Posts Tagged ‘Agricultural commodities’

Jim Rogers: China Equities Could Collapse, Commodities Still Best

Friday, July 31st, 2009


Investing legend, Jim Rogers, says that he is not buying any stocks in China right now nor is he selling any, but says he will buy more Chinese stocks when they collapse. Stocks have doubled in 9 months. Instead, he says the best way to invest in China is via commodities.

No matter what, the Chinese will pay all their bills because they absolutely need to buy all the commodities they don’t produce themselves. Cotton, Nickel, iron ore, steel, and Agricultural Commodities are among their biggest requirements.

Click to view this July 27, 2009 interview with Bloomberg.

Jim Rogers was interviewed by the Globe and Mail on July 30, 2009 and re-iterated his convictions about commodities:

So you see commodities, even after a 10-year bull run, as still offering the best investment opportunities? Isn’t that dependent on a global economic recovery?

If the world economy is going to get better, commodities will lead the way, because of the shortages. I cannot imagine a better place to be. When you come off periods like this, you want to be in the things where the fundamentals are getting better – those are the ones that always lead the next bull market.

If the economy is not going to improve, commodities are still the best place to be … because governments are printing huge amounts of money all over the world.

Throughout history, when people have printed lots of money, it has always led to higher prices. Throughout history, when governments printed, the money has to go somewhere. Historically, it has always gone into real assets, as people try to protect themselves. … It’s not going to go into people buying new cars, it’s going to go into wheat and silver and oil first. It may go into new cars eventually, but it’s going to go into real stuff first – at least it always has. I’d rather own commodities than just about anything I can think of in a period when the whole world is debasing paper money.

Source: Bloomberg, Youtube | Globe and Mail, July 30, 2009

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Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (April 27 – May 3, 2009)

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009


“Goodbye safe havens, hello risky assets.” This was the refrain of investors’ theme song during the past week. Safe-haven assets were out of favor as better-than-feared corporate earnings and signs of a budding economic recovery emboldened investors’ appetite for reflation trades such as equities and commodities.

Investors’ sentiment improved notwithstanding a number of influences that could potentially disturb financial markets. These included a three-day delay in the release of the stress test results of the 19 biggest US banks until May 7, the plight of the beleaguered US automakers with General Motors (GM) proposing a sweeping debt-for-equity restructuring and Chrysler filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and fears of an escalation in the number of swine flu (H1N1) cases.

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Source: Vita

As to be expected given the countless catalysts, the past week’s trading was bumpy, but the major global stock market indices nevertheless managed to resume their eight-week rally. Further testimony of investors’ zest for risky assets came from the following:

• a solid performance by crude oil, base metal and agricultural commodities (with the exception of pork bellies and lean hogs - despite the fact that humans cannot contract swine flu by eating pig meat)

• tighter credit spreads (especially high-yield corporate bonds)

• a jump in Treasury Note yields to levels last seen in November

• a decline in the US dollar and Japanese yen as traders switched to high-yielding currencies such as the Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar and South African rand (all resource-linked currencies)

The performance of the major asset classes is summarized by the chart below, expanded to now also include Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIP) and investment grade (LQD) and high-yield corporate bonds (HYG).

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Source: StockCharts.com

Marking eight straight weeks of gains, the MSCI World Index advanced by 1.6% (YTD -2.6%) on the week, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index by 2.3% (YTD +16.9%) and the Nasdaq Composite Index by 1.5% (YTD +9.0%) - the Nasdaq’s longest advance since December 1999. After recording declines during the prior week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+1.7%; YTD -6.4%) and the S&P 500 Index (+1.3%; YTD -2.8%) also added to the gains notched up since the rally commenced off the March 9 lows.

Global indices also celebrated solid gains for calendar month April, with the MSCI World Index (+10.9%) recording its top monthly advance since January 1987 and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (+16.3%) its strongest monthly showing since December 1993. The S&P 500 (+9.4%) had its best month since March 2000, placing the Index in the middle of its top 20 monthly gains since 1950.

Click on the table below for a larger image.

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Using four-day performances for markets that were closed for the May Day (International Workers’ Day) holiday on Friday, returns around the world ranged from top performers Indonesia (+8.7%), Ireland (+8.4%), Greece (+8.1%), the Czech Republic (+6.9%) and Turkey (+6.7%) to Luxembourg (-4.7%), Bulgaria (-4.0%), Malta (-2.7%), Macedonia (-2.6%) and Oman (-2.5%), which experienced selling pressure. The Mexican Bolsa Index surprised by only declining 3.0% amid swine flu fears. (Click here to access a complete list of global stock market movements, as supplied by Emerginvest.)

By the end of last week, more than 70% of the companies in the S&P 500 Index had reported first-quarter earnings. According to Bespoke, the Index’s annual decline in earnings (Q1 ‘09 versus Q1 ‘08) on Friday was of 32.3%. This compares with analysts’ estimates of -37.4% at the start of the earnings season. Also, as shown in the graph below, the percentage of companies beating earnings estimates has been rising steadily during the reporting period to 62% on Friday. ”With three quarters of companies having already reported, this earnings season is shaping up to be one of the best in years,” said Bespoke.

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John Nyaradi (Wall Street Sector Selector) reports that the strongest exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on the week were the Market Vectors Coal (KOL) (+15.1%), iShares MSCI Taiwan Index (EWT) (+13.8%) and Claymore US-1-The Capital Markets Index (UEM) (+11.4%). On the other end of the performance scale the SPDR KBW Bank (KBE) (-6.1%), PowerShares Active US Real Estate (PSR) (-5.8%) and Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury Index (EDV) (-5.7%) performed poorly.

For April, the “ETF of the Month” was the iShares Dow Jones Real Estate Fund (IYR) that gained +22.6%. Click here for a chart.

An interesting analysis on country ETFs was published by Bespoke last week, specifically indicating that markets around the world are extended into overbought levels from their normal trading ranges. Click here for the study.

On the credit front, the cost of buying credit insurance for US and European companies eased during the past week, as shown by the narrower spreads for both the CDX (North American, investment grade) Index (down from 175 to 163) and the Markit iTraxx Europe Index (down from 153 to 139).

Another indicator worth monitoring is the Barron’s Confidence Index. This Index is calculated by dividing the average yield on high-grade bonds by the average yield on intermediate-grade bonds. The discrepancy between the yields is indicative of investor confidence. There has been a solid improvement in the ratio since its all-time low in December, showing that bond investors are growing more confident and have started opting for more speculative bonds over high-grade bonds.

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Source: I-Net Bridge

The quote du jour relates to the stress test and belongs to Bill King (The King Report), who said: “A major problem with the ‘stress test’ is it depends on modeling and it’s the precise practice responsible for much of this economic and financial mess. It’s extraordinary that so many people believe that the Fed and Treasury, after missing the financial disaster, housing debacle, recession and derivative implosion, can now extrapolate economic conditions and resultant financial effects from its models. How did all that rocket-science modeling for subprime defaults and securitization workout? Yet many people already forget or ignore this reality.”

Next, a tag cloud of all the articles I read during the past week. This is a way of visualizing word frequencies at a glance. Key words such as “market”, “stock”, “economic”, “economy”, “bank” and “financial” again featured prominently. Let’s hope “flu” does not stake its claim among the dominant words over the next few weeks.

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But back to the stock market. In order to gather some perspective on the current stock market rally, Chart of the Day highlighted the duration (calendar days) and magnitude (percentage gain) of all significant Dow rallies that occurred during the 1929-1932 bear market (solid blue dots). By means of illustration, the bear market rally that began in October 1931 lasted 35 calendar days and resulted in a gain of 35%. “… the current Dow rally (hollow blue dot labeled ‘You are here’) is slightly below average in both duration and magnitude relative to the average 1929-1932 bear market rally (hollow red dot),” said Chart of the Day.

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Source: Chart of the Day, May 1, 2009.

As shown in the table below, the 50-day moving averages have been cleared comfortably by all the major US indices and the early January highs are the next important targets. As a matter of fact, the Nasdaq Composite Index is already above this level. It has to rise by a further 2.1% in order to reach the key 200-day moving average - an indicator often used to distinguish between primary bull and bear markets. On the downside, the levels from where the nascent rally commenced on March 9 should hold in order for the upward trend to remain intact.

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Two S&P 500 sectors - Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Technology (XLK) - have actually just broken above their 200-day moving averages. Bespoke said: “This … signals the end to a long-term downtrend and the confirmation of an uptrend. It’s also a positive for the overall market that two cyclical sectors (one that is extremely tied to the consumer) are the first ones to break above their 200-days.”

Still talking technical analysis, Kevin Lane of Fusion IQ said: “The S&P 500 Index had stalled at the 878 level on three separate occasions over the past five months. However, prices then subsequently gave way to profit-taking and closed back below that level. Only a close above that level would open the way to higher prices.

“On the sentiment front, the CBOE Equity Put/Call Ratio, the AAII Bearish Sentiment Survey and the VIX’s deviation from its 50-day moving average have all moderated from constructive levels to more neutral levels. … these indicators are not at levels that would suggest sentiment is overly bullish yet, but their deterioration is enough cause for concern that a corrective wave may occur.”

“All the things are in place for the bear market to have ended,” Anthony Bolton, president of investments at Fidelity International in London, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “When there’s a strong consensus, a very negative one, and cash positions are very high, as they are at the moment, I’d like to bet against that.”

Remaining across the pond, David Fuller (Fullermoney) put matters in context as follows: “Base formations, confirming not only the ending of a bear market but the beginning of a new bull market, come in all shapes and sizes. The leading stock markets, which generally have better fundamentals, usually form smaller bases before commencing their uptrends, as we have seen with China and a number of other emerging markets from Asia to South America. Fundamentally weaker markets, such as the US and most of Europe, require a longer convalescence before a significant recovery occurs. This explains the new lows in late February and early March.

“This impressive rally is overextended in the short term, so we can expect it to spill over into a reaction and consolidation before long. The recent uptrend consistency will be followed by some choppy action as legitimate fundamental concerns remain.”

The last (cautionary) word goes to Richard Russell, writer of the Dow Theory Letters newsletter: “On the bear market decline, we never saw the great values that usually appear at major bear market bottoms. The ‘great value’ area is the place where I would normally suggest that investors load up with blue-chip stocks. For this reason, I would prefer waiting out this rally or making a limited trade with DIAs [Dow Diamonds ETF] with stops. I continue to believe this is an upward correction in an ongoing primary bear market. I note that many observers are saying that ‘this is a market that won’t go down’. Believe me, all markets go up - and all markets go down.”

And here is the venerable R man taking the bull by the horns!

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For more discussion about the direction of stock markets, also see my recent posts “Video-o-rama: Investors “look past the valley“, “Sell in May and go away: Fact or fallacy?” and “Donald Coxe - Investment recommendations (April 2009)” (And also make a point of listening to Coxe’s webcast of May 1, which can be accessed from the sidebar of the Investment Postcards site.)

Economy
“Global business sentiment is improving. Confidence remains very weak, but it improved last week to its best level since late last October. Much of the improvement has been in Asia and South America, although sentiment is more upbeat everywhere. Expectations regarding the outlook six-months hence are particularly buoyant,” said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted by Moody’s Economy.com.

Although it is premature to conclude that the global recession is ending, a number of indicators, compiled by US Global Funds, could signal better times ahead.

• The inflation-adjusted inventory component of US GDP dropped by more than $100 billion in the first quarter of 2009. This figure represents nearly 1% of GDP. Such drops in the past have been associated with the end of recessions. At the least, it raises the chances of GDP growth in the current quarter.

• The latest industrial production (IP) numbers coming from Asia are positive. South Korea’s IP was up 5.2% from February, while Thailand’s IP improved by 2.5% and Japan’s gained 1.6%. Manufacturing inventories in South Korea and Japan continued their decline in March after peaking in late 2008.

• In China, the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) rose for the fifth straight month in April (see blue line in chart below). The latest PMI figure is 53.5 - any reading over 50 indicates that the manufacturing sector is growing. The last time the PMI was this high was in May 2008. Another promising PMI figure, the employment sub-index, is also over 50, meaning that job growth in manufacturing is under way.

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Source: Kevin, Sinolise.com, May 1, 2009.

The April update of the ISM Manufacturing Index shows that the US manufacturing sector failed to grow for the fifteenth straight month, but the April reading of 40.1 was significantly higher than the 36.3 figure for March. The index has been improving for four straight months.

Rebecca Wilder (News N Economics) summarized the global economic picture as follows: “Overall, hope that key economies are no longer in free fall is emerging; however, the economic decline is ongoing.”

In an interview with The Washington Post, Nouriel Roubini said: “I don’t believe we are going to end up in a near-depression. Six months ago I was more worried about an L-shaped near-depression. Today, after the very aggressive policy actions taken by the US and other countries … we are, instead, in the middle of a U.”

Turning specifically to the US, a snapshot of the week’s economic data is provided below. (Click on the dates to see Northern Trust’s assessment of the various data releases.)

May 01
• The ISM Manufacturing Survey points to imminent economic recovery, possibly in 2009
• Auto sales edged down in April

April 30
• Consumer spending and income decline
• Initial Jobless Claims declined but Continuing Claims advanced

April 29
• Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting ends with no surprises
• GDP growth - another quarter of deep and wide contraction in economic activity

April 28
• Case-Shiller Home Price Index confirms message from other reports
• Consumer Confidence Index improves mostly on surge in Expectations Index

The FOMC announced no change to monetary policy on Wednesday following the conclusion of its meeting. The communiqué said the Committee expected to keep the Fed funds rate target in the 0-0.25% range “for an extended period”. Moody’s Economy.com reported as follows: “The remarks on current economic conditions were less pessimistic than in recent months; the statement said that the pace of economic contraction ‘appears to be somewhat slower’ and that ‘the economic outlook has improved modestly’ since March.”

