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How has another year come and gone so quickly? It seems like someone hit the
fast forward button. And once again, all too soon, it is time for me to demonstrate
my masochistic nature and write a forecast issue. Rather than going into details
on every topic, I will try and stick to the big picture and leave the fine
points for later letters.
Each year as I do this forecast, I look for a theme. What will be the driving
factor which will set the stage for the economy? In 2001 it was the coming
recession; in 2002 it was a weak recovery and the beginning of the Muddle Through
Economy; in 2003 it was Surprise and Transition. In 2004 it was the Silver
Lining Economy; in 2005 it was the See-Saw Economy. Last year it was The Gripping
Hand, as Bernanke had the economy in his interest rate gripping hand. Who knew
in January 2006 how far he would go? For masochists, you can go the archives
at www.2000wave.com and read those forecasts.
This year the theme is The Goldilocks Recession. As outlined in the past few
months, I think the US will have a mild recession or slowdown in 2007. That
premise leads to a lot of other follow-on forecasts. Why the theme? Remember
that after finding things were just right, Goldilocks ended running out of
the house when the bears came home. And I think the housing bear will finally
come home in 2007.
And as I do each year, we start by reviewing last year's forecast. Prior to
last year, I had been on kind of a roll in my forecast issues. Never perfect
of course, but all in all I have been lucky. I wrote as a preface last year:
"As I look at the coming year, I think it is likely I will not be as successful
in my accuracy. There are a lot of potential variables which could cause any
number of my predictions to be wrong. But chief of my concerns is Fed policy.
When will they stop raising rates? In my mind, I see Ben Bernanke playing Clint
Eastwood, doing the Dirty Harry role, looking into the face of the housing
market and saying, 'Do you feel lucky punk? Well, do you?' As we will see,
this is the wild card upon which the economy will turn."
As it turns out, I did not do all that badly. I wrote at length why I though
the Fed would go further hiking rates than the consensus at that time and I
was right. However, I thought that raising rates more than most economists
thought, plus a slowing economy, would put a damper on the stock market and
I was really wrong in calling for a down year in the stock market. I also thought
inflation would peak earlier than it has, but that is my bias, as I think that
global deflationary forces will eventually be the order of the day.
On the plus side, I got the currency markets right. I was mildly bearish on
the dollar as well as seeing a small rise in the Chinese Renminbi. I was bullish
on gold and energy. I did not think we would go into a recession in 2006, but
that consumer spending would slow down by the end of 2006. I predicted a return
of the Muddle Through Economy by the end of the year, which we certainly saw.
Growth in the last half of the year will be below the 2% range, which qualifies
for Muddle Through. I was positive on global growth and China in particular,
even with many calling for a hard landing in China. I also called for a correction
in copper, which we surely got this year.
Past performance is not indicative of future results. In golf, you drive for
show and you putt for dough. Forecasts are for show. I can guarantee I will
get a few things wrong. Maybe a lot of them. Count on it. Its how we invest,
and what either confirms or changes those forecasts as time plays out that
is the key. If the facts change, so will my views. However, a forecast stays
forever in the archives, good or bad. Let's see if we can get a few right this
year.
Caveat: If I am wrong about the housing market retreat causing a recession,
this forecast is going to be really wrong.
And speaking of the accuracy of forecasts, a note from reader Nathan Lewis
called to my attention an interesting historical event. Let's get in the Way
Back Machine and go to the 70s. The Dow had topped out in late 1965 - early
1996, and then began an almost 30% bear market drop to the spring of 1970.
But wait, from that bottom the Dow took off. In January of 1973, the Dow topped
out around 1050, or 5% above its previous high. Writes Nathan:
"On January 1, 1973, Barron's published its famous Roundtable interviews with
big-name professional investors. The title was 'Not a Bear Among Them.' (By
the way, the Fed Funds Rate, as of the end of December 1972, was -- 5.33%!
You can't make this stuff up.)"
Of course, the Dow then proceeded to drop 40%.
And yes, this year's Roundtable had not a bear in the room. Let's see. A 5%
rise from previous highs? No bears in the Roundtable? You drive for show. Let
me note that this issue probably gets forwarded more than any other weekly
letter I write. For new readers, you can join my 1,000,000 closest friends
and get this free weekly letter sent directly to your email address by going
to www.2000wave.com and simply entering
your email address. Now, let's get into the forecast.
