08 October 2009

cad, oil, gold and stocks

note - click the chart to have a clear view if too small.


cad
cad chart indicates if it falls through the falling slope, the drop will be drastic, it already fell through the multitop formation and pierced the horizontal neckline of 1.08 thus it will achieve at least 0.86 but not without struggles.

oil and gold
since cad is associated with oil and partially gold, likely oil will really hit new high faster than we might think as gold has broken the 990 neckline not long ago.

usd
if usd is falling so fast, it is not impossible to imagine oil may soon be based otherwise than usd as it is already heard on the street news that opec may be thinking of using gold, rmb, jpy and eur as the basis for pricing, how that can be done is anybody's guess. should this be true, then we may have too much usd in circulation and too little of jpy, eur and gold which means a huge appreciation in the pipeline.

stocks
us stocks that have very heavy overseas sales exposure will rise like a rocket. emerging markets will shoot up as well since investors will chase after promising non-usd assets.

$5,800 gold

here is some interesting ideas from a pro, mind you that you cannot extrapolate inflation with gold as gold has no yield and also costs to hold.


$5,800 gold? But stocks okay, too.
Commentary: After a good decade, Aden sisters gleeful about gold

By Peter Brimelow, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- A skillful veteran letter is sanguine about stocks -- but positively gleeful about gold and other hard assets.

Mary Anne and Pamela Aden's Costa Rica-based Aden Forecast first came to fame in the last great gold bull market three decades ago. In the current post-2000 gold bull market, the letter has shown remarkable tactical versatility and a definite willingness to compromise its powerful long-run analysis if short term-trends dictate. ( See Aug. 10 column.)

It's worked. Over the year to date through September, the Aden Forecast is up 20.2% by Hulbert Financial Digest count, versus 21.3% for the dividend-reinvested Wilshire 5000 Total Stock Market Index. That is, it's pretty well caught the rally.

And over the longer run, the Aden Forecast's superiority is striking. Over the past 12 months i.e. counting the Crash of 2008, it's up 13% versus negative 6.4%% for the total return Wilshire 5000. Over the past three years, the letter is up an annualized 5.6%, versus negative 4.8% annualized for the total return Wilshire 5000.

In fact, it's been a good decade for the Adens: Over the last ten years, the letter is up annualized 5%, versus just 0.9% annualized for the total return Wilshire.

Long-term, the Adens expect an inflationary collapse. But that doesn't stop them staying with stocks, although they do anticipate short-term weakness. They write:

"The stock market got through September without any trouble and it's still strong, again hitting a one-year bull market high this month. The same is true of the stronger world stock markets. As we've been pointing out, however, they're all temporarily overbought and downward corrections are now getting started. This is not unusual following the significant rises they've had and this will probably continue in the weeks ahead. But following these corrections, the U.S. and global stock markets remain poised to rise much further. Keep the common stocks you have."

The Adens' cynical conclusion:

"The stock market loves the liquidity the Fed is providing. Whether you agree with what's happening or not, Wall Street views the Fed's actions as positive. It's not looking at the super long-term consequences."

If inflation is returning, nominal interest rates will rise. The Adens think we're near the low (in fact, they recommend mortgage refinancing). But it's not here yet. They write:

"The 30 year Treasury is near 4%. When will it be time to short the long bond or buy an inverse Treasury ETF? What will the trigger be?

"Here's what we're watching...a rise above 3.35% on the 10-year yield would be the first sign, ideally followed by a rise above 4.30% on the 30-year. The final signal that a mega upmove in interest rates is unfolding, which would totally confirm the big inflation scenario, would be a sustained rise above 4.65% on the 30-year yield.

"Currently, we're checking the best ways to take advantage of this should it play out. It's not time to buy yet, but the probable candidates when the time comes, are ones like ProFunds:Rs Rt Opp;Inv /quotes/comstock/10r!rrpix (RRPIX 13.30, -0.24, -1.77%) and ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury ETF /quotes/comstock/13*!tbt/quotes/nls/tbt (TBT 43.09, -1.06, -2.40%) .

About gold, the Adens note that "gold's peak in 1980 at $850 is the equivalent of about $2400 in current dollars. Gold has not even approached that level yet and the situation is far more serious now than it was then."

