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October is famous for stock markets crashes, - the Crash of 1929, "Black Monday" 1987,
the Asian Contagion crash in October 1997, and the Sub-Prime crash of October
2008. US Treasury chief Henry Paulson's ill-fated decision on Sept 14th, to
pull the plug on the 158-year old brokerage firm of Lehman Brothers, set in
motion a horrific chain of events that unleashed a torrent of panic selling
on commodity and global stock markets, froze the European and US banking systems,
and changed the direction American politics for years to come.
At its lowest point in October 2008, the meltdown in equities around the world
erased $12 trillion of market value for the month and $31 trillion from a year
earlier. Lehman's bankruptcy left sellers of credit default swaps with liabilities
of $270 billion, and hedge-funds scrambled to raise cash by selling anything
they could get their hands on, including commodities and stocks. The Reuters/Jefferies
Commodity Index plunged -23% in October, its steepest monthly decline since
1956. Investment grade corporate bonds lost -7.4% in October, their worst month
since 1976.
At the same time, US-home prices continued their unrelenting slide for a 20th
straight month, to stand -222% below their peak in July 2006. Falling US-home
prices have reduced homeowner wealth by about $3 trillion, and stock market
losses add-up to an additional $8-trillion. This reduced household wealth could
force US-households to cut aggregate spending by $300-billion a year or more.
Historically, September is the cruelest month for the US-stock market, but
residual selling often spills over into October.The Dow's loss of -18% in October-2008
was the biggest since the crash of October-1987. Paper losses totaled $2.5
trillion. But for Republican nominee John "Maverick" McCain, a late October
to Nov 4th rally, boosting the market by 15%, was too-little, too-late. The
tide of opinion among the investor class whose 401k's and IRA's had plummeted,
tilted against the Republicans, and was made worse by the unrelenting slide
in home prices.

In mid-September, Republican nominee John "Maverick" McCain understood the
fatal impact of a stock market meltdown on his presidential bid. He frantically
suspended his campaign in order to persuade rebellious House Republicans to
quickly agree to a $700-billion rescue plan for US-banks, and prevent a meltdown
in the market. But House Republicans decried it as a "bailout" and helped to
kill its first version, sending the Dow into a tailspin of 777-points. But
Obama stayed quiet and above the fray.
The Treasury's bail-out, - purchasing toxic mortgage-backed securities from
banks was badly flawed and utterly rejected by the marketplace. Even after
the House finally passed the bill on October 3rd, the Dow Jones Industrials
plunged another 3,000-points and free-falling to a five-year low. It was not
until the British and Euro-zone governments moved aggressively to inject capital
directly into their banks, and the US Treasury followed suit, did some measure
of calm and stability return to the global stock markets. But for "Maverick" McCain,
the collateral damage from the October market meltdown torpedoed his long-shot
bid for the presidency.
The Dow Jones Industrials rallied 15% in the week prior to Nov 4th election
results, a move that has surprised many traders. Barack Obama's higher tax
policies combined with far-left Democratic control of Congress defied the conventional
wisdom that markets like lower taxes and at least some gridlock on Capitol
Hill. However, soon after Obama's victory speech in Chicago, the stock market
rally fizzled out, and the Dow began melting down 800-points over the next
36-hours of trading.

McCain had a steep uphill climb, tied to an expensive war in Iraq, linked
to an deeply unpopular Republican president, 760,000-jobs lost this year before
the stock market crash began in mid-September, roughly 90% of Americans saying
the economy is on the wrong track, and his selection of Sarah Palin as his
running mate, turned off 60% of independent voters. The Arizona senator was
also handicapped by his confessions that economics wasn't his strongest suit,
which showed during the debates, while the Main Stream Media elite gave its
blessings to Barack Obama.
Americans are naturally eager for fresh start, - a "New Deal," as is typical
during periods of economic hardship. And a majority of voters turned to Obama
in a giant leap-of-faith, - a man who many Americans know little about, and
with no executive experience, after less than four-years out of the Illinois
Senate. McCain tried to paint Obama as a tax-raising Socialist, who will "spread
the wealth around," a fear that resonates with the biggest and most powerful
traders in the financial markets.
Uncertainty over how Obama and the far-left Social Democrats in Congress would
alter tax policies for US-multinationals listed on the NYSE, and capital gains
taxes on wealthy investors, intensified the stock market's meltdown in October.
On corporate taxes, Obama proposes to tax world-wide income earned by American
multi-nationals at the 35% US-corporate rate, the world's second highest. Obama
is also promising a windfall profits tax on oil companies, and in his stump
speeches, talked about lifting the capital gains tax on wealthy investors to
20% next year.