The FOMC included the following paragraph in the statement regarding its programs to buy agency debt, mortgage-backed securities and Treasuries: “The Committee will continue to evaluate the timing and overall amounts of its purchases of securities in light of the evolving economic outlook and conditions in financial markets.”

The dire tone of GDP growth in the last two quarters has invariably caused analysts to draw comparisons with the Great Depression. The table below, courtesy of Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust) compares the behavior of real GDP, unemployment, inflation and stock prices during the early-1930s with the current situation.

Click the table below for a larger image.

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On the eve of the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders’ meeting in Omaha, Warren Buffett told CNBC that September’s “strike against the heart of the American system” was behind us, and that we have moved past the “economic Pearl Harbor”.

Week’s economic reports
Click here for the week’s economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic Data.

Date

Time (ET)

Statistic

For

Actual

Briefing Forecast

Market Expects

Prior

Apr 28

9:00 AM

S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index

Feb

-18.63%

NA

-18.7%

-19.00%

Apr 28

10:00 AM

Consumer Confidence

Apr

39.2

29.5

29.7

26.9

Apr 29

8:30 AM

GDP – Advance

Q1

-6.1%

-4.0%

-4.7%

-6.3%

Apr 29

8:30 AM

Chain Deflator-Advance

Q1

2.9%

1.7%

1.8%

0.5%

Apr 29

10:35 AM

Crude Inventories

04/24

+4053K

NA

NA

+3857K

Apr 29

2:15 PM

FOMC Rate Decision

-

0.00%-0.25%

NA

NA

0.00%-0.25%

Apr 30

8:30 AM

Initial Claims

04/25

631K

640K

640K

645K

Apr 30

8:30 AM

Personal Income

Mar

-0.3%

-0.2%

-0.2%

-0.2%

Apr 30

8:30 AM

Personal Spending

Mar

-0.2%

-0.2%

-0.1%

0.4%

Apr 30

8:30 AM

Employment Cost Index

Q1

0.3%

0.5%

0.5%

0.6%

Apr 30

9:45 AM

Chicago PMI

Apr

40.1

34.0

35.0

31.4

May 1

9:55 AM

Mich Sentiment –Revised

Apr

65.1

64.0

61.9

61.9

May 1

10:00 AM

Factory Orders

Mar

-0.9%

-0.4%

-0.6%

0.7%

May 1

10:00 AM

ISM Index

Apr

40.1

39.5

38.4

36.3

May 1

2:00 PM

Auto Sales

Apr

-

NA

NA

3.3M

May 1

2:00 PM

Truck Sales

Apr

-

NA

NA

3.8M

Source: Yahoo Finance, May 1, 2009.

In addition to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s testimony before the Joint Economic Committee in Washington (Tuesday, May 5) and interest rate announcements by the bank of England and the European Central Bank (both on Thursday, May 7), the US economic highlights for the week, courtesy of Northern Trust, include the following:

Click here for a summary of Wachovia’s weekly economic and financial commentary.

Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall Street Journal Online shows how different global financial markets performed during the past week.

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Source: Wall Street Journal Online, May 1, 2009.

J. Kenfield Morley said: “In investing money, the amount of interest you want should depend on whether you want to eat well or sleep well.” Hopefully the “Words from the Wise” reviews will assist Investment Postcards readers in properly assessing risks before making investment decisions.

Our thoughts are with those affected by the swine flu virus, and we pray that the spreading is contained. By the way, an interesting way of tracking the occurrences of the virus is by means of Google Maps (click on “Satellite” along the horizontal menu bar for the best image).

That’s the way it looks from Cape Town (yes, I’m actually back home for a change!).

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Source: Mike Keefe, The Denver Post.

Financial Times: Bank objections delay stress tests
“US regulators will delay the release of stress test results for the country’s 19 biggest banks until next Thursday, after some lenders, including Citigroup and Bank of America, objected to government demands that they needed to raise billions in fresh capital.

“Citi, one of the biggest victims of the crisis that has already been bailed out three times by the government, is believed to have been told by regulators that it needs more than $5 billion in fresh capital, while BofA might need to convert $45 billion in government preferred shares into common equity.

“Both companies are still contesting the findings and might still persuade the government they need less, or no capital, according to people close to the situation. Citi’s own projections are believed to show the company will have hundreds of millions of dollars in excess capital.

“After a week of tense talks between regulators and the banks, government sources said the Treasury and the Federal Reserve were set to unveil the outcome of the tests after the market closes on May 7 - three days later than anticipated.

“The authorities’ decision to let the original timetable slip also reflects the widespread belief that, after months of speculation since the tests were first announced in February, their outcome has the potential to disturb the markets.

“Government sources said regulators were likely to release both aggregate and individual data for each of the 19 banks, detailing their losses and capital needs under adverse economic scenarios.

“Some of the banks will then supplement those data with regulatory filings and analysts’ calls. Bankers said a number of lenders had pleaded with regulators for more time to lay out plans to plug any capital shortfall identified in the stress tests, by raising equity from either the government or from the stock market.”

Source: Francesco Guerrera and Sarah O’Connor, Financial Times, May 1, 2009.

Option Armageddon: Stress test - tangible common equity
“Ahead of official announcements regarding stress test results, OA thought we’d publish our latest update for banks’ tangible common equity, a metric that is likely to figure prominently.

“A recent Reuters report said ‘US regulators want the top 19 banks being stress-tested to have at least 3% [TCE].’ In other words, regulators want leverage ratios below 33x.* Surreal, no? That the banking system has grown so bloated that 33x leverage can be considered ‘healthy?’

“Anyway, using the 3% Test, the results for the nation’s nine largest banks are mixed … four pass, five fail. And by the way, this is before ‘stressing’ the balance sheet per future ‘adverse’ scenarios. As you can see, most banks fail the test before they even sit for it …

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“To be clear, this is not a prediction of the government’s verdict. As Jack Ciesielski of The Analyst’s Accounting Observer points out: “there is no iconic definition of TCE. Treasury may come up with one of their own that takes into account ‘questionable items’ so that all the banks pass. That would be totally consistent with early reports …”

Source: Rolfe Winkler, Option Armageddon, April 24, 2009.

Financial Times: US taxpayers to take majority GM stake
“US taxpayers would take a majority shareholding in General Motors under a sweeping debt-for-equity restructuring proposal that the carmaker revealed on Monday in a bid to avoid bankruptcy.

“Under the plan, GM said it would shut 13 of 47 plants by the end of next year, resulting in an additional 7,000 job losses. The latest job cuts would reduce GM’s US workforce from 61,000 last year to about 40,000 by the end of 2010.

“The carmaker, which lost its crown as the world’s biggest carmaker to Toyota last year, said it would give up its 83-year-old Pontiac brand and cut its dealership network from 6,200 to 3,600 by the end of 2010.

“Fritz Henderson, chief executive, said: ‘The objective here is not to survive. The objective is to develop an operating plan that allows us to win.’

“The Obama administration has set a June 1 deadline for GM to produce a viable turnaround plan in exchange for further government aid, or face bankruptcy. The carmaker has received $15.4 billion in emergency loans and expects the total to rise to about $20 billion by the end of next month.

“GM warned in a letter to bondholders that if the debt-for-equity swap failed to go through by June 1 it would ‘expect to seek relief through the US bankruptcy code’. In such circumstances, GM said bondholders might receive no ‘consideration at all’. GM set a May 26 deadline for bondholders to respond.

“Calling the proposal ‘neither reasonable nor adequate’, an ad hoc committee of GM bondholders said it believed ‘the offer to be a blatant disregard of fairness for the bondholders who have funded this company, and amounts to using taxpayer money to show political favouritism of one creditor over another’.”

Source: John Reed and Bernard Simon, Financial Times, April 27, 2009.

Financial Times: Chrysler files for Chapter 11 protection
“Chrysler filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Thursday after President Barack Obama criticized hedge funds for blocking an out-of-court restructuring of the US carmaker’s $6.9 billion debt.

“The Obama administration said the owner of Jeep and Dodge would emerge from a ‘surgical’ bankruptcy process with more government aid and new shareholders, including Italy’s Fiat and the United Auto Workers union. Bob Nardelli, Chrysler chief executive, will step aside as part of the deal.

“Mr Obama praised JPMorgan Chase and other large banks for accepting the terms of the proposed restructuring plan. He laid blame for the bankruptcy filing on ‘a small group of speculators’ who refused to buy into an offer to swap Chrysler’s debt for $2.25 billion in cash.

“They were hoping that everybody else would make sacrifices and they would have to make none,” he said. “Some demanded twice the return that other lenders were getting. I don’t stand with them.”

“Under the plan outlined on Thursday, Chrysler will face 30-60 days in Chapter 11, which enables businesses to restructure and reorganize under court supervision. During that period, Chrysler will close most of its North American plants, idling tens of thousands of workers.

“When Chrysler emerges from bankruptcy it will be 55% owned by the UAW and a separate workers’ healthcare trust. Fiat will take an initial 20% stake with the option of increasing it over time.”

Source: Tom Braithwaite and John Reed, Financial Times, April 30, 2009.

Charlie Rose: A discussion about Chrysler’s bankruptcy plan
“A discussion about Chrysler’s bankruptcy plan with author Paul Ingrassia, Micheline Maynard, senior business correspondent for the New York Times and John Stoll of The Wall Street Journal.”

Source: Charlie Rose, April 30, 2009.

The Big Money: Dow Jones says it can measure economic sentiment by reading the press
“Just as a technological revolution is blowing up newsrooms across the country, Dow Jones has come up with an algorithm to prove that yesterday’s newspapers are useful for more than just fish wrap. According to the publishing giant, you can plumb the language and tone of newspapers to finger turning points in the economy.

“The news, it seems, is a moderately reliable economic compass. And today, Dow is quantifying that assertion with the release of its newly minted Economic Sentiment Indicator, a monthly assessment of the ‘tone’ of content in 15 metropolitan dailies. The ESI, informally known as the Optimism Index, is a simple barometer based on a scale of zero to 100 - the higher the number, the more upbeat the news and, by extension, the stronger the economy. Dow Jones back-tested the indicator to 1990 and found that it could signal critical turning points in the economy, sometimes a bit earlier than other economic measures.”

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Source: Nancy Miler, The Big Money, April 30, 2009.

Bespoke: Tracking the business cycle through Google trends
Google Trends is a cool tool that has been around for a few years that tracks search volume and news reference volume for various words and phrases. We like to use it as a sentiment gauge of the public. Below we highlight the Google Trends result for the word ‘recession’. As shown, there was a big spike at the start of 2008 when the economy began to stumble. Then it died down only to spike again in Q4 ‘08 when things got really bad. Over the last couple of months, however, the ‘recession’ worries seem to be dwindling again, but they are still elevated. It’s also interesting to note how little chatter there was about it in 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007.”

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Source: Bespoke, April 30, 2009.

Charlie Rose: A conversation about the economy
“A conversation about the economy with Bill Ackman, major investor and hedge fund manager of Pershing Square Capital Management LP, Kate Kelly of The Wall Street Journal, Andrew Ross Sorkin of The New York Times and Joseph Stiglitz, economist and a member of Columbia University faculty.”

Source: Charlie Rose, April 24, 2009.

CNBC: Buffett - “economic Pearl Harbor” is over
“Billionaire investor Warren Buffett tells CNBC’s Becky Quick that this past September’s ‘strike against the heart of the American system’ is behind us, and that we have moved past the ‘economic Pearl Harbor’. However, he cautions that the war isn’t over just yet.”

Source: CNBC, May 1, 2009.

CNBC: Munger on Berkshire’s off year
“Berkshire vice chairman Charlie Munger discusses Berkshire’s difficult year and where he thinks the economy is headed, with CNBC’s Becky Quick.”

Source: CNBC, May 1, 2009.

The Washington Post: Roubini - “I am not Dr. Doom”
“Lally Weymouth of Newsweek and The Post sat down last week with economist Nouriel Roubini. Excerpts:

“Q. You are the economist known for predicting the economic downturn in 2008. What do you believe is happening to the economy today?

“A. The consensus among economists is that they see the economy that was contracting for the last two quarters at 6% going into positive economic growth by the second half of this year … I believe that the rate of economic contraction is going to slow from negative 6% in the last two quarters to negative 2% by the fourth quarter.

“Next year, I believe that the growth rate is going to be low - 0.5% for the US, compared to the consensus view of [plus] 2%. I believe the unemployment rate this year is going to go well above 10% and will be well above 11% next year, so even if we are technically out of a recession, we are going to feel like we are in a recession.

“I do agree that there is an improvement in the sense that the rate of contraction is not going to be as much as it has been in the last couple of quarters, but I still believe that the bottom of the economy [will be seen] toward the beginning or middle of next year. So my views are more bearish than the consensus.

“I believe things are going to be very mediocre throughout the world; in particular, in Europe and in Japan. They will only get out of their recession toward the end of next year.

“So you are still Dr. Doom?

