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The following is part of Pivotal Events that was
published for our subscribers Thursday, March 5, 2009.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES:
Last Year:
"Traders Turn Gold Fever Into Fire"
"Gold fever is gripping investors, but the metal's temperature looks
set to rise much further still."
- Financial Post, March 1, 2008
"The world is going through the biggest industrial revolution it has
ever seen. The implications for raw materials are dramatic." High
was 4.02 (LME) on March 6, 2008.
- Red Kite Metals - a hedge fund described as
the "Kings of Copper"
- Financial Post, March 26, 2008
* * * * *
This Year:
"The essential thesis is that we are adding 50 to 75 million consumers
a year to the metals and the grains and the energy. That's going to continue."
- Donald Coxe, Financial Post, March 3, 2009
The demographic story was used to tout stocks in the 1920s, as well as at
the secular high for the stock market in the late 1960s. Then, it was used
to tout stocks in the 1999 tech-mania when a "baby boomer" was turning 50 every
50 seconds, or something like that. The reasoning was that they were going
to buy stocks for their retirement plan.
At the time, Bob Prechter published a thorough study on demographics during
the post-1929 contraction. The conclusion was clear - the depression turned
down the birth rate, as markets pushed demographics.
Essentially, a key part of the late commodities mania was the concept of the
global boom creating endless numbers of middle-class families in China and
India. Commodities would respond to demographics. Quite likely, the crash in
commodities, as in the 1930s will be forcing demographics, and the critical
factor has been credit contraction, which in 2008 was not part of strategists'
cheerleading.
STOCK MARKETS
Dismay is running its course. Our memo of February 2 was "concerned" about
the immediate outlook, and recent work by Ross had a possible low for the S&P
at 643. Monday was a failure of nerve day and so is today. So far, the low
on the S&P is 682. By the same method the Dow equivalent is 6250.
Pressure seems close to finishing, which will set up the rebound. They rally
will likely fit the parameters of the stair-step decline as outlined in two
recent ChartWorks.
Some of the timing could be due to the big change in currencies that has been
possible this week.
Our February 19 edition observed that Canadian and US banks were depressed
enough to "pop a brief rally." Using the BKX, the low was 19.58 on that day
and the initial move made it to 28 last Thursday. At 19 today, this seems to
be a test that could resolve to the upside.
Overall, Democrats are using the crisis as the reason to impose socialist
compulsions. And as we all know, socialists are like cats clawing the furniture.
They can't help doing it, but always look guilty when caught. In every experiment
in socialist meddling, the equivalent of wrecked furniture is always revealed
by implacable market forces.
More accurately, Democrat policies should be described as corporatism or fascism,
and it is time that socialism became as stigmatized as, for example, liberalism.
This will make a post-bubble contraction even worse than otherwise making
the investment streets unsafe - day or night.
Any rallies we expect should be used only by nimble traders. Investors should
consider them as a means of keeping track of the post-bubble contraction.
Credit Spreads: The advice in November-December was to position depressed
corporate bonds for a rally possible out to around March-April.
With a gain of 14 points on a yield of 10 percent in December, the BBB showed
an outstanding return. Our February 19 edition advised to begin selling when
the yield was 8.93%, and the following week it was an outright "sell". The
yield has increased to 9.35% and the spread has widened from 5.25% to 5.67%.
The next phase of the lengthy post-bubble bond disaster has likely started.
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