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The following is part of Pivotal Events that was published
for our subscribers May 21, 2009.
Signs Of The Times:
Last Year:
"Is the Financial Crisis Over?"
This was the headline on the Investment Round Table held in Singapore on May
15, 2008. Jesper Koll, the head of Tantallon Research in Japan, gushed about
the Fed's handling of last year's crisis:
"US policymakers deserve the Nobel Prize for applied economics. The
policy response to financial asset deflation was not only extremely fast,
but extremely well coordinated... [And] the second-round
effects of asset deflation have been contained."
There is something about interventionist theories that to certain mentalities
seems the equivalent to cat nip - particularly in May, which can often record
a financial "silly season".
Well, we are not sure about Koll's count on "second-round" effects, but
by our count this is the first big rebound out of a classic fall crash, that
typically become enthusiastic in May. This was the case in 1930 and 1874.
Also, there is another "count" running. The high for the stock market was
in October 2007, which was some 20 months ago. Twenty months after the end
of the bubbles in September 1929 and September 1873 counts out to May of
1931 and May of 1875 when those post-bubble contractions began another nasty
phase.
With appropriately-timed "joy" being expressed now, another turn to disaster
seems difficult to avoid.
* * * * *
This Year:
News reports show considerable contrast. Some are of economic disaster, but
by way of always late reporting are of an historical nature. Others, with more
immediacy, are very bullish.
"Evidence is piling up that the worst of the recession is over."
- AP, May 8, 2009
"Recovery to be A Powerful V-Shaped Recovery"
- Bank of England, Telegraph, May 10, 2009
"Credit Crunch Dulls Glitz of Cannes Festival: Parties Cancelled, Yachts
Empty"
- Reuters, May 19, 2009
"World Regains Taste For Risk"
- Wall Street Journal, May 11, 2009
"White House Sees 3.5% Growth by Year-End"
- Bloomberg, May 11, 2009
Well, we wondered where Abby Joseph Cohen would end up.
"China Optimism Prompts Investors to Load Up on Commodities"
- BMO Global Commodity Strategy, May 12, 2009
* * * * *
STOCK MARKETS
You can feel the excitement. The financial world is as it ought to be and
last fall's classic crash was just a modest speed bump on prosperity's natural
road. However, we have been expecting a classic rebound out to around May -
and this we have, such that the S&P has generated a good overbought on
our Summation thing. This is within a downtrend. The Upside Exhaustion readings
register at cyclical highs.
Stock market sentiment is high, and flying with official sentiment about the
economy. Support has also been expected from stronger base metal and crude
oil prices, which is the case. Of course, this would be accompanied by the
elixir of a weaker dollar.
We are reaching extremes for the move, and now we look for change. One big
one would be the S&P setting a new weekly low, but there could be others
before that.
Of interest is yesterday's downtick in metal prices. Zinc fell 4.7% as lead
plummeted 6%, which makes one think about lead canaries in a coal mine.
There is some irony in this section's opening paragraph about things being
as they ought to be. The street thinks that this "ought" to last, ours is that
it is the set up for the next phase of the contraction that has been likely
to become evident after June.
Of course, not all sectors will peak at the same time, and our advice is that
while the panics provided buying opportunity this month's action is providing
the exit.
More specifically, we bought the banks (BKX) in early March for the rebound,
and exited the position at the double in mid-April. On April 23 we noted that
the high needed a test and that one was exuberant on the rush to 43. Taking
out 36 would turn the bank index down.
Our proprietary Bank Trading Guide, which turned up from 120 early in the
year rallied to 154 on May 12. This has corrected to 149 and if this turns
down it would be a technical "sell" on most banks.
Base Metal Prices extended the decline today, encompassing all five
that we monitor. After plunging 6% yesterday, lead fell 1% today, which says
that the canary died. Our index (excluding nickel) reached 423 on April 15,
corrected to 371 at the end of April. The rebound made it to 425 on May 7,
and is at 399 today. The 6% decline is interesting and taking out 385 sets
the downtrend.
Our May 7 edition concluded: "Momentum for metals is at levels seen at previous
important highs and for stocks it is exceptional - at the right time for selling." That
edition also noted the Upside Exhaustion reading for copper, that had not been
seen since the cyclical high two years ago. The red metal reached 4.25 and
a test and rolling top would be the killer pattern. This is working out.
Mining stocks (SPTMN) set their high at 609 on May 8, and slumped to 494 on
Friday. The test made it to 574 and, obviously, taking out 494 sets the downtrend.
We bought the sector at as low as 178 in November and December on the crash
as well as on the seasonal low. The target has been the initial rebound out
of a crash to around May, as well as the seasonal rally into spring. It is
time to be absolutely out and traders to play the short side.
Link to May 22, 2009 'Bob and Phil Show' on Howestreet.com: http://www.howestreet.com/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1218
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