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I have often written about the high probability of a recession following an
inverted yield curve (where short-term rates are higher than long-term rates),
based upon research which suggests the yield curve is our most reliable indicator
of future recessions. I am often asked whether a yield curve causes a recession.
The (very) short answer is no. But then what is the mechanism that makes it
so reliable? Is it different this time? How can we believe that the economy
has a few bumps in its future when things are just so darn good? We ponder
these questions in today's letter, as well as peruse the "shocking" housing
data released this morning, and look at a very interesting chart on gold.
But first, let me call to your attention the official announcement of my 4th
annual Strategic Investment Conference, co-sponsored by my friends at Altegris
Investments. The conference will be April 19-21 in La Jolla, California. The
line-up of speakers is quite impressive. Richard Russell, of course, will be
there. It is one of his few live speaking engagements of the year, as he does
not travel to speak. So we bring the mountain to Mohammed, so to speak. Dennis
Gartman will regale us with his stories and wisdom. Dr. Woody Brock, one of
the world's better economists and frequent speaker at Davos will be there.
George Friedman of Stratfor (what a treat!) will give us his views on how the
world will develop politically over the coming years, and hopefully give us
a preview of his forthcoming book. Louis-Vincent Gave will kick things off.
Rob Arnott will follow. And Dr. Mike Roizen (YOU: The Owner's Manual)
will give us the latest on how to stay healthy, live longer, and enjoy our
lives. And your humble analyst, of course.
In designing a conference, I put together a group of speakers that I want
to hear and learn from. Many conferences have one or two headliners and then
fill in the rest of the time. This conference has nothing but headliners. Every
speech is a keynote. And there are plenty of chances to meet the speakers personally.
If you are looking for one place to come and learn about what the economic
climate may be for the next few years, and for ways to both protect and take
advantage of an ever-changing world, then you should consider this conference.
No booths, no vendors, just investors like you and experts.
But it is more than just a theoretical event - investors will also have the
chance to learn about the many different hedge fund strategies and options
that are appropriate for their particular risk tolerance, investment goals,
and investment experience, in the many manager sessions during the conference.
I find first-class speakers, but my partners at Altegris run a first-class
show. Everything is top-notch. Most attendees tell me that this conference
is the best they have even been to, and we make a point of trying to make it
better each year. The price you pay for the conference has been substantially
less than what it costs us to do, so you get value! And the Hyatt Aventine
in La Jolla is a great venue with a wonderful spa. And the best part of the
weekend is that you get to meet some really great new people.
The bad news is that because of the regulatory requirements to which we are
subject, we have to limit attendees to those who have a liquid net worth of
$2,000,000 or more. Thus, the conference is by invitation only, as we are required
to talk with every attendee prior to their coming to the conference. I wish
it were different, but we are very serious about playing by the rules.
If you have already signed up for my Accredited Investor E-letter, your invitation
should have been sent to you this week. If you missed it, drop me a note and
I will make sure you get one, or you can go to https://hedge-fund-conference.com/invitation.aspx to
learn more about the conference and then scroll down to register.
If you have not signed up for my free bi-monthly (more or less) e-letter on
alternatives, you can go to www.accreditedinvestor.ws and
sign up, as well as read about the risks involved with hedge funds. If you
are interested in going to the conference, the following link will take you
to the registration page for the letter, and I will make sure someone promptly
follows up with you to get you an invitation. https://usreg.accreditedinvestor.ws/?sic=1
If you have any questions, get back to me and we will make sure they get answered.
I hope to see you there. (In this regard, I am president and a registered representative
of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, member NASD.)
An Impressive Bull Run in Gold
One of the more frustrating things about being an analyst is to make a call
and then wait for what may be a long time before the market decides to approve
of your intuitive foresight ... or brutally punish your hubris. But it comes
with the territory, so if you have been doing this long enough, you eventually
develop some emotional calluses as well as a certain quantum of humility. Some
of the more dangerous characters in this business are those who refuse to acknowledge
they can be wrong and demand the market confirm their superior wisdom. A good
investment or great market call is evidence of their genius, but if something
negative happens, it is simply bad luck or an intransigent market. Those who
ride a bull need to realize that it is easy to get thrown off. Risk controls
are the mantra of the better players in the investment game.