The Goldilocks Recession
Economic forecasts this year tend to fall into three camps. The very large
majority which sees a mild slowdown (not a recession!) with the Fed cutting
rates in response and then renewed growth. They look back to the middle 90's
where there was indeed a slowdown but not a recession, and the market continued
to climb. Goldilocks, indeed.
There are a few which see the roots of a serious recession based upon a collapse
in housing prices and a manufacturing slump.
And then there is the lonely middle where I reside, which sees a mild recession
(at least by historical standards). It's like the line from the one hit wonder
by Stealers Wheel from 1973:
"Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right of me, stuck in the middle
with you. And I'm wondering what it is I should do."
Why just a mild recession? Because basically the bulls are right about 70-80%
of the economy. Things are doing just fine, thank you. The service sector is
rocking along with the latest ISM number for the service sector at 57.1%, which
is quite healthy. By some estimates, the service sector is up to 80% of the
economy.
There is not a recession in health services. Where is the bear market in government
employees? Education? Except for mortgage related services, there is growth
in the finance area. Technology? Food services? Every month, we see solid increases
in service employment. Unemployment is a comfortably low 4.5%, with many areas
of the US showing even lower levels.
The problem is in two areas, housing (which is categorized mostly as service)
and manufacturing, especially auto related manufacturing. These sectors are
in recession already. If you are in the home building business, it feels like
more than a recession. While some point to a small rise in new home sales,
there is plenty of evidence to suggest that it is from aggressive price cutting.
Even so, the numbers of new homes for sale just keep rising.
Under normal circumstances the bulls would be right. A slowdown in the housing
sector, even a serious one, should not be enough in and of itself to cause
a recession. But this is not a normal circumstance.
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We have had a real asset bubble in housing. Bubbles do not end without
pain.
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US home owners have used the rise in the value of their homes as a source
for increased consumer spending through Mortgage Equity Withdrawals (Mews),
financing increased consumer spending even while savings were negative.
MEWs are going to fall even more as home prices do not rise and even (hard
to believe!) fall.
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The housing industry -construction, finance, sales, MEWs, furniture and
renovations - accounted for a significant part of the recent growth there
has been in the economy. Without that positive contribution, and indeed
what will be a negative detraction in 2007, the economy will indeed be
slower.
Let's review two charts from friend Barry Ritholtz we used last week. The
first is what GDP would have been without MEWs.

The second graph shows the drop in MEWs through the third quarter. As we will
see below, home prices are not going to be rising, thus making it more difficult
for home owners to borrow money against the rise in their home values. Given
other pressures mentioned below, I think it is enough to cause consumer spending
to slow enough to cause a recession.

That Hissing Sound You Hear
In my home counties (Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas) homes are very affordable
when compared to the rest of the nation. We have not experienced the bubble.
Yet, foreclosures are at an all-time high here. There is a flood of these
homes coming onto the market. The pattern is the same all over the country.
Why should foreclosures be high in a period of low unemployment? Part of it
is that bad stuff happens to good people. They fall behind, lose a job, get
sick. Any of a dozen reasons.
But it is also because the mortgage industry has made some very bad loans.
That hissing sound you hear are the subprime mortgage loans escaping from the
housing bubble. The Center for Responsible Housing suggests that loose lending
practices in 2005 and 2006 will push 20% of the sub-prime loans made into foreclosure.
This is not insignificant. Subprime loans are 25% of the mortgage market. What
do you think will happen if 20% of recent sales go back onto the market?
And that is based on a mere 3.6% drop in housing prices nationwide. If the
price drops are more typical of what we have seen in regional housing recessions
(we have not seen a national one since the Depression), housing prices could
drop more than 3.6%, pushing more homes into the problem zone.
Gary Shilling writes: "Subprime mortgage loans have also leaped in recent
years as a portion of total originations, and among subprime mortgages, so
have ARMs. Most of those Subprime borrowers are very stretched to meet monthly
mortgage payments, and few have financial resources to fall back on if they
lose their jobs or if their mortgage payments adjust up substantially. They
already spend about 40% of their incomes on house costs. But payments will
leap unless interest rates collapse-- and soon.
Around 60% of subprime ARMs issued since 2004 have fixed interest rates for
two years and float for 28 years thereafter--2/28 mortgages. Their original
rates in 2004 were 7.1% on average and, under their mortgage contracts, can
eventually adjust up to about six percentage points over the current short-term
benchmark, the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR). It's 5.4% at present,
so those subprime ARMs can adjust to 11.4% if market rates don't change. Wow!