The volatility on Wall Street was unprecedented in October, with gut-wrenching
swings of 500-points or more per day. The CBoE's Volatility Index (VIX), which
measures how much traders are willing to pay for stock options, typically at-the-money
S&P-500 index put-options, soared to a high of 89.5 on October 24th. Even
in the biggest panics this decade, the VIX did not move above 48. The VIX tends
to go up during sharp market declines, and falls during sideways or rising
markets.
Most importantly, the VIX is regarded as a contrarian indicator. Historically
super-high VIX readings signal extreme fear and panic, and have coincided with
significant bottoms in the stock market. On October 25th, contrarians lifted
the Dow nearly 900-points higher, betting the fourth worst bear-market in history
had run its course. The 2000-2002 bear market fell -49% before finding a bottom
and the 1973-1974 bear market lost -48-percent.After the 2007-2008 bear-market
tumbled -46% from the October 2007 high, contrarians figured that the trading
patterns of the past would once again, serve as a reliable guide for the future.
The "Group of Seven" cartel of central bankers and the Bank of Japan played
a key role in engineering the late October stock market surge, by capping the
rise of the Japanese yen against other major foreign currencies. On Oct 26th,
the G-7 central bankers issued a veiled threat to intervene in the marketplace
if necessary, to block the yen's advance, "We are concerned about the recent
excessive volatility in the exchange rate of the yen and its possible adverse
implications for economic and financial stability," the G-7 finance officials
said.

The next day, Japanese Finance chief Shoichi Nakagawa warned that Tokyo financial
warlords were "watching the foreign exchange market with great interest," secret
code words for intervention to weaken the yen. Within 48-hours, the Euro had
surged 10-yen to 125-yen, and the US-dollar rebounded from a 13-year low of
91-yen to as high as 99.70-yen. The unwinding of "yen carry" trades, that has
been terrorizing the global stock markets since the Lehman bankruptcy, was
successfully brought under control by the G-7 central bankers.
However, threats of intervention can't suppress the yen forever, in a market
where roughly $550-billion changes hands each day. Tokyo backed-up its verbal
intervention threat by pressuring the Bank of Japan to cut its overnight loan
rate to 0.30-percent.Currency traders hadn't been expecting a BoJ rate-cut
and quickly scrambled to cover short dollar positions towards 100-yen.
The Brazilian real also rebounded against the yen, a key catalyst that ignited
a +30% rebound in the Sao Paulo's Bovespa Index. Emerging stock markets in
Asia and Latin America soared after the Federal Reserve swapped $30 billion
with Brazil, Mexico, South Korea and Singapore to bolster their foreign currency
reserves. Brazil's government is struggling to prop up its currency, which
has already lost a third of its value against the Japanese yen.
Brazil said it would put a quarter of its $210 billion of foreign exchange
reserves on the line to defend the real. Brazil's central bank has spent $40
billion in foreign exchange interventions so far, Brazil's central banker President
Henrique Meirelles said on Nov 6th, adding that the worst of the crisis has
already passed.

Preventing unwinding of "yen carry" trades was only one juggling-act performed
by the US Treasury's "Plunge Protection Team" in late-October. There was also
the job of snuffing-out the surge in US$ Libor interest rates, to which $360-billion
of adjustable rate home loans, ARM's, and many business loans are pegged. After
adopting the more sensible European approach, the US Treasury began injecting
$250-billion directly into US-banks, and over the next 20-days, the 3-month
US-dollar Libor rate quickly fell by 242-basis points to 2.40% today.
The flood of US dollar liquidity pumped into the global banking system by
the Fed, together with aggressive interest rate cuts around the world, have
calmed the panic and eased the worst of the credit crisis. Libor rates in England
and the Euro-zone have declined by 70-basis points respectively, signaling
that the $3.2-trillion of emergency funds approved by governments may be thawing
out credit markets.
Still, until US-home prices stop falling, the S&P-500 Index is skating
on very thin ice. The average US-home price might fall another 10% in the year
ahead to get back to pre-bubble levels. Worse yet, home price declines can
overshoot on the downside, which would increase the number of sub-prime homeowners
with negative equity, and create a strong incentive to default on their mortgages.
And in a vicious cycle, more foreclosures put more homes on the market, driving
prices even lower, increasing bank losses. That's why powerful stock market
rallies, engineered by bargain hunters and central bankers, have typically
ended-up as bull-traps.