“No, I am not Dr. Doom. I am Dr. Realist. I don’t believe we are going to end up in a near-depression. Six months ago I was more worried about an L-shaped near-depression. Today, after the very aggressive policy actions taken by the US and other countries … we are, instead, in the middle of a U.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Lally Weymouth, The Washington Post, April 27, 2009.

Paul Kasriel (Northern Trust): Coming out of the downturn
“Paul Kasriel, Northern Trust’s Chief Economist, discusses the current economic climate and the potential impact on market consumption during any recovery.”

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Source: Paul Kasriel, Northern Trust, April 30, 2009.

CNBC: Sheila Bair - the economy & financial crisis
“FDIC Chair Sheila Bair discusses the current state of the economy and the financial crisis.”

Source: CNBC, April 27, 2009.

CEP News: Fed keeps target rate and asset purchases unchanged
“The US Federal Reserve maintained the status quo on Wednesday. It kept rates unchanged, as expected, and maintained the amount of Treasuries, mortgage-backed securities and government sponsored enterprise (GSE) assets it intends to purchase.

“The Fed said it will evaluate the timing and amount of future asset purchases over time, and that the vote to keep the program as is was unanimous.

“In the monetary policy statement, the central bank said there are some signs that the economic outlook is improving, including stabilization in consumer spending and a slower pace of economic contraction.

“‘Although the economic outlook has improved modestly since the March meeting, partly reflecting some easing of financial market conditions, economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time,’ the statement read.

“Nevertheless, the Fed said the US will eventually resume a sustainable economic growth path.

“The Fed said it will employ all available tools to promote a recovery. As of the last meeting, the Fed plans to spend up to $1.25 trillion on agency mortgage-backed securities, up to $2,900 billion in agency debt and up to $300 billion in Treasury securities.”

Source: CEP News, April 29, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Another quarter of deep and wide contraction in economic activity
“Real gross domestic product (GDP) fell at an annual rate of 6.1% in the first quarter of 2009 after a 6.3% drop in the fourth quarter of 2008. Real GDP has declined at an annual rate of 6.2% in the last two quarters, which is the largest since the 1957:Q1-1958:Q2 period when the annualized reduction in real GDP was 7.4%.

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“A decline in real GDP, albeit more modest, is projected for the second quarter. GM’s plans to cut production should translate into another noticeably weak third quarter headline for real GDP, followed by a stronger than previously expected fourth quarter. The annual decline in real GDP is now projected to be roughly 3.5% in 2009, which is a tad higher than the 3.3% decline assumed in the alternative adverse scenario of the stress test of the 19 major banks under the Treasury’s Capital Assistance Program.”

Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, April 28, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): ISM Manufacturing Survey points to imminent economic recovery, possibly in 2009
“The April survey results of the ISM Manufacturing Survey results indicate that the factory sector is contracting but the pace of contraction has slowed significantly. The composite index (PMI) rose to 40.1 in April from 36.3 in March. Indexes below 50.0 denote a contraction in activity but indexes moving toward 50.0 imply a deceleration in the pace of factory activity. The cycle low for the composite index is the December 2008 reading of 32.9.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, May 1, 2009.

Standard & Poor’s: S&P/Case-Shiller - home prices still declining
“Data through February 2009, released today [Tuesday] by Standard & Poor’s for its S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices shows continued broad based declines in the prices of existing single family homes across the United States, with 10 of the 20 metro areas showing record rates of annual decline, and 15 reporting declines in excess of 10% versus February 2008. For the first time in 16 months, however, the annual decline of the 10-City and 20-City composites did not set a new record.

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“The chart above depicts the annual returns of the 10-City Composite and the 20-City Composite Home Price Indices. The 10-City and 20-City Composites recorded annual declines of 18.8% and 18.6%, respectively. This is a slight improvement from their returns reported for January, where they fell by 19.4% and 19.0%, respectively.

“‘While the declines in residential real estate continued into February, we witnessed some deceleration in the rate of decline in some of the markets,’ says David Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor’s.”

Click here for the full report.

Source: Standard & Poor’s, April 28, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Consumer spending and income decline
“Personal income fell 0.3% in March following a 0.2% drop in February. Personal income has declined in five out of the last six months. It is more troubling to note that personal income on a year-to-year basis grew only 0.3% during March, the smallest gain since 1959 when record keeping began for this series.

“Consumer spending, after adjusting for inflation, fell 0.2% in March after upwardly revised gains of 0.9% and 0.1% in January and February, respectively. In light of the absence of support from income, a setback to consumer spending in the near term is almost certain. In the meanwhile, personal saving as a percent of disposable income increased to 4.2% in March from 4.0% in February, putting the quarterly average at 4.2%, the largest average seen since the third quarter of 1998.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore: Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, April 30, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Initial jobless claims declined but continuing claims advanced
“Initial jobless claims fell 14,000 to 631,000 during the week ended April 25, marking the third weekly decline in the last four weeks. The four-week moving average appears to have peaked in the week ended April 4.

“Continuing claims, which lag initial claims by one week, rose 133,000 to a new record high of 6.271 million and the insured unemployment rate advanced to 4.7% from 4.6% in the prior week.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore: Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, April 30, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Consumer Confidence Index improves mostly on surge in expectations index
“The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index shot up 12.3 points to 39.2 in April. The Present Situation Index moved up only 1.8 points to 23.7, while the Expectations Index increased 19.3 points to 49.5.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, April 28, 2009.

The American Banker: Credit card losses
“Credit card losses suddenly escalated in the first quarter as unemployment and other economic conditions worsened, spooking issuers to the point where most shied away from forecasting losses beyond the near term.”

Source: The American Banker, April 29, 2009.

Rasmussen Reports: 26% say US already has partially socialist economy
“Twenty-one percent (21%) of American adults say that the US economy is partially socialist and another five percent (5%) say generally speaking it’s already a socialist economy.

“A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that 26% believe the United States generally has a free market economy and that 41% say the country has a partially free market economy.

“Seventy-seven percent (77%) of all voters say they prefer a free market economy over a government-managed one. That’s up seven points since December.

“But only 53% of American adults believe capitalism is better than socialism. This clearly suggest that many Americans draw a sharp distinction between capitalism and a free market economy.

“Belief that the United States has a free market economy generally rises with income level. Those who earn the most are most confident that the market is at least partially free.”

Source: Rasmussen Reports, April 28, 2009,

Financial Times: Commercial mortgages at risk
“The volume of commercial mortgages at risk of default has quintupled since the beginning of 2008 as a deteriorating economy has made it increasingly difficult for shops and businesses to keep up with their payments.

“Special servicers, companies that collect payments from borrowers in distress on behalf of mortgage bond investors, reported $23.7 billion of mortgages under their care at the end of the first quarter, according to Fitch Ratings.

“That was five times higher than the $4.6 billion of mortgages needing special servicing at the end of 2007. Servicers experienced an almost 50% increase in the volume of distressed commercial mortgages in the first quarter alone.

“Mortgages for multi-family residential properties suffering from the housing downturn represented the largest share of the troubled loans at 31%, said Fitch. However, mortgages for shops and businesses were catching up, with retail loans at 28% of the distressed pools.

“Fitch analysts said they expect commercial mortgage defaults to continue to increase this year. At the end of the first quarter, defaults and payments more than 60 days late were at 1.53% of outstanding mortgages. Fitch said they could reach 4% by the end of 2010.”

Source: Saskia Scholtes, Financial Times, April 28, 2009.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): 10-year Treasury Note yield and mortgage rates after March 18, 2009
“The March 18 FOMC policy statement noted the following:

‘To provide greater support to mortgage lending and housing markets, the Committee decided today to increase the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet further by purchasing up to an additional $750 billion of agency mortgage-backed securities, bringing its total purchases of these securities to up to $1.25 trillion this year, and to increase its purchases of agency debt this year by up to $100 billion to a total of up to $200 billion. Moreover, to help improve conditions in private credit markets, the Committee decided to purchase up to $300 billion of longer-term Treasury securities over the next six months.’

“The 10-year Treasury note yield closed at 2.51% on March 18, reflecting a 51 bps rally compared with the close on March 17, 2009, and has since held above the March 18 reading. The 10-year Treasury note yield on April 24 was 3.03% and as of this writing it was trading around 2.97%.

“The Fed has purchased $73.742 billion of Treasury securities between March 23, 2009 and April 27, 2009. The chart below indicates the Fed has not succeeded in guiding Treasury securities lower after the announcement. The goal of the purchase program is to buy $300 billion of longer-term Treasury securities over a six-month period. Effectively, the Fed has roughly $226 billion of Treasury securities more to purchase under this program.

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“The good news is that mortgage rates have declined further after the Fed expanded the purchase of mortgage-backed securities ($1.25 billion, up from prior announcement of $750 billion) and agency debt ($200 billion, up from earlier plan of $100 billion) as per the March 18 announcement. The 30-year mortgage rate stood at 5.03% during the week ended March 20 and was quoted at 4.80% as of April 24.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, April 27, 2009.

Bespoke: Treasuries and high-yield bonds converge
“IEF is an ETF that tracks the price of long-term Treasuries (7-10 years), while HYG tracks the price of high-yield (junk) bonds. During the flight to safety panic that occurred in late 2008, Treasuries soared (yields fell), while junk bonds tanked (yields rose). This caused high-yield spreads to spike to levels not seen in decades. As the market has regained some of its footing in the last couple of months, however, spreads have begun to come in, and the price charts of IEF and HYG highlight this convergence. As shown, IEF (Treasuries) are getting close to testing February support, and the ETF is down from more than $100 to the low $90s. HYG, on the other hand, has rallied from the low $60s to the high $70s since the March equity market lows. If IEF breaks this support in the coming days, it will probably be a sign that the current trend will continue on for longer.”

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Source: Bespoke, April 30, 2009.

Barron’s: Big money poll - the long view
“After the worst stretch for stocks in decades, America’s money managers say they’re bullish. But do they really believe it? Based on the results of our latest Big Money poll, the pros are hoping for the best, but … hold on! Aren’t those fresh bear tracks in the mud?

“Nearly 60% of our respondents call themselves bullish or very bullish about the stock market’s prospects through the end of 2009, a significant increase from the 50% who proclaimed themselves bulls last fall. Yet, signs of unease abound. For one, just 56% of today’s poll participants think the stock market is undervalued, down from 62% last fall. Thirteen percent say stocks are overvalued, up from a prior 7%. And an alarming 58% say the market hasn’t bottomed yet, even though the Dow Jones industrials hit a low of 6,469 in March, before recovering to a recent 8,100.

“The managers are similarly wary about the outlook for the economy, at least through the end of this year. And they are downright doubtful that the government’s first stimulus package, announced with fanfare shortly after the Obama administration moved into the White House, will be the last.

“Given these and other concerns, only 26% of the Big Money men and women expect to be net buyers of stocks in the next six months, although 66% say they will be putting more money to work in the 12-month span. But don’t look for fresh dough to flow solely to US equities. Just 44% of our respondents think the US will be the strongest market in the next year; 42% expect emerging markets to take the baton and lead. As Keith Wibel, a money manager at Foothills Asset Management in Scottsdale, Ariz., put it, ‘Confidence has been fractured. The psyche is slow to heal.’

“The market isn’t much faster. Big Money’s bullish cohort expects the Dow to end 2009 at 8,676, about 7% above current levels but flat for the year. Things, or at least stocks, will pick up thereafter, with the blue chips rising another 10% or so, to 9,488, by mid-2010. In concert with their short-term-skittish, long-term-sunny stance, more than 40% of bulls predict the Dow industrials will reach or breach 10,000 by the middle of next year.

“The optimists see the Standard & Poor’s 500 jogging to 906 by December 30, en route to 1,003 next June. The popular benchmark closed Friday at 866. Their mean predictions for the Nasdaq Composite: 1,683 by year end, and 1,841 by mid-2010, up from last week’s 1,694.

“Some big money managers are notably upbeat even - or especially - after a global financial meltdown has cut most stock indexes in half. ‘They don’t ring a bell when they announce a sale on Wall Street, but prices are as good as I’ve seen them in my entire career,’ says David Corbin, president of Corbin & Co. in Fort Worth, Texas.”

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Source: Jack Willoughby, Barron’s, April 27, 2009.

Bespoke: Sector earnings growth in the first quarter
“More than 70% of the companies in the S&P 500 have now reported first quarter earnings, so the growth puzzle for the quarter is beginning to take shape. Below we highlight the current year over year % change in earnings for Q1 ‘09 versus Q1 ‘08. We also provide the estimates for these numbers as they stood just before earnings season began.

“As shown, the S&P 500 is currently seeing earnings decline by 32.3% in the first quarter. At the start of earnings season, this number was estimated at -37.4%, so it’s coming in a little better than expected. Consumer Discretionary looks the best when comparing actual versus estimates, but earnings have still declined by 52.5% in the sector. The only two sectors that are coming in weaker than expected are Financials and Energy.

“We also provide the price performance of the sectors since April 2nd. Interestingly, most of the sectors that are up the most are the worst in terms of actual earnings versus estimates.”

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Source: Bespoke, May 1, 2009.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): Will stock markets stay above March lows
“The important question is whether or not Wall Street continues to range above its March lows? The answer will have significant implications for other stock markets.

“At Fullermoney, we maintain that the S&P 500 Index will most likely hold above its March low, as it continues to develop a base formation. The main reason, previously stated, is that we are witnessing the greatest attempt at asset reflation in human history. In comparison, it makes Greenspan look, well … almost Austrian and the USA is certainly not the only country engaged in a record reflation. The secondary reason is the record levels of cash held by institutional investors.