I find the better analysts that I meet have a very refined sense of their
potential for being wrong at any given time. In fact, the better they are,
the more humility they seem to exhibit. They may pound the table when espousing
their point of view, and argue with great and laudable vigor; but they constantly
keep an open mind, looking to learn and grow with each missed call.
Thus, when you do make a call and the market decides to confirm your wisdom
fairly quickly, it is an easy thing to remember. It also is a reminder that
luck is a sometimes good thing. I became bearish on the dollar and thus bullish
on gold in early 2002. And it has been an impressive bull run.
Most of my bullishness about gold has been admittedly centered in my still
long-term bearish posture on the US dollar. And in the beginning of the run,
that was the correct position. But of late, gold has been in a bull market
across the board. My good friend and South African partner Prieur du Plessis
sent me the following graph and table, following a discussion on gold. While
we are familiar with the rise in gold in terms of the dollar, it is instructive
to look at how it has done in other major currencies (the euro, pound, yen
and Swiss franc):

For the last three years, gold has been in a bigger bull run in terms of yen
than in any other major currency, making new recent highs. And look at the
following table, which shows the percentage increase for gold in terms of nine
different currencies over the last two years:

Gold is at $668.50 and is having trouble busting through $670. There are persistent
rumors that there is a major seller at this level. Dennis Gartman (no gold
bug he, but he is currently bullish on the barbarous relic) writes this morning:
"Moving on to gold, we note that the resistance between $668-670 has proven
formidable indeed, for gold has effectively traded within that range for the
half day prior to writing yesterday's TGL and for the past full day. Once again,
we've no idea who it is that is selling spot gold at $670, but it is someone
of very real consequence and with very material selling to be accomplished.
Once again, it may be a government, it may be a hedge fund, it may be miners
hedging forward production because of bank agreements made on a project or
two or three... it may be a combination of the above, or it may simply be very
large 'specs' wishing to take profits on old long positions or wishing to get
materially short.
"All we care about is that it is someone or something that has thus far successfully
stopped gold from advancing, and with the week's end upon us, we shall not
be at all surprised to see that seller remain successful in keeping gold from
moving through his offers. Next week, however, the 'game' shall be played with
a bit more enthusiasm, and the seller... whoever or whatever 'he' might be...
shall have a far more difficult time keeping gold in check."
As I have said many times, gold is a neutral "currency." It is the one currency
that cannot be printed by a reserve bank, and thus, is a long-term hedge against
monetary deterioration. Gartman gives us a very wise quote from James Burton,
Chief Executive of the Gold Council, and one with which I totally agree. When
queried about whether a return to a gold standard is possible in the foreseeable
future, he answered:
"No - the gold standard was appropriate to the second half of the 19th century,
but circumstances are now different. But this does not mean that gold no longer
has a monetary role. It remains an important reserve asset for central banks
since it is the only reserve asset that is no one's liability. It is thus a
defense against unknown contingencies. It is a long-term inflation hedge and
also a proven dollar hedge while it has good diversification properties for
a central bank's reserve asset portfolio."
I would expect to see more developing central banks put some of their reserves
into gold over time, as the developed world sells some of their gold. I would
also not be surprised to see another bubble in gold develop at some point,
as there is something about the metal that seems to alter mental reality when
it starts to run. I hope not, for a bubble and the following aftermath would
do a great deal of damage.
What the Yield Curve Tells Us
The yield curve is the slope of the line between short-term and long-term
interest rates. In a normal world, you get more interest (yield) for longer-dated
maturities. But sometimes (rarely) the interest-rate world gets out of sorts,
and short-term rates become higher than long-term rates. The yield curve is
said to be inverted, as it is today - witness the graph from Bloomberg below:

I have written at length about the various studies, first by Professor Harvey
Campbell of Duke and then later by New York Federal Reserve economists Mishkin
and Estrella, which show an inverted yield curve to be the best indicator of
a future recession. For those not familiar with the studies, you can go to
my December 30, 2005 e-letter to review: http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo123005
In short, the yield curve inverted significantly last fall; and if past performance
is indicative of future results, the studies suggest we should see a recession
as early as the late second quarter of this year, or more likely in the third
quarter. Note: we have never had an inverted yield curve as we currently have
without a recession following within about 4 quarters.
