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Larry Moe and Curly formed one of the most successful comedy trios in history,
who rightfully so, went with the stage name The
Three Stooges. Their routine was based on physical slapstick comedy applied
to numerous stories and awkward situations. Their bumbling stupidity and lack
of focus on any given situation made for entertaining comedy clips that spanned
several decades of the 20th century. An example of their fine comedic routines
can be seen in this clip titled Carpenters.
To view an infinite supply of "The Three Stooges", simply enter this into the
search bar on www.youtube.com and be
prepared to be entertained for hours.
Speaking about being entertained, enter Larry Kudlow. John
Browne of EuroPacific Capital was recently part of a debate in which
Kudlow, along with two bullish cheerleaders, were trying to tear at the fabric
of his bearish case. Browne is British, extremely knowledgeable and extremely
polite...too polite to be dealing with the antics of Kudlow and Company.
If you have not noticed, by the title of the article, a picture of "Larry" Kudlow
was collated with images of Moe and Curly...now all we have to do is search
for modern day representations of Moe and Curly on the Wall Street Entertainment.
The problem is there are numerous candidates to add a "Moe" and "Curly" in
forming a modern day trio, except they all perform monologue financial comedy
shows.
I have only tuned into watch Kudlow and Company once in a blue moon to get
a perspective of how far off the mainstream media is at understanding where
we are in the commodity cycle. My conclusion is that they are still in the
denial stage and have not even entered into the opposition or tentative acceptance
yet...these psychological hurdles must be leaped over first before we enter
slavish acceptance, which represents the blow-off phase. So, this commodity
bull market may last far longer than any of us are lending credit. Further
points mentioned within this article are related to the slapstick routine that
Kudlow and his crew present which lack merit and substance.
Interest Rate and Commodity Cycles
Long-term interest rate cycles last for decades. According to my work on the
10-Year US Treasury Index, the pattern that started from the top of the 1980
top is "just" in the process of completing the long-term corrective pattern.
Longer-term interest rates are about to enter a long-term trend, leaving the
cheap rates of the past in the rear view mirror...something that Kudlow et
al fail to realize.
Interest rates generally rise slowly as economy gains strength after a bottom
is put in place after a significant bear market has terminated (remember bear
markets go out with a whine, not a growl). A change in trend for a strong period
of economic growth must be confirmed by numerous factors such as a confirmed
economic bottom, real estate bottom, lack of a currency crisis, favourable
demographic profiles in nations one seeks to invest in etc.
Stock markets have an inverse relationship to gold...the 1980-1999 period
was in a bull market across the broad market indices while most commodities
were in a severe bear market. For nearly 20 years, commodity prices were extremely
low, which caused a lack of exploration and resource development for increasing
reserves in the ground (oil, gold, silver, coal, cobalt etc.). Lack of exploration
caused many of these companies to high grade the resources they had, leaving
only the chaff.
Since 2000, commodity prices have risen substantially, but so have the expenses
associated with exploration, development and maintenance of infrastructure
not to mention the fact that labour and labour shortages have also gone up
hand in hand. The price of mining one ounce of gold has been recently stated
to cost $700-800/ounce at present, leaving only $80-100/ounce profit, which
represents around 10-11% profit...this is a minimum for any sort of business
trying to make a profit. Anyone who does not look at the net profit gold mines
of present and thinks gold stocks are overvalued are examining these companies
incorrectly. Rising inflationary pressures have forced costs up across the
board so commodity prices must rise in order for companies extracting raw commodities
to meet their associated costs or they close shop, plain and simple.
What Makes a Bubble?
Generally, bubbles occur when there is an excess supply of a given commodity
or item in the market. Gold, oil and silver production
are far from bringing additional supplies onto the market. The ability to explore
for new resources and extract them is directly linked to the amount of available
energy. Since we are in the era of Peak Oil, this automatically suggests that
supplies will be limited in the future due to the availability of energy for
extracting resources. For anyone not familiar with the concept of Peak Oil,
I suggest everyone pay a visit to Matt
Simmons web site, as he is by far the foremost global expert on Peak Oil.
When the above situation occurs, thereby restricting supply, coupled with real
negative interest rates similar to what occurred in the 1970's, it represents
a turning point where longer-term interest rates will eventually begin to
move up, dragging the price of gold much higher.
Markets control longer-term interest rates, no matter what meddling governments
may try to do in the short-term. Once inflation really begins to dig its heels
in later this year and through all of 2009, lenders will realize the associated
risk with lending, inflationary pressures etc. This will cause them to demand
a higher interest rate associated with loans in order to compensate for overall
risk.
Banks with laddered loan portfolios from rates on lower rungs to higher rungs
will require higher rates going forward to offset lower yielding loans and
cover operational costs. This will force people to live within their means
and automatically removes all components of the economy that depend on credit.
Since the US GDP is represented by 72% of consumers, the overall economy is
going to be hit hard. This will make the fiat paper regime less attractive
and will drive anyone with money into hard assets i.e. gold and silver.
