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I was surfing through radio stations Friday night while on a short drive to
pick up a pizza. Hoping for a good rock song I instead landed upon an economic
expert speaking ever so authoritatively on National Public Radio. I am pleased
to report to you that [paraphrasing him] "As far as the ongoing financial
crisis is concerned, the worst is behind us. We are not completely out of the
woods, but the Fed has done an amazing job of providing liquidity to the banks.
We have had a massive commodity bubble that has been responsible for the
US Dollar's decline and now that bubble is bursting. Again, the worst is
behind us and it is time to restore confidence in the financial system."
There you have it; the old 'inflation is caused by rising prices' canard.
I am not going to waste virtual ink dispelling this foolishness. If you are
reading this on biiwii.com or on the websites
that regularly publish my work, it would be an exercise in preaching to the
converted anyway. So the question at hand is do we believe all the happy talk
that has suddenly overrun the major media or not? Here is another example of
it: The
US financial crisis is over.
All this and more came just days after Bear Sterns' bleeding was stemmed by
desperate measures designed to limit the damage a domino effect would have
inflicted on all parties doing business with the company and by extension,
all parties doing business with those parties and those doing business with
them and so on and so forth. When you have leveraged derivatives in play that
have no market and nobody can really quantify, you do not want dominoes to
start falling.
My friend Otto Rock had a look
at what may be going on concurrently where hedge funds - heavy players
in the commodities markets - may have seen their margin terms cut drastically
during the same week that the insolvent likes of Fannie
and Freddie have had their capital requirements eased by the OFHEO. Da
Boyz is certainly pullin' out all da stops and you just gotta hand it 'em;
pure genius!
Where's the Herd's Psyche At?
I have long since known something was way messed up in the financial system
as likely, did you. But as a trader I want to be right, regardless of whether
or not I agree with the talking heads. Market sentiment has been front and
center both to the downside and now apparently, as the market bottoms and turns
up. The important question is whether this is the deal of the century or simply
a collective group hug and endorphin release as bi-polar players swing to the
other side, from despair/panic to hope/euphoria? Let's look at the VIX:

The current would-be market bottom - whether short term or something more
lasting - was telegraphed well by sentiment extremes. I used the 20
day ema of the put/call ratio but really all you had to do was turn on
a TV, radio, access the internet or have a conversation with your neighbor
or co-worker to know that sentiment was getting mighty bearish out there. And
an acutely bearish public is a recipe for reversal. I actually like many of
the charts I see out there including the much maligned, post-crash Philadelphia
Housing Index. I like the daily charts of the Dow and Nasdaq. I like Mr. Softie
(MSFT which I own along
with a few other bull positions) and frankly I am ready for a nice, extended
rally and a break from the media's constant harping on declining markets and
economic meltdown. But first Da Boyz needs ta break the VIX out of this ascending
triangle - and the break had better be down. Because if it breaks up the target
is VIX 56, and that level would be a record for the current (VIX) formula and
would threaten the highs last seen in 2002 on the orginal (VXO) formula.
Precious Metals & Commodities
Here is where the most danger is for investors, with the bursting commodity
bubble and all. And then there is the gold bubble, populated by a bunch of
crazies who never came out of the 70's. Do you sense the sarcasm in my tone?
See the March 14 HUI chart and
analysis at the COW for the technical reasons for my cautious stance heading
into last week's gore fest. Regardless of any manipulative reasons for lighting
the match, any spark was likely to bring a reaction of some sort. As it turns
out, we got a biggie. Note that while HUI did not hit the no brainer buy op
of 400-415, it came close and positions were added to on Thursday. The gold
stocks have certainly gone contrary to the market, as they should be. But that
sword cuts both ways on a short term basis. I would not necessarily hold my
breath for a strong rebound as the margin clerk is likely to come a callin'
soon. New lows and our 400-415 level are certainly possible.
What we actually have here is either a short term bottom in the markets and
another leg down to be signaled by the VIX or something more lasting, upon
which paper myths may be revived. What we do not have here is a financial system
that is being repaired. Either policy makers' efforts will be successful and
we will proceed to the next round of heightened inflation effects or they will
fail and it's "last one out turn out the lights".
I have worked up one of those crazy 'everything but the kitchen sink charts
for you to ponder. I have got to get going and prepare for an enjoyable Easter
Sunday with my family but I will leave you with this chart so that you may
think about it in conjunction with the above analysis. Draw your own conclusions.


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