They conclude:

"The focus now is on the next phase of the current rise. If we continue to use proportions, the bull market's second rise from 1976 to 1980 gained 750%. Using the same growth and applying it to the current bull market, we could see gold eventually reach $4100 during the next run-up. And if you take the entire bull market gain in the 1970s at 2300% and extrapolate, then $5800 would be the equivalent upside target."

02 October 2009

US govt exiting markets

recently there are talks of the fed planning to exit markets when the time is right.

but that right time would be at least 18 months away. inflation might not be a factor for a long while, that does not mean raw mateirals etc would become cheap, prices of finished goods would ie margins of manufacturers are squeezed. why? us being the largest consumer market is hit from all sides:
  • weak house prices,
  • markedly reduced govt revenue esp state government who should balance their books which means further cuts ahead,
  • higher oil prices,
  • jobless recovery that does not boost jobs
  • banks curtailing lending
which in all do not boost the retail market and in turn would not boost growth since consumer spending makes up 70% of the GDP.

23 September 2009

Lessons from the Great Depression

This is a WSJ article which is relevant to our current crisis, good reading and observe telltale signs of US govt actions that might hit the depression button.


The 1930s has become the sole object lesson for today's monetary policy. Over the past 12 months, the Federal Reserve has increased the monetary base (bank reserves plus currency in circulation) by well over 100%. While currency in circulation has grown slightly, there's been an impressive 17-fold increase in bank reserves. The federal-funds target rate now stands at an all-time low range of zero to 25 basis points, with the 91-day Treasury bill yield equally low. All this has been done to avoid a liquidity crisis and a repeat of the mistakes that led to the Great Depression.

Even with this huge increase in the monetary base, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has reiterated his goal not to repeat the mistakes made back in the 1930s by tightening credit too soon, which he says would send the economy back into recession. The strong correlation between soaring unemployment and falling consumer prices in the early 1930s leads Mr. Bernanke to conclude that tight money caused both. To prevent a double dip, super easy monetary policy is the key.


While Fed policy was undoubtedly important, it was not the primary cause of the Great Depression or the economy's relapse in 1937. The Smoot-Hawley tariff of June 1930 was the catalyst that got the whole process going. It was the largest single increase in taxes on trade during peacetime and precipitated massive retaliation by foreign governments on U.S. products. Huge federal and state tax increases in 1932 followed the initial decline in the economy thus doubling down on the impact of Smoot-Hawley. There were additional large tax increases in 1936 and 1937 that were the proximate cause of the economy's relapse in 1937.

In 1930-31, during the Hoover administration and in the midst of an economic collapse, there was a very slight increase in tax rates on personal income at both the lowest and highest brackets. The corporate tax rate was also slightly increased to 12% from 11%. But beginning in 1932 the lowest personal income tax rate was raised to 4% from less than one-half of 1% while the highest rate was raised to 63% from 25%. (That's not a misprint!) The corporate rate was raised to 13.75% from 12%. All sorts of Federal excise taxes too numerous to list were raised as well. The highest inheritance tax rate was also raised in 1932 to 45% from 20% and the gift tax was reinstituted with the highest rate set at 33.5%.

But the tax hikes didn't stop there. In 1934, during the Roosevelt administration, the highest estate tax rate was raised to 60% from 45% and raised again to 70% in 1935. The highest gift tax rate was raised to 45% in 1934 from 33.5% in 1933 and raised again to 52.5% in 1935. The highest corporate tax rate was raised to 15% in 1936 with a surtax on undistributed profits up to 27%. In 1936 the highest personal income tax rate was raised yet again to 79% from 63%—a stifling 216% increase in four years. Finally, in 1937 a 1% employer and a 1% employee tax was placed on all wages up to $3,000.

Because of the number of states and their diversity I'm going to aggregate all state and local taxes and express them as a percentage of GDP. This measure of state tax policy truly understates the state and local tax contribution to the tragedy we call the Great Depression, but I'm sure the reader will get the picture. In 1929, state and local taxes were 7.2% of GDP and then rose to 8.5%, 9.7% and 12.3% for the years 1930, '31 and '32 respectively.

The damage caused by high taxation during the Great Depression is the real lesson we should learn. A government simply cannot tax a country into prosperity. If there were one warning I'd give to all who will listen, it is that U.S. federal and state tax policies are on an economic crash trajectory today just as they were in the 1930s. Net legislated state-tax increases as a percentage of previous year tax receipts are at 3.1%, their highest level since 1991; the Bush tax cuts are set to expire in 2011; and additional taxes to pay for health-care and the proposed cap-and-trade scheme are on the horizon.