Breakdown in Logic, Manufacturing Base and the Economy
Kudlow fails to realize the above, particularly that gold is money, a commodity,
and a hedge against inflation. In the 1979-1980 time frame when interest rates
went to 15-20%, the US had large quantities of gold and silver, a large manufacturing
base, favourable demographics, and was not so energy dependent. So the economy
could absorb the large hike in interest rates. Fast forward to the present
and none of the above is true anymore. Back then, higher interest rates popped
gold because the USD was still a suitable replacement for gold. At present,
the USD pattern is terrible and higher interest rates in the US no longer carries
any tangible weight to cause an investment shift from gold. This translates
into the death of the USD. So not only will rising interest rates be good for
gold this cycle (driving the flight to tangible assets), it will force more
people out of the dollar as it reaches a tipping point into anything that has
value.
Another one of Kudlow's poor market assessments is how a perceived bull market
is developing in the broad market indices (DOW, NASDAQ, S&P 500 Index).
Price the S&P 500 Index using the USD Index, the Euro, or Canadian dollar,
and although the present nominal value is near the 2000 high, in real terms
it's actually no where near the former high. This is a form of illusion...that
being the purchasing power of the S&P. Notice how Figure 1 illustrates
the S&P 500 Index nominally expressed, while Figure 2 shows the S&P
priced relative to the USD Index...quite a different perspective on how things
look when the proper light is cast on the situation. The S&P in real value
terms against the USD index is down around 22%. Just imagine how lower this
value could go should the USD declined to 58-60 by July 2009.
Figure 1

Larger
Image
Figure 2

Larger
Image
Browne mentioned that the US economy is based upon consumers making up 72%
of the GDP, followed by Kudlow quickly changing gears to focus on how well
the US manufacturing sector is doing. Kudlow failed to account for the severe
erosion of the US-based manufacturing sector from post WWII until present and
the fact that credit expansion facilitated the extended bull market in part
by consumers taking on more debt.
Now that the credit cycle has imploded, the 72% consumer-based economy is
under pressure based on the reliance of credit for transactions. There is no
way that the remaining 28% of the non-consumer economy (manufacturing, small
percentage government) can carry the US through a period of time without some
form of a market slowdown occurring (recession, depression or some form in
between). Peak Oil will create regionalized
economies that will cause a return of limited manufacturing capacity, but
these changes can take decades to implement. The amount of growth is dependent
upon the amount of available energy, so it is safe to assume future economic
growth from today's perspective will be significantly smaller than today...if
inflation persists, the economic output will be lower, but appear similar in
nominal terms much like the differences noted in Figures 1 and 2 (i.e. lower
degree of purchasing power). Also, Kudlow failed to realize how energy dependent
the US is and how they are already at the point of saying "Uncle".
One funny point of the interview with Browne was seeing Kudlow "squeal" with
delight noting that oil and gold were down for 1-2 days in a row. Oil shot
up from $85 to a high of $137, before declining sharply to $122/barrel and
shooting up to $138.change/barrel on Friday. Nothing moves as
the crow flies, so the above volatility should come as no surprise to those
that realize a bull market is a "Wall of Worry". One thing not mentioned on
the show is that oil is likely set to touch or surpass $150/barrel this year.
And eventually this will trigger a move in gold well above $1500/ounce by the
end of 2009.
Conclusion
The S&P is a fluid index, which by definition means that poorly performing
components can be removed and replaced with other stocks in different sectors
that perform well. At present energy and gold stocks make up 7% and 0.5% of
the S&P 500 Index, respectively. At the peak of the 1980 commodity bull
market, energy and gold stocks constituted 25% and 17% of the S&P 500 Index,
respectively. From this perspective, with the financial industry making up
30% of the S&P 500 Index only one conclusion can be drawn. Financials will
contract as a percentage of the S&P as the commodity bull market matures,
with energies and gold stocks making up much of the difference.
What happens to the value of the S&P 500 Index over the next 4-5 years
because of this? Chances are it will remain buoyant, surprising many, possibly
even hitting between 1400-1600 between 2011-2012, but that is based upon nominal
value. If the S&P were to be examined as per Figure 2 (any other currency),
it may have a purchasing power value of 700-800...maybe lower. The commodity
bull market will help to keep the S&P 500 Index afloat for some time, but
once the inflationary period reverts to deflation, no more tricks will be up
any sleeves to keep things propped up...the magic hat will be empty. Once the
commodity bull market ends around late 2011/early 2012, the stock market is
likely to start a sharp decline not bottoming until some point in 2014-2016.
I could go on into further detail covering all of the logic errors present
in Kudlow's argument, but you should be getting the point by now, which is
the primary aim here today. Kudlow is the epitome of Wall Street slapstick
financial humour, which is good for a laugh, but not to be taken seriously
for preserving wealth. Continue accumulation of gold and silver bullion, energy
stocks and precious metal stocks in politically secure areas of the world as
a financial storm presently not seen by many will soon to hit the US coasts
from all angles.
A major portion of the work I do is technically oriented, but I write 2-3
editorials per week often intertwined within the analysis . For further viewing
of prior work, simply click on the Archive section of this site. I update the
AMEX Gold BUGS Index, AMEX Oil Index, US Dollar Index, 10-Year US Treasury
Index, S&P 500 Index as well as commentary on market-related issues and
new technical analysis findings. We follow some 60 stocks, with a focus on
core positions and stocks that actually make up our personal portfolio. As
well, the keeper of the site, Captain Hook writes 3-4 articles per week discussing
macro issues, ratio analysis of various markets and an in-depth study of put/call
ratios and shorting candidates.
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David Petch
TreasureChests.info
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