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It has been almost ten full months now since the Fed first lowered interest
rates. If you remember at first there was a lot excitement over the Fed cuts.
The DOW and Nasdaq rallied to new 52-week highs a few weeks after the first
rate cut in September. The rally and promise of more Fed intervention for the
market made many big name commentators extremely optimistic about the market.
But just a few weeks later the market turned lower and has been stuck in a
bear market ever since. The banking problems multiplied and inflation skyrocketed
with oil rising almost double in price now from where it was a year ago. The
rate cuts tasted good at first, but are no longer palatable.
When thinking about the financial markets sometimes it is best to take stock
of things before trying to look ahead and decide if you need to make changes
to your portfolio or figure out where to look for the best investment opportunities.
A lot can be learned about looking at where the market was a year ago and comparing
it to today.
A year ago from today the DOW, S&P 500, and Nasdaq were all climbing higher.
They had experienced a fast and furious correction that took the S&P 500
down over seven percent in February of 2007. The financial media blamed that
quick correction on "credit worries," a fast drop in the dollar versus the
yen, and a huge correction in the Chinese stock market. Rumors also circulated
that some billion dollar Bear Stearns hedge funds were in trouble.
Over the next few months as the market went higher everyone thought that all
of these problems were gone. Then the financial press started to focus on oil
prices that were making new highs and the threat to inflation that they posed.
In July the market peaked as talk intensified that the Fed might actually start
to raise interest rates by the end of the year. Indeed Fed fund futures a year
ago were pricing in rates hikes by the end of 2007.
Fed officials gave repeated speeches and statements that sounded hawkish on
interest rates. At the same time though the drop in real estate prices started
to pick up and the value in "subprime" mortgage securities went into collapse.
Rumors abounded that several large hedge funds were in trouble.
The Fed publicly ignored all of this. At its August FOMC meeting they released
a more hawkish statement on inflation to prepare the way to raise rates. The
market dropped hard that day and James Cramer blasted the Federal Reserve and
Ben Bernanke on TV for knowing "nothing." His statement was one of the most
watched moments in financial TV reporting as people watched it millions of
times on the Internet.
At that moment he was right. Within two weeks the market went into a mini-crash
and the Federal Reserve lowered the discount rate in what looked like a panic
move. The value of "subprime" securities went to zero. They are still being
counted as "level three" assets on the balance sheets of some of the world's
largest banks but in reality they are worthless and have been worthless since
last August.
The Fed changed course 180% degrees in August and began to slash rates in
September. It continued its rate cutting campaign and has lowered rates in
the past ten months at the fastest rate than it ever has before in history
- faster than it did even during the Great Depression.
Since then we have seen the "credit crisis" worsen. We have seen the economy
slow down, real estate prices continue to drop, inflation explode, and the
Fed print about 30 billion dollars and hand that money to JP Morgan so that
it could buy Bear Stearns and prevent a potential systemic bank run.
What a roller coaster! And it ain't over yet folks. You can expect to see
more volatility and the overall downward bias in the financial markets to continue
the rest of the year.
What I want you to do right now though is think about the situation last year
and how it compares with today. Just like in June of 2007, right now we can
look back on this year and see a big correction behind us. Just like the correction
in February of 2007, this one we saw in the first quarter was linked to credit
problems and the unwinding of the real estate bubble. And just like then we
have seen the market rally after that correction and lots of big name experts
come out and declare the worst behind us. For instance Abby Cohen of Goldman
Sachs claims that there is going to be a second half economic boom that will
make the stock market rise much higher than it is now into the end of the year.
Things are certainly different right now than they were last year. The US
is in a bear market right now whereas last year it was approaching the tail
end of a cyclical bull market. That is a huge difference. But there is one
important similarity that you need to focus on right now. At this time last
year most people were worried about inflation and were expecting the Fed to
raise rates by the end of 2007. Right now everyone is worried about inflation
and the Fed has talked very hawkish about inflation over the past few weeks.
Most of the talking heads are looking for the Fed to raise rates by the end
of the year. This is exactly the same spot we were in this time last year!
But what if the economy doesn't pick up steam in the second half of the year
and the stock market continues lower? What if more banking problems materialize?
Bank stocks are making new 52-week lows and have been falling fast this month.
They do not seem to be forecasting an end to the credit crunch. And really
they shouldn't, because there is no sign of a bottom in real estate and all
indicators I follow suggest that we won't see one into at least the second
half of 2009.
I think we are likely to see a Fall shock hit the market. Last year we saw
the Fed do a 180 degree turn from talking about inflation to cutting rates
like a mad hatter. This year I believe we will see the Fed abandon its talk
of fighting inflation to once again intervening to bail out some bank, patch
up the leaky economy, or in response to a stock market mini-crash. I think
the situation right now is like it was a year ago - everyone is worried about
inflation, but the bigger problems lurk in the cooked books the banks are carrying.
In fact we are more likely to see more problems emerge and the stock market
go lower as that is the primary trend right now.
In essence the Fed is playing a game of poker. It is bluffing when it says
it is fighting inflation. It has no chips left and has bet everything on the
slim chance that the economy has already bottomed. If something happens to
make the Fed intervene again then it will be faced with a choice of fighting
inflation by raising rates, which would have the effect of blowing up the banking
system, or intervening to save the banking system, the economy, and the stock
market, which of course would mean more inflation, a falling dollar, and falling
bond prices. The Fed has proven that if it gets trapped into such a corner
it will side to help the banks and the stock market a stable currency be damned.
If this is what we see happen in the Fall then the Fed will lose all of its
credibility when it comes to maintaining a stable currency.
What do you need to do? You need to do what you should always be doing - keeping
your pulse on market trends to figure out the best way to position yourself
to make money is. You can profit from any situation. Right now we have a bear
market and that means using bear market strategies.
I will leave you with one last thought for today. In the past ten years every
time the Fed has gone on a campaign of lowering interest rates it has create
a "bubble". In 1998 the Fed lowered rates to bailout the Long-Term Capital
Management Fund. When it did so it put excess money into the banking system.
There was a lack of good investments for that money to go into so it flowed
into Internet and tech stocks and formed a bubble. When that bubble burst the
Fed lowered rates again to try to make the stock market go back up. As a result
they dropped interest rates to an artificially low point, which created a housing
bubble.
We are now suffering through the fallout of the housing bubble - the direct
result is a recession, bear stock market, and "credit crisis" from banks who
went nuts during the bubble.
Now remember - every time the Fed cuts rates it creates a bubble, because
it puts excess money into the economy.
Well, the bubble now is now in commodities and oil. A direct result is inflation,
a falling dollar, and eventually a bear market in bonds. There are opportunities
to profit from this and I believe gold and precious metal stocks along with
tactical short selling against he broad market and bonds will be the best way
to go. If the Fed abandons this current inflation fighting talk this Fall I
expect we'll see gold prices skyrocket into the end of the year.
Of course this is looking ahead and that isn't always an easy thing to do
when it comes to the stock market. I can't say with certainty that this is
going to happen. But I do know the technical signs in the market that will
appear over the next two months if this is indeed what is going to happen and
I know how I will position myself. The next eight weeks are going to be some
of the most important we've ever seen in the financial markets. Not because
of what will happen during these weeks, but to see how the markets are positioned
once they are over. As any technical signs appear to point us the way I will
draw your attention to them and explain to you exactly what they mean so that
you can take advantage of anything that may happen too. From chaos comes opportunity
and opportunity is another way to spell profits.
This article is an except from a WallStreetWindow subscription article. The
full article contains more price projections of what I see happening for the
S&P 500 and gold for the rest of the year. You need to subscribe to my
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