The stunning collapse the US-industrial sector in the past two months was
a bombshell that shook the ground beneath the Republican Party. The ISM's factory
activity index plunged -20% over the past two months alone, to a reading of
38.9 in October, it's lowest since September 1982. The purchasing managers'
gauge of new factory orders plunged to 32.2, the lowest since 1980, from 38.8
the prior month, and exports, theone bright spot for the US-economy this year,
also collapsed, with the ISM's export gauge dropping to 41, the lowest reading
since 1988.
US auto sales plummeted -32% in October to the lowest since January 1991,
led by General Motors' 45% slide, as reduced access to car loans and a weaker
economy kept consumers off dealer lots. With credit drying up and new-vehicle
sales slumping, 700 car dealerships will close this year, and taking with them
an estimated 37,100 jobs. That's a heavy blow to the US economy. The country's
20,700 dealerships accounted for $693 billion in sales last year, or 18% of
all retail sales. Dealership wages and salaries make up 13% of the nation's
retail payroll.
However, bargain hunters in badly battered blue-chip stocks, are betting the
ISM Factory Index has hit rock-bottom, will recover in the months ahead, perhaps
with a V-shaped pattern. The risk for bottom pickers however, is the possibility
that the chart pattern for the ISM factory indexes, will evolve into an L-shape
pattern, or a prolonged period of stagnation at deeply depressed levels in
the months ahead. Worse yet, the ultimate bottom might be located at lower
levels.
Synchronized Slide in Global Economies and markets
Despite all the adverse problems in the housing and banking sectors, that
froze credit markets, toppled banks and brokers, and wreaked havoc with stock
markets, the Republican ticket was still within the margin of error in mid-September.
However, during the presidential debates, McCain failed to point-out that foreign
stock markets in Asia, Europe, and Latin America were also melting down by
50% or more, and factory indexes overseas had fallen-off a cliff to multi-year
lows. Highlighting the synchronization of global economies and markets, might
have helped McCain deflect some of the blame for the economic downturn.

In Japan, the Nikkei-225 index plunged to its lowest in 26-years in late-October,
shedding 60% from a year earlier, and handing investors' $2.5-trillion of losses.
Japan's factory activity index plunged to the 42.2-level in October, far below
the 50-mark dividing growth from contraction for the eighth straight month,
suggesting the worsening global slowdown has pushed Japan deeper into recession.
New export orders, a key engine of growth for Japan, fell to 37.5 from 45.4
in September, the lowest on record, after contracting for the ninth straight
month. Japanese exporters are also getting battered by the stronger yen, which
reduces the value of overseas profits earned in Euros or US-dollars when repatriated
back into local currency. To make matters worse, Toyota, the largest Asian
automaker, reported US-auto sales plunged 23% in October, from a year earlier.
Honda, Japan's second-largest automaker, said car and light truck sales fell
-26% from a year ago.
If traders are looking for China to miraculously to save the world economy,
the latest signs of an economic slowdown in the Asian juggernaut are not promising.
The CLSA China Manufacturers Index (PMI) showed that factory activity contracted
sharply in October, falling to 45.2, its lowest level since the surveys began
in June 2004. Manufacturing is a key engine of growth for China's juggernaut
economy, and accounts for about 42% of China's gross domestic product.

Companies from Hong Kong, Taiwan, America and Europe flooded into the Guangdong
province to set up low-cost factories that made everything from sneakers to
laptops and iPods. China's vast manufacturing hub along the Pearl River Delta,
has long been regarded as the world's factory floor. However, Chinese manufacturers
are now seeing their order books cut, both at home and abroad, as the world
economy falls deeper into recession. For the first time in three years, the
growth rate for Chinese exports in the third quarter of 2008 declined.
Government statistics show that 67,000 Chinese factories have been shut-down
in the first half of this year, and another 33,000 plants will closed by year's
end. Factory owners in China were straining under soaring labor and raw-materials
costs, and an appreciating Chinese currency. When the credit crunch took hold,
Western importers slashed orders for Chinese goods and bankers curtailed loans
to factories, so many operations were pushed over the edge.
China has been the biggest driver of global demand for commodities this decade,
including agriculture, base metals, and energy. For instance, from 2000 through
2007, China's energy demand grew by 65%, and accounted for a third of the total
increase in oil consumption around the world. One big question is what will
happen to Chinese oil demand if the global economy goes into a tailspin? Given
that there are 2.2 billion people in China and India, there should be plenty
of demand for commodities, even if their economies slow to an average growth
rate of around 7% in real dollar terms. Yet signs of "demand destruction" from
China's factories in recent months have sliced the Reuter's Commodity Index
in half.
Bank of England Pushes the Panic Button
The British pound has suddenly collapsed from a 26-year high in the summer
of 2007 to a five-year low against the dollar in October, the most brutal devaluation
sterling has suffered, since it was ejected from the European Exchange Rate
Mechanism in 1992. Major players in London are dumping the British ounce, on
expectations the Bank of England will slash its base rate to 2% next year -
which would be the lowest rate in the Bank of England's 314-year history.
Bank of England chief Mervyn King warned on October 23rd, that "the pound
could face a larger and faster adjustment in the coming months as the UK economy
is forced to adapt to the new post-financial crisis landscape." He warned that
the UK was facing a similar economic downturn to the Asian economies in the
late 1990's when foreign investors pull out their capital from their countries. "The
drama of the banking crisis, which is unprecedented in the lifetime of almost
all of us, will damage business and consumer confidence," he warned.
Much like the bursting of the US-housing bubble, British home prices are spiraling
lower. Britain's biggest mortgage lender, Halifax, said UK house prices fell
2.2% in October, the ninth successive decline, and are -15.75 lower compared
with a year ago, the steepest fall since records began in 1983. A report by
Standard & Poor's revealed that 335,000 households in Britain now find
themselves in negative equity, an increase of 250,000 in only four months.
By 2010, S&P predicts that as many as 2 million UK households could be
threatened with falling into negative equity.