"On average, those subprime ARMs' upward adjustment is limited to 2.3 percentage
points on the first reset and 1.2 points per year thereafter. So a subprime
ARM originated in 2004 adjusted to 9.4% last year, and will move to 10.6% in
2007 and 11.4% in 2008 if benchmark rates remain the same. This is known in
the trade as reset shock for good reason. Of the estimated $436 billion in
mortgage loans that reset last year, $250 billion were subprime as are $360
billion of the $585 billion that will move to floating status in 2007."
The Derivative Sleeper
Lenders are going to become more cautious for several reasons. First, as these
bad loans come home to roost, there will be losses. Regulators are increasingly
mandating higher standards. Finally, investors are going to balk at buying
the paper. This latter may be more of a sleeper than most people realize.
Derivatives known as credit default swaps are getting expensive if you want
the protection. And there is a hidden problem in the mortgage market. The credit
rating agencies have priced some derivatives based on past performance that
may in fact not be justified when the future rolls around.
First, before we get into the subject of mortgage derivatives, let me say
the sky is not falling. We are not going to see a meltdown of the global financial
system. But there are going to be some people who are going to lose more money
than they had planned for, because they are taking more risk than they thought
there were.
Let's say a large investment bank puts together a pool of subprime mortgages.
They break this pool up into various "tranches." The first tranche gets the
first money back and gets a justifiable AAA rating. This is about 80% of the
pool. Lower tranches take more risk as they are lower down in the repayment
stream. They slice and dice these pools down to where some tranches are rated
C, somewhere slightly above Enron debt.
About 4% of the pool is rated BBB, or barely investment grade. Now, here is
where it gets interesting. Let's read what Shilling has to say about this debt
paper.
"...Next the BBB tranche, only 4% of the RMBS [Residential Mortgage Backed
Security], is pulled out and combined with BBB tranches from other pools to
serve as collateral for a derivative called a Collateralized Debt Obligation.
Since this combining of BBB tranches supposedly creates diversification that
the rating firms' models indicate will drastically limit delinquencies and
defaults, the AAA tranche of the CDO is 75% of the total capital structure
and 12% is rated AA. Only 4% is considered BBB. So pools of mortgages that
probably would be considered below BBB are miraculously turned into a CDO with
87% of its capital structure rated AAA and AA and only 4% is rated BBB.
"Wow! Talk about a sow's ear being turned into a silk purse! Think of the
leverage involved in converting low into high quality debt, even more so when
the CDOs are leveraged by their buyers 10 or 20 times! And think of the losses
when the 25% fall in house prices we foresee wipes out the whole BBB tranches
of the RMBSs by which the entire CDOs are collateralized!
"Conversely, consider the potential huge profits of investors that are essentially
buying insurance policies, Credit Default Swaps, that pay out any losses on
BBB tranches of the CDOs. But will the sellers of these CDSs be able to make
good on their contracts if the house price collapse we foresee materializes?"
(You can subscribe to his excellent letter by going to www.agaryshilling.com)
Who buys this stuff? Gary suggests that a lot of it is Asian and European
institutions who simply look at the rating by the credit agencies and buy.
It is also sophisticated shops that buy default insurance when they buy the
CDOs, as well as high risk funds that have investors who are searching for
yield.
Remember Amaranth, the hedge fund that blew up $6 billion of investor money
this year? Not a hiccup in the market. We are going to see some of these CDO
pools "have issues." Some are simply going to disappear. Investors will lose
some of their assets.
And let me say again the sky is not falling. The vast majority of mortgage
paper will be just fine, thank you very much. A few investors losing a billion
here or there is not a problem for the system as a whole.
What will really be the upshot is that investors are eventually going to shy
away from the subprime market without increased protection, scrutiny and returns.
The day of the no paperwork subprime mortgage will go away not because of government
action, but because the market will simply not take the paper.
Why should we care? 25% of the mortgage market is in the subprime space. If
a significant portion of people (which would be way less than the 20% mentioned
above) who have bought homes on subprime mortgages are foreclosed on, and there
is not financing for a new buyer for that home, it goes on the market and the
price drops until it becomes affordable to a sub-prime buyer under the new
tighter standards.