“Let us now consider three scripts for Wall Street and its implications for other stock markets: 1) the S&P keeps on rallying, surprising even the bulls; 2) the S&P ranges in extended base formation development for many more months; 3) the S&P rolls over and resumes its bear market by moving well beneath the March low.

1) In this event, the stock markets and sectors that are already considerably outperforming the S&P - mainly Fullermoney themes, including China-led emerging Asia, South American-led resources markets and technology - will continue to do much better than the S&P. Other OECD stock markets, (tech & telecom weighted Sweden excepted), will track the S&P, albeit usually with a slightly higher beta.

2) The Fullermoney themes in (1) above outperform, extending their ranging upward trends. Most OECD stock markets track Wall Street.

3) Fullermoney themes fall back and extend their base formations. Most OECD stock markets track Wall Street, with Sweden being the most likely exception.

“What do I expect? I think it will be (2) above, although possibly in combination with (1). I will not worry too much about (3), provided the S&P can maintain approximately half of its gains from the March low during the next reaction phase.”

Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, April 29, 2009.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): Global stock markets leaders - what are they saying?
“Fullermoney has long maintained that the leaders lead in both directions. In other words, the leaders of a global stock market recovery will usually lead the next correction. The same applies in reverse.

“Which are the leaders and what are they indicating today?

“China is one of the few stock markets capable of providing a leash effect. Among bigger capitalisation markets, it has led on the upside since its October 2008 low. We pointed out China’s downside key day reversal on April 22 and it is experiencing downside follow through, indicating susceptibility to a further pullback. This will probably create another buying opportunity and I would only be concerned if the last reaction low near 2,040 was exceeded. Meanwhile, it will take an upward dynamic to check this reaction beyond a brief pause.

“Taiwan is a China satellite, strong on tech, which has once again been a leading sector. Consequently Taiwan has been an outstanding performer, that is until its downside key day reversal on April 17. This occurred near the psychological 6,000 level and we saw another downward dynamic today. A close above 6,100 is currently required to offset scope for an additional reaction.

“Brazil has been South America’s comparatively big-cap leader among these resources markets, often cited by Fullermoney. It shows none of the downside keys or other bearish dynamics and actually reached a new high on Friday, although that gain was not maintained today. A close under 44,270 would confirm an upside failure and susceptibility to an additional short-term reaction.

“Conclusion - Fullermoney anticipated the impressive global stock market rally, not least with the help of indices shown above, plus other regional leaders such as Sweden, which is still appreciating, albeit approaching lateral and psychological resistance near 800. We remain medium-term bullish but would be cautious in the short term.

“We have always spoken of a lengthy convalescence in response to the financial crisis. Consequently we have favoured accumulating equities on easing within this base building phase and early stage uptrends among the leaders.

“Meanwhile, there is still more than enough worrying news, in terms of corporate disappointments, to frighten buyers from time to time. Conversely, there is more than enough cash on the sidelines to cushion downside risk during the inevitable reactions and consolidations. For OECD laggards which experienced March lows, I would be concerned if they gave up more than half of their gains from those lows during a reaction.”

Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, April 27, 2009.

Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): Lowry’s statistics do not favor a new bull market
“The Lowry’s statistics do not favor the argument that a new bull market has started. Normally, based on the long history of the Lowry’s studies, when a new bull markets starts, their Buying Power and Selling Pressure Indices move apart by roughly the same number of points.

“The fact - since the March 9 low, Lowry’s Buying Power Index has gained 57 points, but their Selling Pressure Index has only dropped 20 points. This is at sharp variance with all other bull market starts in the Lowry’s history.

“Basically, when a new bull market starts, the background is that the urge to sell has been exhausted. The pressure to press that market down further has disappeared. Thus, the market is left in the hands of those who wish to buy. In the current case, there is still a potential supply of stocks to be sold. In other words, the situation is not correct for the start of a new bull market, based on 76 years of the Lowry’s data.”

Source: Richard Russell, The Dow Theory Letters, March 31, 2009.

Bespoke: Mid-April short interest
“Short interest figures as of mid-April were released on Friday after the close and showed an overall decrease in short interest for NYSE and Nasdaq listed stocks. In the chart below, we show the average short interest as a percentage of float for S&P 500 stocks. After peaking at 5.6% in mid-March, short interest as of mid-April has now declined to 5.5% of the average stock’s float.

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“At first glance, it is somewhat surprising that short interest has only declined by a marginal amount. Given the 25%+ rally in the S&P 500, one would expect to see short interest decline by a much larger amount. Digging into these numbers, however, the headline short interest numbers are somewhat misleading due to the extraordinarily large short interest in Citigroup (C). Due to the arbitrage taking place over the upcoming conversion of the preferred into common shares, Citi’s short interest represents 12.1% of the total short interest for the S&P 500. If one were to back Citi out of the calculations, short interest would be about 5.4% of the average stock’s float.

“Even though short interest has declined, there are still plenty of stocks investors are heavily betting against. For example, 82 stocks in the S&P 500 currently have over 10% of their float sold short, and 12 have more than 20% shorted. Given the state of the Financials, one would think most of the names would come from that sector, but the reality is that Citigroup (C) and Avalon (AVB) are the only two names from that sector to make the list. The Consumer Discretionary sector is currently the most popular on the “least popular” list (more than 20% sold short), as six of the 12 names are from the sector.”

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Source: Bespoke, April 27, 2009.

Bespoke: Largest companies in the world
“… below we highlight the 25 largest companies in the world. For each company, we provide its country, sector, price (local currency), year to date change, and market cap in dollars. As shown, Exxon Mobil (XOM) is the biggest company in the world and the only one worth more than $300 billion. PetroChina ranks second and is the only other company worth more than $200 billion. The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China is the world’s third largest company, giving China two of the biggest three. Wal-Mart and Microsoft round out the top five. The United States still dominates the list with 12 of the 25 spots. China ranks second with four spots. General Electric used to be the biggest company in the world, but it has slipped all the way down to the 18th spot. Google (GOOG) is also on the list at number 22.”

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Source: Bespoke, April 27, 2009.

Bespoke: Country ETFs overbought
“… we highlight below various country ETFs and their current trading levels. An ETF becomes overbought when it trades more than one standard deviation above its 50-day moving average. The % overbought number is how far the ETF is currently above this initial overbought level. This is the first time in quite awhile that all country ETFs have been overbought at the same time, and it’s a sign that markets around the world are extended from their normal trading ranges. The Taiwan ETF is the most overbought at 13.32%, followed by Italy (8.34%), India (7.92%), Brazil (7.14%), Sweden (7.08%), and South Korea (7.08%). Japan is the least overbought at 1.4%.”

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Source: Bespoke, April 30, 2009.

The Wall Street Journal: The IMF’s gold gambit
“The fund’s misuse of bullion reserves is crucial to its plan to use the financial crisis to expand its power.

“The International Monetary Fund (IMF) deserves credit, figuratively speaking, for cleverly manipulating the financial troubles of emerging and low-income nations to procure a fresh infusion of capital for itself. But its tactics at this month’s G-20 summit in London - where President Barack Obama signed off on tripling the IMF’s lending resources - should not hoodwink anyone, least of all American taxpayers who pay the largest share of IMF expenses.

“Lost in the lofty talk about putting the IMF in the center of world economic recovery is the fact that the organization has been quietly attempting to ensure its own survival by seeking permission to engage in gold sales …

“The US should not replenish the coffers of a multilateral bureaucracy that quite literally lost its reason for being on August 15, 1971 - the day President Richard Nixon ‘closed the gold window’ and brought an end to the Bretton Woods agreement, which allowed countries to convert their dollar holdings, via the IMF, into gold at a fixed price. Instead, Congress should call for the IMF’s dismantlement and restitution of its assets.

“The most solid asset owned by the IMF, purely as a legacy of its original incarnation, is gold. The IMF holds 3,217 metric tons (103.4 million ounces) of gold, which makes it the world’s third largest official holder. Actually, it’s a misnomer to say the IMF ‘owns’ the gold since the bullion belongs, according to the IMF articles of agreement adopted at Bretton Woods in 1944, to its member nations.”

Source: Judy Shelton, The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2009.

Julian Jessop (Capital Economics): China’s gold reserves jump
“The revelation of a jump in China’s official gold holdings to 1,054 metric tonnes is supporting gold prices and reviving fears that reserve diversification will undermine other dollar assets, notably US Treasuries.

“But the news may be less significant than some people think, says Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics.

“‘Gold was in a bull market from 2002 to 2008, so it is no great surprise that China was buying over this period. The reported amounts are also small compared to the production from China’s own mines, official sales by other central banks, and the record purchases by private investors via exchange traded funds,’ he notes.

“‘What’s more, the fact that China has already increased its gold holdings by 75% does not necessarily mean further purchases and higher prices in the future. It would make more sense to announce an increase in gold holdings once a buying programme has been completed, rather than part way through.

“‘We are also sceptical that the increase in gold holdings tells us anything about the plans for purchases of other assets. Even if all of the additional gold were bought last year at the average 2008 price of $872 an ounce, the total cost would only be around $12.6 billion. This is just a drop in the ocean compared with the total increase in China’s official reserve assets last year of $419 billion.’”

Source: Julian Jessop, Capital Economics (via Financial Times), April 27, 2009.

The Wall Street Journal: Understanding swine flu
“The trouble starts in poor countries where too many people live in proximity to pigs and poultry.

“Unfortunately, conditions in many countries are conducive to the emergence of such new infectious agents, especially flu viruses, which mutate rapidly and inventively. Intensive animal husbandry procedures that place poultry and swine in close proximity to humans, combined with unsanitary conditions, poverty and grossly inadequate public-health infrastructure of all kinds - all of which exist in Mexico, as well as much of Asia and Africa - make it unlikely that a pandemic can be prevented or contained at the source …

“Pigs are uniquely susceptible to infection with flu viruses of mammalian and avian origin. This is of concern for a couple of reasons. First, pigs can serve as intermediaries in the transmission of flu viruses from birds to people. And when avian viruses infect pigs, they adapt and become more efficient at infecting mammals - which makes them more easily transmitted and dangerous to humans.

“Second, pigs can serve as hosts in which two (or more) influenza viruses infecting an animal simultaneously can undergo ‘genetic reassortment’, a process in which pieces of viral RNA (the virus’s genetic material, similar to DNA) are shuffled and exchanged, creating a new organism. The influenza viruses responsible for the world-wide 1957 and 1968 flu pandemics - which killed about 70,000 and 34,000, respectively, in the US - were such viruses, containing genes from both human and avian viruses …

“Because they have been stockpiled for use in the event of an avian flu pandemic, large amounts of the antiflu drugs Tamiflu and Relenza are available. However, they must be administered during the first couple of days after symptoms begin to be an effective treatment. They can also prevent the onset of the disease if administered in adequate doses prior to exposure. The danger of using antiflu drugs in poor countries with inadequate public-health facilities such as Mexico is that they may be administered improperly and in suboptimal doses, which would promote viral resistance and intensify an outbreak.

“If the swine flu outbreak becomes a pandemic with a high rate of severe complications (such as pneumonia) and death, we will need to be smart, nimble and flexible. That will involve triage on many levels - including decisions about which patients are likely to benefit from scarce commodities such as drugs and ventilators - as well as ‘social engineering’ determinations about issues such as mandatory quarantine, the canceling of public events, shutting airports and closing our southern border. Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.”

Source: Dr Henry Miller, The Wall Street Journal, April 29, 2009.

John Authers (Financial Times): Swine flu
“The outbreak of swine fly has barely dented stocks in Mexico, which plainly stands at risk of severe economic damage from a disease that has been linked to the deaths of almost 200 of its citizens.”

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Click here for the article.

Source: John Authers, Financial Times, April 30, 2009.

ETF Trends: Three ETF sectors that could feel impact from swine flu
“The swine flu epidemic, which could possibly turn into a pandemic, may not just be a hit to our health. It could also be a major hit to stock markets and related shares of exchange traded funds (ETFs).

“Many are worried about the economic effects of swine flu as it interrupts day-to-day living, travel and purchases. Some countries are already warning their citizens against travel to Mexico and the United States.

Drug Makers. One beneficiary could be the pharmaceutical industry, though. Certain makers of drugs and vaccines may be caught off guard to the recent epidemic of swine flu, because of commercial orders getting impacted by government stockpile orders from the late avian flu threat.

Retail & Consumer. Sam Stoval talked to Steve Chiotakis on MarketPlace and reports that the broader economic drawbacks of the swine flu hit upon trade and travel as well as day-to-day purchases. A short-term situation aside, if the outbreak were to remain out of control, consumers are likely to stay at home, which would effect gasoline, oil and energy consumption. Purchases on food and leisure items would dwindle, as well.

Airlines. In an effort to secure borders and keep the swine flu contained, the United States is now screening for the swine flu at the Mexican border, and Europe’s Health Commissioner urged Europeans to avoid traveling to the United States or Mexico. Could people hold off on travel altogether because of this? According to Richard Aboulafia on MarketPlace, at least a half dozen airlines, including American, United and Continental, are waiving penalties for changing flights to or from Mexico.

“Upon arrival into the United States from an international flight, expect to be screened in customs, including having your temperature taken. Russia, Taiwan and China are all preparing to quarantine anyone with flu-like symptoms.”

Source: Tom Lydon, ETF Trends, April 27, 2009.

CEP News: UK consumer confidence up for the third straight month
“Confidence among UK consumers rose for the third straight month in April, according to the latest consumer survey report from the GFK Group.