But a yield curve does not cause a recession. It simply tells us that something
wicked this way comes. Something is out of kilter in the economy. Looking back
at past recessions, it has been different things, so we can't look to history
with any sense of reliability to say, "This is it!"
So, when the yield curve gets inverted we must pay special attention. As we
examine the economic landscape today, what could bring about a recession or
serious slowdown? The service sector certainly seems to be in good shape. Agricultural
firms are getting record high prices. The financial sector, with the notable
exception of mortgage firms, is seeing ever higher profits. The world seems
awash with cash.
What could be the problem? As I have written for the past few months, I think
the culprit is going to be the housing market. Both as a result of a slowdown
in construction which will modestly increase unemployment, but more importantly
as a result of a decrease in the ability of the US consumer to borrow against
their home as home values go flat or fall and mortgage lenders have to tighten
up the credit standards. This is going to put a constraint on consumer spending,
and that is going to be enough to tip us into what I think is going to be a
mild recession.
Ken Fisher writes in this weeks Forbes that we have seen the bottom
on the housing market. "In the last six months housing stocks are up 24%, well
ahead of the market. If housing were destined to fall apart in 2007 these stocks
wouldn't be so strong now."
And maybe he's right, as the stocks are still relatively good values if they
meet their 2007-8 earnings projections. But the same argument could be made
about tech stocks in 1999. And the stock market was telling us in August of
2000 that the economy was getting ready to boom. The stock market does not
always get it right.
That being said, the data which has been coming out for the past few months
has not been kind to my predictions, but today we have new inputs which suggest
that maybe we are starting to see some cracks in the economy.
GDP is AWOL
Only a few weeks ago, we were told that the GDP for the fourth quarter was
3.4%, which is rather robust. I must admit I was taken somewhat aback by that
number, as it did not square with the rest of what I was seeing. But you have
to be ready to admit you are wrong when you are. Only, we find the data is
not as robust as first thought.
The first estimate of GDP growth is done on a basis of estimates of inventory
and productivity, among other things. It turns out reducing inventories were
the basis of much of the growth estimate. Reducing inventories is not the same
as increased production. JP Morgan estimates GDP may have been overstated by
as much as 1%, and we will see that official number revised downward in the
next few months.
That "Shocking" Housing Data
This morning, while driving into the office, I was listening to CNBC. The
reporter was talking about the "shocking" housing starts number, which plunged
14.3%. As it happened, I was driving in with my daughter, and turned to her
and said, "There's nothing shocking about that number. It's what you would
expect." Well, maybe that's not quite the case. The lowest estimates were for
about 6% above what the actual number came in at (a 1.4 million starts pace,
down from 1.6 million).
The number of homes under construction declined, the number of completions
declined, and the number of houses authorized but not yet started declined.
There is a simple explanation. Even with construction off more than 38% in
the past two quarters, inventories have only fallen by about 6% from a record
high in July of 573,000 homes.
Slower sales and cancellations of existing orders have caused the number of
unsold homes to pile up. The supply of homes at last year's sales rate averaged
6.4 months' worth, up from 4.4 months' worth in 2005 and 4 months in 2004.
And as the buying is slowing down, that inventory is rising. Sellers of previously
owned homes are lowering prices to drum up demand. The median price of a previously
owned, single- family home fell in 73 of 149 metropolitan areas in the fourth
quarter, a National Association of Realtors report showed yesterday.
Toll Brothers Inc., the largest US luxury home builder, reported a 33 percent
plunge in orders during the quarter ended Jan. 31. Ken Fisher has the company
on his buy list at 19 times what he calls depressed earnings. With today's
announcement it looks like earnings could get more depressed.
