reserves have fallen by $128 billion since August to $455 billion, as the country battles the capital flight that began following the war with Georgia and escalated as the oil price fell and the global crisis worsened.

“S&P said Russia could be forced to spend all $200 billion now parked in its two sovereign wealth funds on recapitalising the banking system and covering fiscal deficits in 2009 and 2010.

“The agency expects Russia to run a current account deficit next year of 2.6% of gross domestic product due to the oil price fall, putting further pressure on the balance of payments.

“‘There are a lot of layers of concern,’ said Frank Gill, primary credit analyst at Standard and Poor’s. ‘There are macroeconomic and political risks … and Russia has not operated a current account deficit since 1997 and that was less than 1% of GDP.’

“The thought of devaluation raises the spectre of the 1998 rouble crash that wiped out Russians’ savings, although economists say any devaluation this time would be far less severe.”

Source: Catherine Belton, Financial Times, December 8, 2008.

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