“According to the report, consumer confidence in the UK improved slightly more than expected in April rising three points to -27. Economists had been expecting a -28 reading.

“The UK consumer confidence survey results were compiled from the responses of approximately 2,000 individuals over the age of 16. The survey was conducted on behalf of the European Commission.”

Source: Erik Kevin Franco, CEP News, April 29, 2009.

CEP News: UK Hometrack Housing Survey moderates slightly in April
“The UK housing sector’s decline abated slightly in April, according to the country’s Hometrack Housing Survey, released just after midnight on Monday (Sunday night EDT).

“On a monthly basis, the survey declined by 0.3%. This was less severe than march’s level, which fell an unrevised 0.6%. Hometrack announced that this was the slowest rate of month-over-monthly declines in a year.

“Similarly, the survey’s 10.1% annualized fall was slightly less severe than the prior month’s decline of 10.3%, a level that was also unrevised.”

Source: CEP News, April 26, 2009.

CEP News: Japan’s economy to contract 3.1% in 2009, BOJ says
“The Bank of Japan has revised down its economic growth forecasts for the 2009 fiscal year and projects corporate profits and household consumption to weaken further in the coming quarters.

“In its semi-annual economic outlook published on Thursday, the BOJ said it expects the economy to contract 3.1% in the 2009 fiscal year, down from the 2.0% decline previously forecast.

“Earlier in the day, the BOJ’s Policy Board voted unanimously to keep the overnight call rate targeted at 0.1%.

“According to the central bank, domestic private consumption will continue to deteriorate. However, the pace in export and production declines will ease as inventories are adjusted both domestically and abroad.

“‘Therefore, the pace of deterioration in economic conditions will likely moderate gradually and start to level out,’ the central bank said.

“The BOJ also noted that corporate financing conditions had begun to loosen compared to the latter part of 2008 due to improved issuing conditions in both the corporate bond and commercial paper markets.

“‘However, given the deterioration in corporate profits, the situation as a whole remains severe as an increasing number of firms are reporting that their financial positions are weak and lending attitudes of financial institutions are tight,’ the bank added.

“Looking ahead to the 2010 fiscal year, which begins on April 1, 2010, the BOJ projects that the economy will recover to a growth rate of 1.2%, with estimates out of the Policy Board ranging from +0.8% to +1.5%.”

Source: Todd Wailoo, CEP News, April 30, 2009.

CEP News: Japanese manufacturing PMI jumps in April
“Manufacturing conditions in Japan improved in April, according to a report from Nomura and the JMMA on Thursday.

“According to a report, the country’s manufacturing PMI advanced to 41.4 from 33.8 in March.

“Although the index remains below the 50 level, which indicates a contracting industrial sector, the figure is well above the 29.6 reading recorded in January.”

Source: Erik Kevin Franco, CEP News, April 29, 2009.

James Pressler (Northern Trust): Japan - deeper into the red
“At this early stage in the global recession, most of the industrialized economies are still only speculating when production will turn around or at least stop contracting so rapidly. The US consensus is that growth will return by the end of ‘09, while Europe remains a mixed bag of hard landings and slow recoveries. Today, Japan’s government released a revision of its own outlook, and placed itself amongst the worst-off of the G-7 countries.

“In the government’s latest biannual economic outlook, the fiscal year just ended in March experienced a 3.1% contraction in GDP, while the current FY2009-2010 will experience a sharper slide of 3.3%. The latter figure is a dramatic revision from October’s forecast of 0% growth, and is somewhat more pessimistic than recent statements from Tokyo suggesting a recovery starting in Q1 2010.

“Expectations for exports and business investment were also slashed across the board, with the only positive figure coming from minor growth in public consumption - courtesy of the fiscal stimulus package that came into effect at the beginning of the month. In short, the government has conceded that it will not be able to export its way out of this recession, and eight quarters of contracting GDP (starting in Q2 2008) might even be a little optimistic.

“However, something good may yet come out of all of this - at least for the ruling LDP. PM Taro Aso and his party have not surprisingly taken a beating in the opinion polls over the past six months, and with general elections due this year there was every likelihood that this icon of Japan’s government would be run out of Tokyo entirely. But, a scandal within the opposition Democratic Party (DP) has offered a brief window of opportunity and it appears Aso is pouncing on it. To counter the particularly negative themes of this latest outlook, Aso’s Cabinet is proposing another fiscal stimulus package for FY2010-11. Furthermore, his government submitted a supplementary stimulus package worth ¥15.4 trillion ($159 billion) and all but challenged the opposition-controlled upper house to stall the legislation and force him to call an early election. After being hobbled by scandal, Aso’s dare forces the DP to either roll the dice at the ballot box or cede the economic momentum back to the LDP.”

Source: James Pressler, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, April 27, 2009.

Financial Times: Swiss seek tax treaty trade-off
“Swiss and US officials will meet in Bern on Tuesday for their first talks on a new tax treaty after Switzerland asked the Obama administration to drop a legal case involving the Swiss bank UBS in exchange for the accord.

“The talks were announced earlier this month.

“Tim Geithner, US Treasury secretary, this weekend met with Hans-Rudolf Merz, Swiss finance minister and head of state this year under the country’s rotating presidency.

“Mr Merz told Mr Geithner that an aggressive investigation by US tax authorities into accounts at UBS could make it very difficult to secure approval for a new tax treaty in the Swiss parliament and in a referendum.

“‘US officials told the Financial Times that Mr Geithner did not dismiss the importance of appropriately resolving the matter,’ one said.

“However, the official added: ‘Tax treaty negotiations will be conducted by the Treasury Department with input from the Department of Justice and the Internal Revenue Service. All pending enforcement decisions will be made by the Department of Justice and the IRS.’

“The US response suggests it might be possible for the two sides to strike a deal, though the official added: ‘Both President Obama and Secretary Geithner have made very clear their commitment to tackling tax shelters and other efforts to abuse US tax laws.’”

Source: Haig Simonian and Krishna Guha, Financial Times, April 26, 2009.

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Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (Dec 8 – 14, 2008)

Sunday, December 14th, 2008


Despite a litany of bleak economic and corporate news confronting investors during the past week, global stock markets digested the bearish fodder with a sense of aplomb. The MSCI World Index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index gained 4.4% and 10.9% respectively on the week, with other reflation trades such as gold (+9.1%) and oil (+20.4%) also putting in a strong performance.

But investor angst was never completely allayed as seen from the yields on US one- and three-month Treasury Bills briefly trading in negative territory for the first time since 1940, indicating the willingness of risk-averse investors to pay the government for the “privilege” of holding their money. Three-month T-Bills ended the week in positive territory but barely so at a minuscule 0.036% yield, indicating that liquidity was still being hoarded. (Also see my “Credit Crisis Watch“.)

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Source: Nick Anderson, Slate

The week kicked off on a positive note after US president-elect Barack Obama had spelled out his plans on Sunday for the biggest infrastructure investment in the US since the 1950s. According to CNN, Obama said: “We understand that we’ve got to provide a blood infusion to the patient right now to make sure that the patient is stabilized. And that means that we can’t worry short term about the deficit [which might surpass $1 trillion before his spending plans are included]. We’ve got to make sure that the economic stimulus plan is large enough to get the economy moving.”

“The resultant infrastructure and physical assets will be far better than endowing busted banks, insurance companies and other financial entities with US taxpayers’ cash, which effectively goes down a black hole,” remarked Bill King (The King Report).

Financial markets reacted negatively to the US Senate’s failure to agree on a $14 billion loan to the troubled automakers. The prospect of the biggest industrial failure in US history caused a sell-off on global stock markets, a widening of credit spreads and an onslaught on the US dollar.

However, the US Treasury was quick to signal its readiness to provide funds to prop up the “Big Three”, as quoted in the Financial Times: “Because Congress failed to act, we will stand ready to prevent an imminent failure until Congress reconvenes and acts to address the long-term viability of the industry.” This indication resulted in an improved tone on financial markets by the close of the week.

Next, a tag cloud from the plethora of articles I have devoured over the past week. This is a way of visualizing word frequencies at a glance. Key words such as “credit”, “debt”, “economy”, “Fed”, “government”, “market”, “rates” and “stock” occur often, but “gold” is also becoming increasingly prominent.

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Back to the issue of markets shrugging off bad news for the second week running. Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters) commented as follows: “On top of everything else, Lowry’s Selling Pressure Index dropped substantially yesterday [Wednesday] and is now in a definite declining trend. At the same time, Lowry’s Buying Power Index is trending higher. Thus, the odds are saying that the trend of the stock market is turning up.

“This is all the more dramatic since this potential upturn has arrived in the face of black-bearish news. Markets bottoming and rising in the face of bearish news are often the most profitable ones. I have never seen a bear market hit its low amid happy news headlines.”

On a fundamental note, 39% of the constituents of the MSCI World Index sell at a discount to shareholders’ equity. “The cash-rich companies allow investors to pay nothing for future earnings streams,” said Jean-Marie Eveillard in an interview with Bloomberg.

A positive for the bulls is that the period post Thanksgiving through the end of the year has usually been a bullish time for stocks, based on studies by Jeffrey Hirsch (Stock Trader’s Almanac). Should the bullish seasonal tendencies provide a tailwind on this occasion, possible first targets are the 50-day moving averages of 8,784 for the Dow Jones Industrial Index (current level 8,630) and 910 for the S&P 500 Index (current level 880).

The last word on equities goes to Hong Kong-based Puru Saxena: “I cannot say with any certainty whether we are already in the early stages of the next cycle. Under my best case scenario, we are in the very early stages of a new multi-year bull market. And under my worst case scenario, we are going to get a very strong rebound (30% move higher in the S&P 500) over a short period of time, which will probably take the markets back to their 200-day moving averages.”

Before highlighting some thought-provoking news items and quotes from market commentators, let’s briefly review the financial markets’ movements on the basis of economic statistics and a performance round-up.

Economy
“Global business confidence has been shattered. Sentiment is equally negative in North America, South America and Europe. Asian business confidence is not quite as dark, but it is falling rapidly,” said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted by Moody’s Economy.com. “Pricing power is quickly evaporating and approaching that which prevailed in 2003, the last time deflation was a concern.” According to the survey results, the global economy is suffering a severe recession.

Economic indicators released in the US during the past week mostly pointed to a deepening recession.

BCA Research said: “The year-end spending season will be the biggest bust in several decades, as consumers have been hit by a double whammy: a meltdown in financial and residential asset prices; and a sharp rise in layoffs. The government’s failure to deliver a fiscal stimulus plan and unfreeze the credit markets imply that the recession will deepen and any recovery will be pushed farther into the future.

“The contraction in payrolls and economic growth will persist until there are some signs that policy actions are finally becoming effective. The fiscal stimulus plan needed to stabilize the economy will be massive and policy rates will stay near zero for a long time.”

The precarious position of the US consumer is illustrated by a plunge of 21.9 points to 63.7 in the annual average of the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index - the largest annual average decline in the history of the Index which began in 1952, according to Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust).

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The Fed fund futures are pricing in a 76% chance of a 75 basis-point cut in rates from 1.0% to 0.25% when the FOMC meets on December 16.

However, Bill King questioned the Fed’s approach: “[Effective] Fed funds traded at zero late last night. We have screamed for months that the official or ‘target’ Fed funds rate was irrelevant because the effective funds rate was much lower, and near zero. Now Fed funds are trading at zero. Yet there will be pundits and experts that will assert that the Fed might cut its target funds rate this week to 0.50% or even 0.25% - even though the cut in the target rate is meaningless. Now that the Fed is paying interest to banks, why did the Fed allow the funds rate to trade at zero? Yep, they are terrified by something.”

Also, the Fed is considering issuing its own debt to further expand money supply without clogging up bank balance sheets and making it harder for the Fed to maintain interest rates at the desired level. RGE Monitor said: “… there are upper limits to Treasury issuance and lower limits to the amount of Treasuries the Fed can sell off from the asset side of its balance sheet. One hurdle to issuing Fed bills: The Federal Reserve Act doesn’t explicitly permit the Fed to issue notes beyond currency.”

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Elsewhere in the world, economic reports compounded anxiety about a severe global recession. Specifically, Chinese exports in November declined by 2.2% from a year earlier as a result of a drastic slowdown in demand in many of its main markets. The figures were far below forecasts and the +19% figure for October. “This is the worst collapse in Chinese exports since 1999 and is probably just the beginning of a prolonged export contraction,” said Isaac Meng, economist at BNP Paribas, as reported by the Financial Times.

Week’s economic reports
Click here for the week’s economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic Data.

Table of Economic Events, 12.13.08

Source: Yahoo Finance, December 12, 2008.

In addition to interest rate announcements by the FOMC (Tuesday) and the Bank of Japan (Thursday), next week’s US economic highlights, courtesy of Northern Trust, include the following:

1. Industrial Production (December 15): The 1.4% drop in the manufacturing man-hours index in November suggests a 1.0% decline in industrial production. The operating rate is projected to have dropped to 75.7. Consensus: -0.8%; Capacity Utilization: 75.7 versus 76.4 in October.

2. Consumer Price Index (December 16): A 0.7% decline in the CPI is forecast for November versus a 1.0% drop in October, reflecting largely lower energy prices. The core CPI is expected to have moved up by 0.1% after a 0.1% decline in October. Consensus: 1.3%, core CPI +0.1%.