In addition to all of these tax issues, the U.S. in the early 1930s was on a gold standard where paper currency was legally convertible into gold. Both circulated in the economy as money. At the outset of the Great Depression people distrusted banks but trusted paper currency and gold. They withdrew deposits from banks, which because of a fractional reserve system caused a drop in the money supply in spite of a rising monetary base. The Fed really had little power to control either bank reserves or interest rates.

The increase in the demand for paper currency and gold not only had a quantity effect on the money supply but it also put upward pressure on the price of gold, which meant that dollar prices of all goods and services had to fall for the relative price of gold to rise. The deflation of the early 1930s was not caused by tight money. It was the result of panic purchases of fixed-dollar priced gold. From the end of 1929 until early 1933 the Consumer Price Index fell by 27%.

By mid-1932 there were public fears of a change in the gold-dollar relationship. In their classic text, "A Monetary History of the United States," economists Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz wrote, "Fears of devaluation were widespread and the public's preference for gold was unmistakable." Panic ensued and there was a rush to buy gold.

In early 1933, the federal government (not the Federal Reserve) declared a bank holiday prohibiting banks from paying out gold or dealing in foreign exchange. An executive order made it illegal for anyone to "hoard" gold and forced everyone to turn in their gold and gold certificates to the government at an exchange value of $20.67 per ounce of gold in return for paper currency and bank deposits. All gold clauses in contracts private and public were declared null and void and by the end of January 1934 the price of gold, most of which had been confiscated by the government, was raised to $35 per ounce. In other words, in less than one year the government confiscated as much gold as it could at $20.67 an ounce and then devalued the dollar in terms of gold by almost 60%. That's one helluva tax.

The 1933-34 devaluation of the dollar caused the money supply to grow by over 60% from April 1933 to March 1937, and over that same period the monetary base grew by over 35% and adjusted reserves grew by about 100%. Monetary policy was about as easy as it could get. The consumer price index from early 1933 through mid-1937 rose by about 15% in spite of double-digit unemployment. And that's the story.

The lessons here are pretty straightforward. Inflation can and did occur during a depression, and that inflation was strictly a monetary phenomenon.

My hope is that the people who are running our economy do look to the Great Depression as an object lesson. My fear is that they will misinterpret the evidence and attribute high unemployment and the initial decline in prices to tight money, while increasing taxes to combat budget deficits.

30 August 2009

if djia reaches 11,000

many readers ask if djia reaches 11,000 where will hsi be?

my estimtes are below:

---------- DJIA "HSI

low ----- 6,500 10,676
high ---- 9,623 21,196
rebound% 48% "99% 2.06 times

if new
high --- 11,000 25,835
rebound% 69% "142% 2.06 times

present -- 9,546 20,098 28-Aug
djia to
11000 -- 15% -- 26,308 30.90% maintains 2.06 times
------------------ 24,439 21.60% 70% of 2.06 times
------------------ 23,203 15.45% 50% of 2.06 times

as there are no chart patterns at present to make a forecast of hsi, i assume the rebound or rally of hsi may not be as strong as the earlier part, therefore expect a discount which is why there are 70% estimates above.

even if djia does reach 11,000 in late 2009 or 2010, it has to make corrections before going higher, so only buy on heavy dips. my hunch is it may not get that high in 2009.

it is also important that djia would not fall through the critical support of 8800 during it's corrections.

24 July 2009

PROFITS!!! JPY & DJIA



hsi reached 20000 today, did you make any profit?

many readers had been asking why the blog had not been updated for so long.

first of all, this is not a blog i make my living from, so if i am busy, i wont be writing. but if you had been following the advice in the 24 may blog [hsi close 17062 on 22 may], you should have profitted handsomely. still some readers are asking what stocks to buy. everyone has their own preference, readers are free to choose, yet if you cannot decide then buy ETF like 2800 tracker fund which tracks the hsi in tandem.

jpy
now look at this chart, it had multiple tops formed [neckline 101] over 10 something years, pointing to 66 in about 4-6 years if you can afford to wait this long.

djia
the other chart also has a head and should bottom formation pointing to almost 11100. if this really happens, where will hsi be? in the stratosphere!!! so beware and watch out where this index goes.

click onto the chart for a larger picture if it is too small for viewing.