Recognizing the extreme danger to the British economy from a double barreled
slide in housing and stock markets, the Bank of England delivered a shocking
1.50% cut in interest rates on Nov 6th, lowering its base rate to 3%, it's
lowest in more than half a century. The BoE judged "the economic outlook had
worsened markedly because of the global financial crisis and that drastic action
was needed." However, British banks are reluctant to pass along lower mortgage
rates in line with official BoE lending rates because of historically high
sterling Libor rates.
British factory output also contracted for a sixth consecutive month in October
as falling demand both at home and abroad tipped the sector into recession.
In response, the BoE engineered the biggest devaluation of the British pound
since sterling's ejection from the EU's Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992, to
help UK exporters compete in foreign markets, and artificially inflate the
income of UK multinationals earned abroad. Despite the pound's 24% devaluation
however, the UK's index for new export orders fell to 43.5, its lowest since
September 2001.

Commodity markets have been on their wildest roller-coaster ride this year,
soaring amid an inflationary boom in the first half, and then plummeting in
a deflationary bust in the second half. At its peak in early July, the Dow
Jones Commodity Index stood +40% higher than a year earlier, led by spectacular
gains in energy, grains, and precious metals. But signs of a serious worldwide
recession have meant the end of the commodities boom. Gold, tracking trends
in the broad commodity indexes, has tumbled 28% since a record high of $1,030
/ounce on March 17th.
Mitigating some of gold's vulnerability to sliding commodities is its traditional
role as a hedge against global security risks. US Vice-president elect Joe
Biden might be right. There could be an international crisis to test the new
American President in 2009. Perhaps North Korea will refuse to honor its disarmament
promises, and fire up its plutonium reprocessing plant. Perhaps Iran's Revolutionary
Guard units located in Lebanon, the Gaza Strip, southern Iraq, and its "special
groups" in the Persian Gulf, will become more active, once the US-military
withdraws from Iraq.
Tension in Russian-American relations has been driven to a post-Cold War high
by Moscow's invasion of South Ossetia. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev wasted
no time on Nov 5th, and in his first state of the nation speech, said Moscow
will deploy Iskander missiles near Poland, and equipment to electronically
hamper the operation of US missile defense facilities in Poland and the Czech
Republic. "From what we have seen, the creation of a missile defense system,
the encirclement of Russia with military bases, the relentless expansion of
NATO, we have gotten the clear impression that NATO is testing our strength," Medvedev
warned.

On the financial crisis, Medvedev said overconfidence in American dominance
after the collapse of the Soviet Union "led the US authorities to major mistakes
in the economic sphere. The American administration ignored warnings and harmed
itself and others by blowing up a money bubble to stimulate its own growth," he
said. Of course, the Kremlin has also been guilty of inflating the the Russian
stock market bubble, by expanding its M2 money supply an average 50% per year.
Soaring oil prices also fueled a boom in Russian stocks over the past few
years, and bloated Russia's foreign exchange reserves to a peak of $597 billion,
the third-largest in the world, from just $10 billion in 1998. Four years of
high oil prices have left the country with no foreign debt. But since July,
sliding oil prices, concerns about the Russian banking sector, and a mass exodus
of foreign investors from Russia's stock market, has wiped-out three-quarters
of the Russian Trading System Index's value, led by Gazprom and Rosneft, the
country's biggest energy companies.
Moscow has been forced to draw-down $113-billion from its reserves to $484
billion, in order to support state-run banks with subordinated loans, to buy
equities on the stock exchange, and to defend the Russian rouble in the foreign
exchange market. Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin argues there is no alternative
to his prescription of greater state-control over the economy and stock markets,
and that the turmoil in Western capitalist economies only proves it.
Since August, the Bush-Paulson team has seized America's largest insurance
company, AIG, nationalized mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie, pumped $250
billion into US-banks, paid the $29 billion dowry for Bear Stearns to enter
its shotgun marriage with JP Morgan Chase, and will soon bail-out GM, Ford
and Chrysler. Is America sliding on the slippery slope towards Europe's "Enlightened
Socialism?"
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