3. Housing Starts (December 16): Permit extensions for new homes fell by 9.2% in October, inclusive of a 12.6% drop in permits issued for single-family homes. These figures suggest a sharp drop in housing starts (730,000). Consensus: 740,000 versus 791,000 in October.

4. Leading Indicators (December 18): Interest-rate spread and money supply are the only two components likely to make a positive contribution in November. Stock prices, initial jobless claims, manufacturing workweek, consumer expectations, vendor deliveries, and building permits are expected to make negative contributions. Forecasts of money supply and orders of consumer durables and non-defense capital goods are used in the initial estimate. The net impact is a 0.5% drop in the leading index during November, assuming building permits fell. Consensus: -0.5 %

5. Other reports: NAHB Survey (December 15), Current Account (Q4) (December 17), Philadelphia Fed Survey (December 18).

Click here for a summary of Wachovia’s weekly economic and financial commentary.

Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during the past week.

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Source: Wall Street Journal Online, December 12, 2008.

Equities
Global stock markets rallied strongly during the past week as bargain-hunters looked past the grim economic and corporate reports. Both mature and emerging markets participated in the rally, as shown by the gains of the MSCI World Index (+4.4%) and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (+10.9%). Notwithstanding the improvement, these indices were still down by 47.4% and 58.8% respectively since the peaks of October 2007.

Particularly noteworthy, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has been outperforming the Dow Jones World Index since late October (rising green line), after a period of solid underperformance from May to October (falling line).

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The chart below shows the performance of the four BRIC countries since the November 20 lows. Brazil (orange line), India (green) and Russia (red) have all recovered sharply, but China (blue) has underperformed after initial outperformance following the climactic[MR2] November 10 sell-off.

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Click here or on the thumbnail below for a (pleasantly green) market map, obtained from Finviz, providing a quick overview of last week’s performances of global stock markets (as reflected by the movements of ADR stocks).

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The Dow Jones Industrial Index was one of the few major indices to record a negative return during the past week, with US markets in general lagging other bourses as shown by the major index movements: Dow -0.1% (YTD -34.95), S&P 500 Index +0.4% (YTD -40.1%), Nasdaq Composite Index +2.1% (YTD ‑41.9%) and Russell 2000 Index +1.6% (YTD -38.8%).

The bar chart below shows the US sector performances over the week, and specifically how strongly energy and materials have recovered. Nine of the ten best-performing groups were related to commodities (diversified metals & mining, coal & consumable fuel, aluminum, steel, gold, oil & gas drilling, oil & gas exploration & production, gas utilities[MR3] , and oil & gas equipment & services).

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Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase’s (JPM) chief executive, prompted a sharp fall in financial shares with a warning that his bank was having a tough fourth quarter after a “terrible” November and December. Goldman Sachs’ (GS) earnings report on Tuesday is keenly awaited.

Based on the outperformance of emerging-market stocks and the sharp recovery of commodity-related groups, it would appear that investors are becoming less risk averse. Another example is the outperformance of small caps since the November 20 lows. A study published by Bespoke on December 8 highlighted the decile performance of stocks in the S&P 500 Index based on market cap. As shown by the chart below, the two deciles of the largest-cap stocks in the S&P 500 increased by about 17%, while the decile of the smallest-cap stocks was 54% higher.

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Fixed-income instruments
The yields on government bonds generally edged up during the past few trading days after a record-breaking plunge since the beginning of November.

The UK ten-year Gilt yield increased by 17 basis points to 3.60% and the German ten-year Bund rose by 26 basis points to 3.30%. Although the US ten-year Treasury Note yield declined by 7 basis points to 2.59% on the week, the yield edged up from an earlier five-decade low of 2.48%.

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John Hussman (Hussman Funds) expressed his concern about the level of Treasuries: “The problem with Treasury yields here is that while there are good economic reasons for the downward yield pressures, the levels are low enough to invite explosive spikes that can easily wipe out a year or more of yield-to-maturity in a few days.”

Emerging-market bonds moved in an opposite direction to mature bonds, with the JPMorgan EMBI Global Index gaining 2.4% during the week.

US mortgage rates were almost unchanged on the week, with the 30-year fixed rate rising by 2 basis points to 5.71% and the 5-year ARM declining by 1 basis point to 5.95%

The CDX and iTraxx credit indices, US Treasury Bills and high-yield spreads are still at distressed levels. Some improvement has been seen as a result of the central banks’ actions, notably the tightening of the TED and LIBOR-OIS spreads, and lower mortgage rates. However, credit spreads need to narrow further to indicate that liquidity is moving freely again and credit markets are starting to thaw. (Also see my “Credit Crisis Watch“.)

Currencies
The US dollar fell sharply as the recent relationship between risk aversion and dollar strength weakened as a result of US-specific factors like the deterioration in the US trade balance and the automaker woes. The greenback plummeted to a 13-year low against the Japanese yen and touched its lowest level against the euro for seven weeks.

As shown by the chart below, the dollar has broken below its 50-day moving average and seems to be topping out. Are foreign investors coming to the conclusion that the US currency, which briefly last week yielded a negative yield, is no longer an attractive option?

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Over the week the US dollar lost ground against the euro (-5.0%), the British pound (-1.8%), the Swiss franc (-3.6%), the Japanese yen (-1.8%), the Canadian dollar (-2.0%), the Australian dollar (-3.0%) and the New Zealand dollar (-2.2%). The US currency also fell against emerging-market currencies[MR4] , like the South African rand (-2.0%).

The British pound came under renewed pressure as the worsening economic situation triggered concerns of a currency crisis. Sterling’s trade-weighted index fell to its lowest level since record-keeping began in 1981.

Commodities
The Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index (+8.8%) closed higher by the end of the week - only its sixth positive week since commodities peaked early in July. The Baltic Dry Index - a benchmark for shipping major raw materials including coal, iron ore and grain - bounced by 15.2% from very oversold levels.

The graph below shows the movements of various commodities over the past week, indicating an improvement across the whole complex (with the exception of natural gas) as a weak US dollar pushed prices higher.

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The International Energy Agency urged a “substantial” cut in Opec output when the oil cartel meets next week, as global oil demand this year is expected to contract for the first time in 25 years. The price of West Texas Intermediate crude surged by 20.4% in expectation of a cut of at least 1 million to 1.5 million barrels a day.

Gold bullion (+9.1%) remained in favor with investors as a result of a solid supply/demand situation, store-of-value considerations and a weaker US currency. The chart below illustrates the strong inverse relationship between gold (green line) and the dollar (red line). In addition, gold has broken above its 50-day moving average (blue line) and trades at about the same level it started off in January 2008 - quite a feat in these difficult markets. Platinum (+4.9%) and silver (+8.5%) improved in tandem with the yellow metal.

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After the storm comes the calm. With only 12 more trading days remaining before we wish the tumultuous 2008 goodbye, let’s hope the calm lies just ahead. And as Richard Russell reminds us: “Calm after a bearish trend is usually bullish.” Meanwhile, the news items and words from the investment wise below will hopefully assist in steering our portfolios on a profitable course.

That’s the way it looks from Cape Town.

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Source: Dave Granlund

YouTube: The twelve days of bailouts
A bailout song for the holidays.

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Source: YouTube, December 6, 2008.

New York Magazine: Oracles of doom
They always knew the economy would collapse. What do they think will happen next?

FORTUNE TELLER: Gerald Celente
Trends Research Institute founder; owner of collapseof09.com

TRACK RECORD
Predicted 1987 crash, 1997 Asian currency crisis; said in 2007 that US was headed for “economic 9/11″ in 2008.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“Products are going to be cheaper to buy, but guess what? You’re going to need more dollars to buy them because your dollar’s going to be worth less. There is no fiscal or monetary policy that can save this. You cannot save it by printing more money.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Nouriel Roubini
NYU business professor; chairman of RGE Monitor

TRACK RECORD
Predicted this year’s crisis in 2006, pointing to a housing bust, oil shocks, and interest-rate increases.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“It’s becoming a global recession. I expect it to be the worst US recession of the last 50 years. I expect a cumulative fall in output from the peak of 4% and the unemployment rate going all the way to 9%.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Peter Schiff
President of Euro Pacific Capital

TRACK RECORD
Published “Crash Proof: How to Profit From the Coming Economic Collapse in February 2007″; star of YouTube video “Peter Schiff Was Right 2006-2007.”

CURRENT PREDICTION
“I predicted that the economy would collapse. The bigger risk I saw was the government’s attempt to solve the problem by doing exactly what they’re now doing. They’re going to create another Great Depression, but worse, because the cost of living will go through the roof.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Richard Russell
Founder of the Dow Theory Letters

TRACK RECORD
Predicted bottom of 1974 bear market; exited market before crashes in 1987 and 2000.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“As long as we can hold the Dow above 7,470, I think the situation is hopeful. That’s the halfway level from when the bull market started in 1982 and when it ended in 2007. My guess is that it will break that level. Most bear markets have wiped out more than 50% of a bull market.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Barry Ritholtz
CEO and equity research director of Fusion IQ; blogger at The Big Picture

TRACK RECORD
Predicted downturn last year.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“In March, the first-quarter numbers start coming out, and that’s potentially a problem. It’s just going to be an issue of dealing with the market. If earnings continue to drop and you end up with multiple contractions, that basically takes you to a really bad, ugly place, which is an S&P at 400 or 500. I don’t think that’s likely, but it’s certainly possible.”

FORTUNE TELLER: Jeremy Grantham
Co-founder and chairman, GMO LLC

TRACK RECORD
His 1998 ten-year forecast showed severe market declines in 2007 and 2008; warned of global bubble in April 2007.

CURRENT PREDICTION
“I would think, just to guess, that the period of heroic volatility will end pretty soon and will be replaced by a rather 1974-ish environment, where you quietly get bitterly resigned to your steady diet of bad news.”

Source: Jeff VanDam, New York Magazine, December 7, 2008.

CNBC: Merrill Lynch - outlook for 2009
“An economic and investment outlook for 2009, with Merrill Lynch’s Richard Bernstein and Davis Rosenberg.

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Source: CNBC, December 11, 2008.

Financial Times: Obama to focus on stimulus not deficit
“Barack Obama on Sunday spelled out his plans for the biggest infrastructure investment in the US for half a century. The president-elect argued that with the economy reeling, his incoming administration could not afford to worry about a spiralling budget deficit.

“Mr Obama’s proposals for government works on roads, bridges, internet broadband and school buildings, together with energy efficiency measures and health spending, are far more detailed than the normal announcements during a time of transition.

“At a time of deepening economic gloom - with half a million jobs lost last month alone - president George W. Bush has been largely absent from the recent economic debate. Mr Obama is highlighting his concern at the depth of the recession he will inherit, while fast-tracking his plans to counter it.

“‘Things are going to get worse before they get better,’ Mr Obama said on Sunday on NBC’s Meet The Press. He emphasised that his plans represented the largest US infrastructure programme since the federal highway system in the 1950s.

“‘The key is making sure we jump-start the economy in a way that doesn’t just deal with the short term, doesn’t just create jobs immediately, but also puts us on a glide path for long-term sustainable economic growth.’

“Noting the US budget deficit might surpass $1,000 billion before his spending plans are factored in, Mr Obama added: ‘We understand that we’ve got to provide a blood infusion to the patient right now to make sure that the patient is stabilised. And that means that we can’t worry short term about the deficit. We’ve got to make sure that the economic stimulus plan is large enough to get the economy moving.’

“He wanted a strong set of financial regulations to make banks, credit ratings agencies, mortgage brokers and others ‘much more accountable and behave much more responsibly’.

“‘I am absolutely confident that if we take the right steps over the coming months that not only can we get the economy back on track but we can emerge leaner, meaner and ultimately more competitive and more prosperous,’ Mr Obama said at a subsequent press conference.”

Source: Daniel Dombey, Financial Times, December 7, 2008.

Bill King (The King Report): Obama Plan one of the better plans
“The Obama Plan to spend massive amounts of money on infrastructure in the US is one of the better plans being proffered to keep the US out of a depression. But it has its drawbacks.

“Other stimulus plans put money or entitlements in US consumers’ pockets. Most of the money ends up in China, Japan or OPEC. Most infrastructure spending will remain in the US. And instead of just passing out checks or larger entitlements, jobs, mostly temps, will be created and permanent assets will result.

“The resultant infrastructure and physical assets will be far better than endowing busted banks, insurance companies and other financial entities with US taxpayers’ cash, which effectively goes down a black hole.

“Obama’s Plan will boost blue collar employment, provided a limited number of illegals are hired. This will produce an income shift to blue collar and lower middle class households. But fired employees of financial, high tech and other high-end jobs are unlikely to participate. So the multiplier effect of increased income will be less on the economy in general.

“The negatives of the plan, besides the massive debt and likely corruption, is that it does not remedy structural problems in the US economy and financial system. There will be few new industries spawned and therefore few permanent well-paying jobs. Nothing addresses the savings and investment problems.

“There is too much capacity in the world. There are hundreds of empty or abandoned factories in China alone. Until excess capacity is scuttled and new industries appear, stable employment is a fantasy.

“The real problem, the one that solons will not address, is the US welfare state is busted. The Keynesian and monetary stimuli that were abused over many decades to paper over welfare state spending are now being escalated to an unsustainable degree in a last grand attempt to salvage the welfare state system.

“Like all state attempts to stave off a debt deflation by running the printing press and nationalization, it will likely result in a massive inflation that destroys the nation’s fabric and the financial assets of the upper middle class and elites. The middle and lesser classes have few financial assets.”

