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The battle between economic weakness and the Fed's programs are playing out
in the currency, commodity, and stock markets around the globe. Since we know
stocks tend to bottom before the economy, we should remain open to all possible
outcomes, bullish or bearish, even in the face of serious systemic problems.
In Reflation:
Déjà Vu All Over Again?, we commented that the S&P
500's move through 806 sends a signal the markets are paying attention to all
the Fed's "liquidity facilities".
The Million Dollar Question: Are the current moves in commodities and
stocks due solely to an aversion to currency debasement, or is the market also
forecasting a better economy in the coming months? If the move is solely based
on the Fed's actions, then many of the current rallies may fail relatively
soon. If markets are moving because of the Fed and an improved economic
outlook, then we could be on the cusp of some bullish breakouts for numerous
markets (see charts below).
Reasons To Pay Attention: On March 24, 2009, we presented the chart
of oil below showing some positive characteristics that can be indicative of
an emerging trend. You can find similar early-stage, "it pays to keep an open
mind" characteristics in many asset classes - most of which have some connection
to a weak dollar.
NOTE: The chart below is from 3/23/09 close

While is it understandably difficult to comprehend significant bullish breakouts
possibly occurring given the state of the world, we know:
- Markets look forward and will move before the headlines get better (see
1974 headlines at the bottom of this article)
- We can't argue with the charts below - they are what they are.
Successful breakouts of the charts below would be a positive development for
all risk assets. A successful breakout ultimately means a lasting breakout
- it pays to be careful near inflection points. It is worth our time to monitor
their progress or lack thereof in the coming days and weeks.
Remaining charts are as of Thursday's (3/26/09) close.





Dollar Still Holding Up: When reviewing all these markets, it is important
to keep in mind, the U.S. dollar has held above its recent upward sloping trendline
(bullish). So at this moment, all the talk of weak dollar assets may be premature.
The bearish dollar ETF (UDN - shown below) has not cleared enough hurdles to
become blindly bearish on the dollar (as we would expect). Our guess is most
of these charts will follow a similar path in the coming days and weeks - they
will all break through meaningful levels or they will all bounce off meaningful
levels. We can afford to be patient and see how it plays out. When "the shift" occurs
from risk aversion to willingness to accept risk, it will be not be all that
hard to see on the charts. Understanding the fundamental side of the ledger
helps as well - obviously, significant bullish breaks in the commodity markets
is a positive signal for the global economy. The five hundred thousand dollar
question is if we get breakouts, will they hold? Time will tell.


The Headlines Will Continue To Be Worrisome: The following is an
excerpt from an October 20, 2008 article Stocks
Will Bottom Well Before Economy. It is not presented again to
imply a bottom is in place, but to illustrate the importance of remaining
open minded to the possibility a bottom is in place.
Investors need not wait for the headlines to become more positive before
allocating some of their capital to stocks. The headlines below were on the
front page of major U.S. newspapers between late September 1974 and late
March 1975. Stocks bottomed on October 2, 1974, which means while the headlines
were still very negative, stocks were looking forward to better times. All
the headlines below graced the front of newspapers after the market
had bottomed.
- Nixon's Chief Aids Go On Trial
- Ford's Ban on Wage and Price Controls Draws Criticism
- Nixon Tapes Open Pardon Question
- Arab Oil Nations Warned
- Inflation Spurts 1.3%
- Fed Pledges End to High Interest Rates
- Senate Joins Efforts to Get Nixon Tapes
- Spending Cuts Urged
- Ford Defends Action, Made No Pardon Deal
- Police Stop School March
- Terrorists Hold French Embassy
- Police Escort School Buses
- Nixon Likely to Resign From Bar
- Ford May Pardon Others
- Big Energy Taxes Next?
- West Must Change Ways, Iran Warns
- Terrorists Cut Demands
- President Opposes Gas Tax, Rationing
- U.S.-Soviet Talks Fall Apart
- Tax Hike Heads New Ford Plan
- Energy Crisis to Change Americans
- President Hopes to Cut Inflation by Next Year
- Tapes Reveal Nixon Knew Facts Early
- $3 Billion OK'd For Housing Aid
- Ford Says He Will Prove Polls Wrong
- Mileage Boosted in '75 Cars
- Anger at Watergate Trial
- Ted's Night of Anguish for Mary Joe
- Economic Index Takes Plunge
- U.S. Investigates Food Price Fixing
- Jobless Rate HitsThree-Year High
- Ford Pleads for Inflation Fight
- Financial Crisis Faces Sympathy
- Coal Strike Seems Inevitable
- Stores Ask Voluntary Rationing of Sugar
- Kent State Shooting Guardsman Acquitted
- Skyjacker Dies in Shootout
- 15,625 More Autoworkers Jobless
- Hijackers Hold off Executions
- Recession Hits Auto Plants
- Chrysler May Halt December Production
- Watergate and Hush Money
- Threat of Gas Lines - We're Using Too Much
- U.S. Economy Flashes New Distress Signals
- Real Wages Nosedive
- HUD Accused of Mortgage Bias
- Watergate Case Goes to Jury
- Gloomy Jobless Rate
- Big Economic Plan Pledged
- A $16 Billion Tax Cut
- Oil Price Batter Balance of Trade
- Ford's Jobless Forecast Grim
- Highway Funds Low, Projects Cut
- 9.3% Unemployment Hits California
- U.S. Rolls of Unemployment Climbs to 8 Million
- FBI Works On Hearst Case
We can expect the headlines to look quite bleak in the coming quarters,
but we must keep in mind that it is not unusual for stocks to bottom well
before the economy and social mood. An investor who held stocks while the
headlines above appeared in his daily paper was rewarded with a nice profit.
The Most Important Concept In Investing: The charts represent the collective
thoughts of all market participants, the same participants that ultimately
determine if and when we are going to transition from a bear market to a bull
market. Regardless of any individual's personal opinion or forecast, when all
market participants collectively decide we are moving into a sustainable bull
market, we are going to move into a sustainable bull market. If you disagree,
you will be left behind. Conversely, if an individual is bullish and the market
collectively does not have the will to produce positive breakouts, the market
will reverse and the individual will be on the wrong side of the trade. The
previous four sentences should make us better understand the dangers of forecasting.
Understanding these concepts is extremely important in investing.
"The market can remain irrational longer
than you can remain solvent."
~ John Maynard Keynes
Let's assume you have in your hand a flawless research report that has accurately
depicted everything that should influence market behavior in the next six months.
Now, assume you are the only person who has access to that report. If the market
collectively does not know what you know, you can bet the market is not going
to be influenced by your report or opinion. It does not matter what individuals
or entire organizations think or forecast, it matters what the market collectively
thinks and forecasts. The statements above apply to all of CCM's research reports
and opinions as well. It pays to pay attention - it is dangerous to forecast
or use the expressions "I think" or "they forecast". The concept of fundamental
and technical alignment says the fundamentals are your "research report",
which may be 100% accurate. You need the technicals (charts) to align with
your research report before you can profit from your research report. Both
are important - fundamentals and technicals. When you have fundamental and
technical alignment, you have very good odds of being successful.
In the current environment, weak dollar investments have tremendous fundamental
support - we need technical alignment - it may or may not be coming to a chart
near you soon.
The charts and commentary above are for illustrative purposes
only and are not recommendations to buy or sell any security.
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