Every real estate agent knows that it is first time home buyers who are in
large part the fuel for the market, buying from more established households
who are "moving on up to the Eastside."
Problems on the Margins
Now, let me be clear here. I am talking about problems on the margin. The
vast majority of subprime loans are going to be repaid on time, as are their
more conventional cousins. Remember, 80% of the country, and a large portion
of the rest of homeowners will be just fine. They may not be happy because
their piggy bank doesn't automatically refill with home prices rising 15% a
year, but they will adjust.
But recessions are all about "on the margin." Really all a recession is is
a period of time when the economy does not grow but falls back, usually just
a few percentage points or on the margin. Recessions are typically created
when a small portion of the economy has larger than usual problems. In the
past, it has classically been manufacturing, but manufacturing is an increasingly
smaller part of the US economy. This time it will be the housing market and
its cousins that put pressure on the consumer.
The housing problems will spill over into consumer spending, both from much
lower MEWs and from the negative wealth effect. Throw in higher mortgage payments
for a significant portion of the country and there is less to spend. Instead
of robust growth in consumer spending, we will see anemic growth in much of
2007. Note I said growth.
But with inflation at 2%, businesses need 2% growth in consumer spending just
to "break even." While we all talk about "real" or after-inflation GDP, we
live in a nominal GDP world. Yes, incomes are (finally!) going up, but they
have to go up enough to cover the rise in expenses and to cover the loss of
MEWs, etc. I don't think they will.
From a sector standpoint, I think it is consumer durables that get hit the
hardest in the Goldilocks recession. Consumers will buy the staples. The simple
bear necessities will be ok, but larger purchases will be put off.
Timing? Aah, now you ask a much harder question. The inverted yield curve
historically suggests no sooner than the second quarter and by at least the
end of the third quarter, but what does a yield curve know? That sounds as
good a time frame as any.
But won't the Fed start to lower rates? Yes, but I think it unlikely that
it will be in time. The Fed has made very clear, and the minutes from the meeting
on December 12 underscore their unease, that inflation is still a concern.
They are not going to lower rates until the inflation monster is well and truly
dead. Not unless they want to lose their credibility, and they seem to value
that.
Today's employment report suggests that a Fed ready to cut rates is further
off than the market hopes.
Will the Stock Market (Finally!) Be Ready to Correct in 2007?
If I am forecasting a recession, then that suggests the stock market will
drop as well. Maybe not by as much as in past recessions, but it is hard to
see how it could shrug off a recession without so much as a real correction
of at least 10-20%. In future letters we will look at why a deep (the 40% plus
that is typical in recession) stock market bear is not as likely.
It also follows then that the Fed will cut rates and that long term interest
rates will go down, thus there is some room for a bond rally. Let me suggest
you go to www.pimco.com and read Bill Gross's
latest missive. He argues that nominal GDP is too low for the current rate
structure. (Van Hoisington and Lacy Hunt do as well, for different reasons.
I will send you their latest letter in Monday's Outside the Box).
Let's jump to Gross's conclusions:
"We at PIMCO look for a Fed Funds rate of 4 1/4% by December of 2007 with
5 and 10 year yields hovering at levels perhaps 25 basis points higher. While
that by no means would be reflective of past bond bull markets in terms of
magnitude, that is not to imply that 12/31/07 would mark its last gasp. With
nominal growth in the U.S. economy dependent on asset appreciation more than
ever before, the Fed will lower rates as far as they must in order to produce
it. We, like everyone else, will be interested observers along that downward
path as they attempt to push the nominal economy back to the magic 5% rate
of growth necessary to pay this nation's bills. Is the Fed impotent now?
Not as powerful as it once was, but with private financial market participants
more interested in other pursuits, it may be the only game in town, at least
for 2007, and if it lowers rates sometime within the next six months then
the U.S. bond bull market will gain renewed vigor."
Hard to argue with the Bond King. But while he does not say so, if the Fed
is having to cut rates that much that would suggest to me that a serious slowdown,
if not a recession, is underway.
A recession means that risks premiums should reassert themselves into the
high yield bond market, so if you are reaching for yield, I would be very careful.
Very careful indeed.
And if the Fed is cutting rates while Europe is raising theirs, as their economy
seems to be on a better track, then you would expect the dollar to fall some
more. Nothing precipitous, just another leg down, especially against Asian
currencies.