Source: Bill King, The King Report, December 9, 2008.

Financial Times: Treasury signals rescue for carmakers
“The US administration was on Friday scrambling to save Detroit’s troubled car industry, as General Motors said it was closing most of its North American manufacturing plants for the month of January in the wake of the Senate’s failure to agree a $14 billion loan for GM and Chrysler.

“The US Treasury signaled it was ready to step in with funds intended to prop up the financial system to prevent the biggest industrial failure in US history.

“‘Because Congress failed to act, we will stand ready to prevent an imminent failure until Congress reconvenes and acts to address the long-term viability of the industry,’ the Treasury said.

“GM’s bonds fell to a new low of 9-10 cents on the dollar on fears of a bankruptcy by America’s largest domestic carmaker, before recovering to 15 cents on the news that the Bush administration was looking for alternative financing.

“For weeks George W Bush, the US president, has resisted using the $700 billion troubled asset relief program to provide aid to the carmakers, arguing that such an interventionist step would be a misuse of funds.

“However, facing the prospect of the collapse of one or more of the Detroit companies, the White House indicated it had few other options. ‘A precipitous collapse of this industry would have a severe impact on our economy and it would be irresponsible to further weaken and destabilize our economy at this time,’ said Dana Perino, White House spokeswoman, specifically noting the possibility of using Tarp funds.

“A Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by GM, the world’s biggest carmaker, would mark the biggest industrial failure in US history.”

Source: Daniel Dombey, John Reed and Bernard Simon, Financial Times, December 12, 2008.

Reuters: Fed mulls issuing own debt
“The US Federal Reserve is considering issuing its own debt for the first time, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.

“Fed officials have approached Congress about the move, which could include issuing bills or some other form of debt and would provide the central bank with more flexibility to tackle the financial crisis, the Journal said.

“The Fed can already print as much money as it wants, but issuing debt is largely the province of the Treasury Department.

“The Fed stepped in with emergency credit for investment bank Bear Stearns in March and insurer AIG in September, and threw open its direct loan window to Wall Street firms this year in a bid to stabilize financial markets amid a credit freeze.

“But with the credit crisis showing no signs of abating, and the narrow scope for further interest rate cuts from the present levels of 1%, economists expect the Fed to look at new ways to boost the supply and circulation of money to avoid a deflationary slump.”

Source: Reuters, December 10, 2008.

Paul Kasriel (Northern Trust): The credit rating on a benevolent counterfeiter’s debt - infinity A?
“Why would the Fed be contemplating issuing its own debt? To soak up in the future some of the massive credit the Fed has created in the past year or so. Why would the Fed not just sell US Treasury securities from its portfolio in order to soak up this excess Fed credit? Because, as shown in the chart below, the Fed’s outright holdings of US Treasury securities has dropped from a shade under $800 billion to about $475 billion as Fed credit outstanding has risen from a little over $800 billion to about $2.1 trillion. In percentage terms, the Fed’s outright holdings of US Treasury securities has gone from a bit over 90% of reserve bank credit outstanding to about 22-1/2%. The Fed is afraid it might run out of US Treasury securities to sell!

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“I can see nothing sinister about all this. It is not a conspiracy to print money. Just the opposite. It is a way to destroy some of the paper the Fed already has ‘printed’.”

Source: Paul Kasriel, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, December 10, 2008.

Bloomberg: Fed refuses to disclose recipients of $2 trillion
“The Federal Reserve refused a request by Bloomberg News to disclose the recipients of more than $2 trillion of emergency loans from US taxpayers and the assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.

“Bloomberg filed suit November 7 under the US Freedom of Information Act requesting details about the terms of 11 Fed lending programs, most created during the deepest financial crisis since the Great Depression.

“The Fed responded December 8, saying it’s allowed to withhold internal memos as well as information about trade secrets and commercial information. The institution confirmed that a records search found 231 pages of documents pertaining to some of the requests.

“If they told us what they held, we would know the potential losses that the government may take and that’s what they don’t want us to know,” said Carlos Mendez, a senior managing director at New York-based ICP Capital, which oversees $22 billion in assets.

“The Fed stepped into a rescue role that was the original purpose of the Treasury’s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The central bank loans don’t have the oversight safeguards that Congress imposed upon the TARP.

“Congress is demanding more transparency from the Fed and Treasury on bailout, most recently during December 10 hearings by the House Financial Services committee when Representative David Scott, a Georgia Democrat, said Americans had ‘been bamboozled’.

Source: Mark Pittman, Bloomberg, December 12, 2008.

The Wall Street Journal: Mayors get in line for US funds
“Big-city mayors will arrive on Capitol Hill Monday to lobby for more federal spending to be funneled to urban areas that they say drive the country’s economic engine.

“The push comes after a strong Democratic turnout in metropolitan areas helped President-elect Barack Obama - who is set to become America’s first urban president in almost half a century - win by such a decisive margin in November.

“A delegation of mayors, including Michael Bloomberg of New York and Antonio Villaraigosa of Los Angeles, plans to ask the federal government to distribute funds directly to cities instead of going through state governments. The group is set to present a list of more than 4,600 infrastructure projects that they say are ‘ready to go’.

“Tom Cochran, executive director of the US Conference of Mayors, which is organizing Monday’s event, said the next administration has signaled that it will coordinate financing for projects for an entire metropolitan area instead of dealing with cities and suburbs separately.

“‘I am of the opinion, based on our conversations with President-elect Obama, that he gets it,’ said Mr. Cochran. ‘You can’t just have a transportation system that stops at the city line.’

“Mr. Obama’s transition office is drawing up plans to create a White House office on urban policy, which would report directly to the president, to coordinate funding for cities from different federal agencies. Mr. Obama has pledged to provide new funding for job training, education and grants for local governments and organizations.”

Source: T.W. Farnam, The Wall Street Journal, December 8, 2008.

Bloomberg: Interview with Martin Feldstein
“Harvard University professor Feldstein discusses auto bailout, how to fix the housing market as well as Fannie and Freddie, and 3-month T-Bill rates below zero.”

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Source: Bloomberg (via YouTube), December 9, 2008.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): Deflation virus is moving the policy test beyond the 1930s
“Debt deflation is tightening its grip over the entire global system. Interest rates are creeping towards zero in Japan, America, and now across most of Europe.

“We are beyond the extremes of the 1930s. The frontiers of monetary policy are being pushed to limits that may now test viability of paper currencies and modern central banking.

“You cannot drop below zero. So what next if the credit markets refuse to thaw? Yes, Japan visited and survived this policy hell during its lost decade, but that was a local affair in an otherwise booming global economy. It tells us nothing.

“This time we are all going down together. There is no deus ex machina to lift us out. Certainly not China, which is the most vulnerable of all.

“As the risk grows, officials at the highest level of the British Government have begun to circulate a six-year-old speech by Ben Bernanke - at the time of its writing, a garrulous kid governor at the US Federal Reserve. Entitled ‘Deflation: Making Sure It Doesn’t Happen Here’, it is the manual of guerrilla tactics for defeating slumps by monetary means.

“‘The US government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost,’ he said.

“His point was that central banks never run out of ammunition. They have an inexhaustible arsenal. The world’s fate now hangs on whether he was right (which is probable), or wrong (which is possible).

“As a scholar of the Great Depression, Bernanke does not think that sliding prices can safely be allowed to run their course. ‘Sustained deflation can be highly destructive to a modern economy,’ he said.

“Bernanke’s central claim is that the big guns of monetary policy were never properly deployed during the Depression, or during the early years of Japan’s bust, so no wonder the slumps dragged on.

“The Fed can create money out of thin air and mop up assets on the open market, like a sovereign sugar daddy. ‘Sufficient injections of money will ultimately always reverse a deflation.’

“Bernanke said the Fed can ‘expand the menu of assets that it buys’. US Treasury bonds top the list, but it can equally purchase mortgage securities from US agencies such as Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie, or company bonds, or commercial paper. Any asset will do.

“The Fed can acquire houses, stocks, or a herd of Texas Longhorn cattle if it wants. It can even scatter $100 bills from helicopters. (Actually, Japan is about to do this with shopping coupons).”

Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph, December 9, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Household net worth is shrinking rapidly
“Household net worth in the third quarter of 2008 was $56.5 trillion, down 4.7% from the second quarter. This is the largest quarterly decline since the second quarter of 1962 when net worth of households dropped 5.0%.

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“Household spending will suffer as setback a household net worth shrinks, which is already visible in consumer spending data, and the proclivity of households to borrow will show a reduction. The chart below indicates that growth of both mortgage and consumer debt have fallen in the third quarter. The sharp drop in mortgage debt (-2.4%) reflects the impact of mortgage foreclosures and a drop in home purchases, while consumer debt grew at a 1.2% pace in the third quarter versus a 7.2% jump a year ago.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, December 11, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Weak trajectory for retail sales
“Retail sales fell 1.8% in November, after a 2.9% decline in the prior month. Retail sales have dropped for five straight months, the longest string of declines since record keeping for retail sales began in 1967. The wide swings of gasoline prices influence the headline of retail sales. Excluding gasoline, retail sales dropped 0.2% in November after a 1.6% plunge in the prior month. Retail sales excluding gasoline have recorded six consecutive monthly declines. Unit auto sales have fallen in ten out of eleven months of the year.

“The upshot is that with or without gasoline and autos, retail sales show an extraordinary weakness that is seen the overall consumer spending data and this weak trajectory for retail sales and overall consumer spending is predicted to prevail in the near term.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, December 12, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Consumer spending in post-war recessions
“The chart below illustrates the history of consumer spending during recessions. Consumer spending typically declines in recessionary periods with the exception of the 1948 and 2001 recessions.

“Our forecast includes five consecutive quarterly declines in consumer spending, possibly another record for the books if our forecast is accurate. The highly leveraged household balance sheet of households underlies this prediction.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, December 8, 2008.

Bloomberg: Inside look - housing crisis
“From Housing Forum in Washington D.C.: Interview with PIMCO Managing Director Scott Simon.”

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Source: Bloomberg (via YouTube), December 8, 2008.

BusinessWeek: Unretired - retirees are back, looking for work
“They saved. They planned. Then housing tanked and the markets melted. Now they need jobs, and there aren’t any.

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“Six years ago, Paul Nelson gave up his long career in the defense industry for what he thought would be a peaceful retirement in Tucson. The weather was mild, the neighbors friendly. He had plenty of time to volunteer and garden.

“But retirement hasn’t worked out the way he planned. In 2006 his wife of 46 years died unexpectedly. He tried to swap their house for a smaller one and lost a chunk of his retirement savings in the process. Then this year the stock market cratered, wiping out almost everything he had left. Now the 71-year-old is looking for work at local hardware stores and Home Depot and contemplating filing for personal bankruptcy. ‘I have nothing left,’ says Nelson, a former Raytheon engineer. ‘I am not alone, I think.’

“Far from it. An increasing number of people who retired in recent years, confident they had set aside enough to live on comfortably, are finding themselves strapped. The stock market plunge and the housing downturn have affected many Americans, of course. But retirees have been particularly pinched because their homes and investments are the primary assets they depend on for income. As a result, many of the country’s elderly are finding themselves in Nelson’s situation, low on money and looking for work. ‘Suddenly the rug has been pulled out from under them,’ says Alicia H. Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Heather Green, Business Week, December 4, 2008.

Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Oil imports lead to wider trade gap in October
“The trade deficit widened to $57.2 billion in October from $56.6 billion in September. During October, exports (-2.2%) and imports (-1.3%) of goods and services fell.”

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Source: Asha Bangalore, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, December 11, 2008.

Reuters: Jim Rogers calls most big US banks “totally bankrupt”
“Jim Rogers, one of the world’s most prominent international investors, on Thursday called most of the largest US banks ‘totally bankrupt’, and said government efforts to fix the sector are wrongheaded.

“Speaking by teleconference at the Reuters Investment Outlook 2009 Summit, the co-founder with George Soros of the Quantum Fund, said the government’s $700 billion rescue package for the sector doesn’t address how banks manage their balance sheets, and instead rewards weaker lenders with new capital.

“Dozens of banks have won infusions from the Troubled Asset Relief Program created in early October, just after the September 15 bankruptcy filing by Lehman Brothers. Some of the funds are being used for acquisitions.

“‘Without giving specific names, most of the significant American banks, the larger banks, are bankrupt, totally bankrupt,’ said Rogers, who is now a private investor.

“‘What is outrageous economically and is outrageous morally is that normally in times like this, people who are competent and who saw it coming and who kept their powder dry go and take over the assets from the incompetent,’ he said. ‘What’s happening this time is that the government is taking the assets from the competent people and giving them to the incompetent people and saying, now you can compete with the competent people. It is horrible economics.’

“Rogers said he shorted shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the government nationalized the mortgage financiers in September, a week before Lehman failed.

“Now a specialist in commodities, Rogers said he has used the recent rally in the US dollar as an opportunity to exit dollar-denominated assets.

“While not saying how long the US economic recession will last, he said conditions could ultimately mirror those of Japan in the 1990s. ‘The way things are going, we’re going to have a lost decade too, just like the 1970s,’ he said.

” … Rogers said sound US lenders remain. He said these could include banks that don’t make or hold subprime mortgages, or which have high ratios of deposits to equity, ‘all the classic old ratios that most banks in America forgot or started ignoring because they were too old-fashioned’.