I think it is going to get worse as the sub-prime mortgage market starts to
cough homes that were sold the last two years back onto the market because
of foreclosures. Foreclosures are up five times in Denver, as an example.
Dave Seiders, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders,
predicts that the cut in residential investment (construction) will shave one
percentage point from the economy's inflation-adjusted growth rate in the first
quarter, more than he was anticipating late last year.
But the real hit comes from the decrease in mortgage equity withdrawal. Let's
look again at the following graph. I know I have used it before, but it is
at the crux of my potential recession argument.
Mortgage Equity Withdrawal (MEW) accounted for over 2% of last year's GDP
growth. Take away that and 1% for construction, and we would have been close
to a recession.

Now MEWs are not going to disappear. This is the US consumer we are talking
about. They are committed to supporting world trade through increased borrowing.
No, the problem is going to be that MEWs are going to be harder and harder
to get, especially for sub-prime mortgages.
A decade ago sub-prime mortgages were a mere $35 billion. Today they are one-fourth
of all mortgages, about $665 billion. Somewhere in the neighborhood of $1 trillion
in adjustable-rate mortgages is eligible to be reset in the next two years,
sharply increasing payments and lowering the discretionary spending ability
of those homeowners.
But the real hit is going to be the inability of many to actually get loans.
In the same issue of Forbes where Fisher was telling us to buy home
builders and that the housing market is going to rebound, is a very interesting
article about the problems of sub-prime lenders. Here are some of the high
(or maybe low) lights.
Some 79% of the loans by FirstFed Financial were so-called stated income loans,
in which the borrower's income did not have to proven with W-2's, tax statements,
or payroll checks. The list of institutions with such problematic loan policies
is long. And the result is that there are going to be a lot of new homeowners
getting into financial difficulty. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates
that as many as 20% of the subprime mortgages made in the last two years could
go into foreclosure, or about 5% of the total homes sold. If just half of those
homes come back onto the market, it will cause home prices to fall, limiting
the ability of people to borrow, causing valuations to fall and a reduction
in MEWs.
Compound that with probable legislation sponsored by Democratic Congressman
Barney Frank and Senator Chris Dodd to tighten up lending standards and disclosure
rules, and you could see loans at the lower end of the market dry up. And by
the way, full disclosure requirements would be a very good thing.
The subprime mortgage market is going to be a scandal by the end of this year,
as these loans have been packaged and sold as investment-grade bonds by numerous
investment banks, mostly to European and Asian institutions. Some of these
Collateralized Debt Obligations, or CDOs, are going to default and there is
going to be a major wave of lawsuits.
So, will there be a recession? I still think so, and I think the culprit is
going to be the housing market, which is going to trigger a slowdown in consumer
spending, the first such slowdown since 1991. If Fisher is right and the housing
market is getting ready to take off, then I am going to be not just wrong,
but really wrong. We'll see.
A Family Road Trip
It is time to hit the send button. It is close to ten, and the poor editor
and tech support guy are waiting. And I have to get up quite early and drive
to Tulsa with some of my kids to watch my daughter cheer in her final home
game. These annual trips with the kids are actually fun, even though I am not
much of a fan of sitting in a car for long stretches. We'll have six of my
seven in Tulsa. We'll eat sushi and laugh a lot. Life is good.
One of my good friends, Dr. Gary North, distressingly lost his youngest son
this last week. I knew Caleb as a kid, as he was the age of my kids when we
lived in Tyler near Gary. I was particularly touched by the way Gary ended
his letter telling us about Caleb:
"Instead of sending an email of condolence to me, call your kids and tell
them you think they are terrific. Be specific as to why. It will help them
work on their good points. The older they are, the less you can do about their
bad points. Put your effort where it counts."
You can bet I will do just that this weekend. And it is good advice to all
of us. None of us knows the future.
I have adjusted much easier to the jet lag coming back from Africa than going.
I am back on Texas time. It has been a busy week, trying to catch up with office
issues, put in some writing and research time on my book, and a whole host
of things which seem to demand attention.
Have a great week, and get in touch with those you love.
Your glad for every moment analyst,
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