But in a mercantilist world, I don't think that many countries will let their
currencies rise all that much against the dollar. So, no large returns without
leverage, but that means a lot of risk. If you are going to invest in foreign
currencies with any type of leverage, let the professionals do it for you.
There is no guarantee, but the leveraged currency markets (futures and other
derivatives) is no place for amateurs. And even the pros get spanked regularly.
And if the dollar will fall some more, you would have to think that gold will
rise, so I remain bullish on the barbarous relic. The energy complex? A pause
is in order before the next leg up as foreign demand just keeps rising. And
just as last year, I would still be wary of long only commodity funds, at least
for the first part of the year. That could change.
If we do get a mild recession and a correction in the stock market back to
lower than trend valuations, I expect to finally turn selectively bullish on
stocks. I am really looking forward to that.
I think the global economy will get a mild hangover from a US recession, but
not as much of one as in the 90s. Things are changing.
The risks to my forecast? One very real one is typified by Steve Leuthold,
a very seasoned (and generally right on target) analyst, who thinks the recession
does not start until 2008. I am often early on these things.
Another real possibility is that there is not even a slowdown, as many think
will be the case. It could happen. If inflation does indeed come down faster
than it now looks, allowing the Fed to cut rates not as stimulus but because
inflation is not a problem, then we could indeed find that soft landing. If
that is the case, then take every forecast I made (except energy) and turn
it around.
Or the economy could get strong, stoking the inflation fires and force the
Fed to raise rates. I don't think so, but credible economists, ones that I
respect, see that as a possibility.
That being said, for all the reasons I haven outlined in this letter over
the past few months - the inverted yield curve, the leading economic indicators,
a housing recession, pressure on the consumer and more - I think we see the
Goldilocks Recession in 2007. We will see. Stay tuned.
As I indicated two weeks ago when I discussed my personal portfolio, I will
change little in any case, at least for the first half of the year. For those
of you who did not see that issue, here is a link: http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo122206
South Africa, A Moment for Reflection and My Book
I am off to La Jolla tomorrow with Tiffani to meet with business partner Jon
Sundt and the team at Altegris Investments, but flying back on Tuesday. In
a few weeks I am flying down to South Africa. I am looking forward to that
trip. It has been too long since I have been there. Partner Prieur du Plessis
will host me. I am going to be speaking at about a dozen meetings, so drop
me a note and I will make sure someone gets in contact with you.
And yes, I am going to take a few days to kick back. I need it. I realized
over the holidays I have not taken a vacation for a long time, and may even
take a longer when I get back.
This last year was more stressful than most. Toward the end of the year I
took a routine test for a life insurance policy. I was disturbed when I was
turned down, and when I found out the reason was brought up short. There was
a large jump in a potential cancer marker. As my doctor, Mike Roizen (the author
of You, the Owner's Manual) said, "John, you either have some reason for a
false positive which happens a lot with this test or you have a vicious SOB
of a cancer." Not the words you want to hear. Ironically, we were also working
to update my will, estate and business continuity plan. Kind of brought you
up short, known what I mean?
As it turns out, later tests (it took more than six weeks to work it all out)
did indeed confirm that there is no reason at all for any concern. Everything
is now testing normal. In fact, I am in overall better shape than a year ago.
The only bad news is we don't exactly know why the first test was off, but
why sweat the small stuff? I had a special reason to enjoy Christmas even more.
I have had a real writer's block on my next book The Millennium Wave. I just
couldn't get the words on the screen to make any sense. Normally when I write
I get a sense of direction and just let the words flow, admittedly in fits
and starts. Trying to write something coherent and thoughtful about how the
world will change over the next 20 years has been far harder than I originally
thought it would be.
Over the holidays I finally realized I was trying to write the wrong book.
I think that now that I have a sense of the direction, I can finally get it
done. It is the 800 pound gorilla on my work schedule shoulder and I want to
get it off. This is a book I have wanted to do for a long time, so when I get
it done, I want it done right.
This is going to be a busy year. I expect to travel more than in most years,
so I may be coming to a city near you. All over Europe, maybe Dubai, Chile,
a few other Latin American countries, Australia and Canada, of course, as well
as all over the US. I will keep you updated on my schedule.
I wish you a truly prosperous and Happy, Healthy New Year. Thanks for letting
me come into your life.
Your planning on living to see if his 20 year predictions work out analyst,
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