24 May 2009

HSI & Others



many readers have been asking whether this is a new bull market or just a rebound. if it is just a rebound why is it so strong.

in fact, i have no clues. it is like asking why this fall [dow from 14000 to 6500, hsi from 32000 to 10600] is so drastic. because the fall is so drastic, the rebound has to be too couple with the fact that usa is printing money.

sometimes i tell from my hunch but most of the time i tell from charts.

my hunch this time is that even if this is a new bull run, it will encounter a major correction before a nice bull market can really starts.

HSI
earlier the chart indicates it would reach 16700. after breaking out of 16000, it formed another bottom indicating it would reach 20000. this is very much like when hsbc falls from the top, it formed many head and shoulder tops as it fell each indicating a further low while this time around, hsi has a similar situation forming many [inverted h&s] bottoms when it goes up.

China
it may be false dawn to conclude that china's stimulus can lead world commodities to rally, rather it is the usa who is now printing money fast enough to push money sitting on the sidelines to move back into commodities, stocks, corp bonds and real estate.

HK
real estate in hk is pretty precarious as it has shot up quite a bit. the fact is money in banks gets no interest, so people move into real estate to get some yields. but people who borrows heavily [70%] could be setting themselves up for trouble as interest rates for mortgage at present are about 2.5-3%, any hike in interest rates will cause mortgage instalments to balloon, if wage rate increase cannot catch up with the increase in mortgage amounts it would put extreme pressure on real estate.
while this worry is not imminent, it may still happen. even so, such incident may not come so soon and bubble can keep on going for a while without bursting as deflation may set in before the arrival of inflation since economy activity is still at a low point and may not turn around so fast. current events in the usa of contraction easing is because of inventory
rebuilding not because of return of real consumer demand.

i posted two charts - dow in 1930s and nikkei from 1990s, in both periods the indexes encountered
depression or severe recession. it took many years to recover part of the losses but not all. obviously the printing of money helps, but when us govt has to exit their positions, the interest rate increases could be tremendous and could block any recovery to its fullest.

to view the charts more clearly, do one of the following:
  • double click the picture, it should enlarge or
  • place curosr on the image, right click to copy and paste it onto a blank word doc or paint, then enlarge for easy viewing.

06 April 2009

HSI, AUD CAD




HANG SENG
The above is a 3 month chart indicating a classic head and shoulders with neckline at 14000 finally being broken and heading towards 16700.

AUD CAD
The earlier forecasts did not materialize as the necklines stated had not been broken. Also both currencies got support when Fed chairman said shortly after my forecast Fed will buy long bonds to maintain even long yields at low levels to support refinancing of mortgages which means effective money printing - Treasury issue bonds to public to finance govt operations, TARP, TALF etc but Fed will buy such bonds in open market to lower their yields effectively printing money for all these operations.
Recent AUD CAD charts indicate bottom formations that if necklines of 0.72 and 1.22 are broken will head towards 0.84 and 1.13.

09 March 2009

cad aud



look at both charts [weekly], you will see that there looks like a tendency for both currencies to fall further against their previous lows.

cad - if it breaks out of the 130 mark, which has strong resistance as it was tested 3 times recently, and go north, it will hit 142 then 146 eventually
aud - if it breaks out to the south of the 60 mark, it will hit an eventual low of 42.

you can copy and paste the charts onto a word doc, then enlarge it for a clearer picture.

if the above forecasts are right, does the trend of these two currencies foretell something more drastic in the direction of the global economy?

we will soon know.

06 March 2009

DOW, Banking and HSBC

dow
dow jones hit new low just last nite around 6600 which is now closer to my predicted short term low of 6000 earlier [read earlier blogs]

dow had recently fallen two 250+ points sessions, a third one would mean almost 12% decline in a matter of a few days which is surely too much, expect a rebound very soon.

banking
plain vanilla banking in hk and overseas will be very different after this once in a life time credit crunch is over. there are just too many such banks and assets valuation would be much lower then, therefore dont expect a huge rebound in profits of this sector as aging factor will also kick in after 3-5 years in the slumps.


hsbc
given the above, there is no need to subscribe to the rights issue although the i-banks involved undoubtedly will try to maintain some order in hsbc trading prior to book close of the rights.