“‘Governments are making mistakes,’ he said. ‘They’re saying to all the banks, you don’t have to tell us your situation. You can continue to use your balance sheet that is phony … All these guys are bankrupt, they’re still worrying about their bonuses, they’re still trying to pay their dividends, and the whole system is weakened.’

“Rogers said he is investing in growth areas in China and Taiwan, in such areas as water treatment and agriculture, and recently bought positions in energy and agriculture indexes.”

Source: Jonathan Stempel, Reuters, December 11, 2008.

CNBC: Meredith Whitney - outlook grim for banks

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Source: CNBC, December 7, 2008.

Financial Times: Post-Lehman company defaults to soar
“Default rates for speculative grade companies are forecast to jump threefold next year following the fall of Lehman Brothers, the world’s biggest bankruptcy, according to Moody’s, the US ratings agency.

“The implosion of Lehman on September 15 is widely regarded as a significant milestone, turning the credit crunch into a fully blown economic crisis.

“Jim Reid, credit strategist at Deutsche Bank, said: ‘We are at a turning point for default rates, with much bigger monthly rises from now on.

“‘Two or three months after Lehman’s collapse, we are starting to see the impact on the real economy, particularly for those companies on short-term funding.’

“European companies defaulting on their bonds are also set to outpace those in the US, although analysts suggest this is because the European junk-grade market is smaller, meaning any rise in defaults has a greater impact in percentage terms, rather than pointing to a deeper recession.

“Global default rates are forecast to rise to 10.4% by November 2009 - from 3.1% last month - to levels last seen in 2001 following the dotcom crash. Rates are forecast to jump to 4.2% by the end of this year.

“A year ago, the global rate was 0.9 per cent.

“The ratings agency’s distressed index, which measures the number of companies with bonds trading at more than 1,000 basis points over government paper, rose to 51.8% at the end of last month, up from 48.5% at the end of October, and the highest level since Moody’s launched the index in 1996. This reflects the deepening problems for company funding. Even some investment grade companies are now trading at distressed levels.”

Source: David Oakley and Paul J Davies, Financial Times, December 8, 2008.

Bespoke: 10-Year Treasuries overbought
“It’s an understatement to say that Treasuries are overbought at current levels. We’ve been monitoring the spread between its price and its 50-day moving average, and the 10-year Note has finally gotten to a level that is usually met with selling pressure in the near term. Since 1977, the 10-year has only gotten more than 12% above its 50-day moving average on three different occasions. As shown in the table below, the returns over the next week, month, and 3 months lean to the negative side. The average change of the 10-year over the next three months when getting this overbought has been -3.23%.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 9, 2008.

Bespoke: Want to lend money to uncle Sam? It’s going to cost you
“What would your reaction be if you had a friend who had reached the limit on 20 different credit cards and then came to you to borrow $100? Then imagine that you actually said yes, and when you went to give your friend the $100, he or she actually asked for $101 just for the privilege of loaning the money. Well, that is exactly what is happening (to a lesser degree) in the US T-bill market. As just another example of the crazy times we are living in, the yield on 3-month Treasuries went negative today. There was a time when an event such as this was unimaginable. Today it barely gets noticed.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 9, 2008.

John Hussman (Hussman Funds): Unusually unfavourabale yield levels for Treasuries
“In bonds, the market climate last week was characterized by unusually unfavorable yield levels and generally favorable yield pressures. As I have frequently noted, yield levels are much more important than market action in driving subsequent total returns in bonds. This is because bonds are less susceptible to ‘bubbles’ as a result of their payment stream being known, so favorable market action can’t be taken as evidence of favorable surprises in those payments.

“The problem with Treasury yields here is that while there are good economic reasons for the downward yield pressures, the levels are low enough to invite explosive spikes that can easily wipe out a year or more of yield-to-maturity in a few days.

“Corporate yields have increased significantly, but default rates tend to pick up in the later stages of recessions, and there isn’t much historical evidence to suggest that corporate bonds reach their lows any earlier than stocks do. For that reason, corporate bonds are essentially equity-equivalents here, and the same considerations about quality apply as well here as they do for stocks. Generally speaking, corporate bonds are currently priced to deliver both lower long-term returns than stocks, but as a group, will probably have lower volatility than stocks as well.”

Source: John Hussman, Hussman Funds, December 8, 2008.

Bloomberg: US Treasury risk surpasses Campbell Soup as debt increases
“The cost to hedge against losses on US Treasuries surpassed the price of default protection on bonds from Campbell Soup and drug-maker Baxter International as government spending on stimulus packages grows.

“Credit-default swaps protecting US government debt in euros for five years are trading at 65 basis points, according to CMA Datavision, meaning costs 65,000 euros ($84,200) to protect 10 million euros of debt. Contracts on Campbell were at 52.5 basis points and Baxter contracts were 57.5 basis points at the close of trading [on Wednesday] in New York.

“The Federal Reserve’s assets have more than doubled from a year ago to $2.14 trillion as the central bank seeks to revive credit markets. Economists including Harvard University professor Kenneth Rogoff and Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz say President-elect Barack Obama should push for a stimulus package of at least $1 trillion to lift the economy out of a yearlong recession. The US government’s total cost to bail out the economy may exceed $4 trillion, according to strategists including Ira Jersey at Credit Suisse Group AG in New York.

“Contracts protecting U.K. government debt for five years were quoted at a mid-price of 114.75 basis points today [Wednesday], according to CMA. Swaps on Italy are at 190, and the Netherlands at 99.5. France was quoted at 58.75 and Germany at 51.5, CMA data show.

“Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent if a borrower fails to meet its debt obligations. A basis point on a credit-default swap contract protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years is equivalent to $1,000 a year.”

Source: Shannon D. Harrington, Bloomberg, December 10, 2008.

Jean-Paul Calamaro (Deutsche Bank): Credit markets offer stunning opportunities
“The crisis gripping financial markets has produced some stunning investment opportunities in credit markets. Among the best is the returns available on ‘basis trades’ between corporate bonds and credit default swaps, says Jean-Paul Calamaro, global head of quantitative credit strategy at Deutsche Bank.

“‘Investors buy a corporate bond and also buy default protection on the issuer via a CDS. When the basis is negative [CDS protection costs less than the bond’s spread to swaps] this produces protected cash flows and further profits if the difference between the bond and CDS narrows, or if the issuer defaults. The basis between bonds and CDS has been at historic wides recently, giving significant returns without using leverage,’ he says.

“‘The trade works for many investment grade and high yield issuers in Europe and the US, but high yield trades look most attractive.

“‘This is because investors can earn high returns more quickly when an issuer defaults and at this point in the credit cycle we think defaults are more likely. The trades also work in investment grade, not because we expect defaults but because we expect the basis between bonds and CDS to narrow.

“‘The major cheapening of bonds versus CDS across corporate credit has been due to the heightened funding crisis since the Lehman bankruptcy in mid-September. We believe conditions will start to ease after year end, which makes these types of trades unusually attractive now.’”

Source: Jean-Paul Calamaro, Deutsche Bank (via Financial Times), December , 2008.

Bloomberg: Cheapest stocks since 1995 show cash exceeds market
“Stocks have fallen so far that 2,267 companies around the globe are offering profits to investors for free. That’s eight times as many as at the end of the last bear market, when the shares rose 115% over the next year.

“Bank of New York Mellon in New York, Danieli in Italy and Seoul-based Namyang Dairy Products hold more cash than the value of their stock and debt as the slowing world economy wiped out $32 trillion in capitalization this year. Companies in the MSCI World Index trade for an average $1.17 per dollar of net assets, the lowest since at least 1995, and 39% sell at a discount to shareholder equity, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“The cash-rich companies allow investors to pay nothing for future earnings streams, providing opportunities to buyers concerned about deflation, according to Jean-Marie Eveillard, whose $16 billion First Eagle Global Fund has beaten 98% of competitors this year. Microsoft and Novo Nordisk, which generate the most money compared with debt, can expand even if lower consumer demand erodes profits.

“‘Cash is king, not necessarily for the investor but for corporations,’ Eveillard said in an interview from New York last week. ‘It’s useful to sit on a ton of cash, No. 1 to survive, as opposed to going bankrupt, and No. 2 to seize opportunities either to make acquisitions cheaply or to squeeze competitors.’”

Source: Michael Tsang and Alexis Xydias, Bloomberg, December 8, 2008.

Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): “I’m beginning to like what I see”
“If they create enough of it, will they come and spend it? That’s what Mr. Bernanke is going to find out. The government has created over a trillion dollars of currency. There’s now over $8 trillion on the sidelines in money markets and T-bills - all frozen with fear and waiting for something better and safer to come along. There’s too much money now in relation to the quantity of goods and merchandise available. This is the formula for inflation or even hyper-inflation. What’s holding it all back? Lack of confidence, fear.

“What would change that? The stock market rising steadily would bring back confidence. Which is why I monitor the stock market so closely. Yes, it’s quite a game, and it’s the most important and fascinating game in the world. No wonder I’m in this business. I read the markets, and I’m beginning to like what I see!

“My guess is that the market is establishing a tradeable bottom with a rally that will last into the first quarter of next year. What we’re seeing now might not be the final bottom but it will serve until the real one comes along.”

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letters, December 8, 2008.

Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): Adding some selected stocks
“Up to now, our favored position has been cash and gold (preferably physical gold). Our new position is cash, gold and, for the bolder crowd, a few selected stocks (DIA if you’re a fearless, speculative type).

“Backing off: Subscribers may think Russell’s lost his mind. He’s turning just a bit bullish. The answer is that I’m reporting exactly what I’m seeing. And if what I see doesn’t jibe with what I’m reading in the newspaper and it doesn’t jibe with prevailing sentiment, then I think it’s that much more important. I keep hearing the most horrendous stories about unemployment and companies in trouble, and my thought is always, ‘Has this been discounted by one of the worst bear markets since the ’30s?’ Which is why I report every item that I see, every item that might suggest that the market has already discounted the bad news. The question always is ‘cut through the BS, what is the market saying?’”

Source: Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letters, December 11, 2008.

Puru Saxena: Sowing the seeds
“This nasty bear-market is in its latter stages and I suspect that the bulk of the declines are now behind us. Although it is premature to claim that the bear-market definitely ended on October 10, it does look increasingly likely that the lows recorded on November 21, were in fact a successful ‘test’ of the prior month’s lows.

“History shows that following a major bear-market, it is common for the major indices to retest the lows. In a recent study undertaken to review recovery patterns, JP Morgan examined all the bear-markets going back to 1900 and it came up with a few interesting observations. The study revealed that market bottoms were almost always retested and that such ‘tests’ resulted in a new marginal low about 40% of the time.

“The study also found that 75% of the retesting events occurred within 44 days of a major bottom; so if October 10 marked the bottom of this bear-market, the retest on November 21 was bang on target from a timing perspective.

“At this stage, I am only guessing that October 10 was the pivotal turnaround of this bear-market. It may well be that this market breaks below those lows in the days ahead, however given the favourable technical and sentiment data, at the very least, there is a strong possibility that we will get a multi-month rally from these oversold conditions.

“It is worth noting that new bull-markets are always born amidst abject pessimism; at a time when the majority are convinced that economic activity will never pick up again. Furthermore, it is interesting to note that frightening economic news continues to surface, long after a new bull-market has begun. So, the time to buy is during such scary times. This was also highlighted by Warren Buffet who recently wrote - ‘If you wait for robins, spring will be over’.

“Now, I cannot say with any certainty whether we are already in the early stages of the next cycle. However, the recent rout in the markets has set the stage for above-average long-term returns. Under my best case scenario, we are in the very early stages of a new multi-year bull-market. And under my worst case scenario, we are going to get a very strong rebound (30% move higher in the S&P500) over a short period of time, which will probably take the markets back to their 200-day moving averages.”

Source: Puru Saxena (via Fullermoney), December 10, 2008.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): S&P 500 at extreme divergence from its 200-day moving average
“We first posted this indicator on October 10 when the relevant spreadsheet was created for us by a subscriber. The indicator remains at a historically low level but has risen considerably from its early October nadir. This has been achieved by the relevant indices having gone mostly sideways for the last two months. The moving average is now starting to come down towards the price and while it still has a long way to go, mean reversion is taking place.

“This is not a guarantee that the market will not go lower later but, historically, when the market has diverged from its mean by such a margin, important stock market lows have occurred relatively soon afterwards.”

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Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, December 8, 2008.

Bespoke: Percentage of stocks above 50-day moving averages
“Even though the S&P 500 is in a new bull market, the percentage of stocks in the index trading above their 50-day moving averages is still at oversold levels. As shown in the chart below, at 26%, this indicator has a long way to go before becoming overbought.

“On a sector basis, Telecom, Utilities, and Consumer Discretionary have the highest percentage of stocks above their 50-days, while Energy and Financials have the lowest.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 10, 2008.

Bespoke: Third worst bear market on record
“The S&P 500 finally had its first 20%+ rally in 408 days yesterday [Monday], which means we’re currently in a bull market by the standard definition (20% rally preceded by a 20% decline).

“… below we highlight historical bear markets for the S&P 500 since 1927. As shown, the bear market that ran from 10/9/07 to 11/20/08 is the third worst ever with a decline of 51.93%. The bears that ended in June of 1932 (-61.81%) and March of 1938 (-54.47%) are the only two that had bigger declines without a rally of 20%.”

Source: Bespoke, December 9, 2008.

Bespoke: US sector and stock buy ratings
“Below we highlight the average percentage of buy ratings for stocks in each of the ten S&P 500 sectors. As shown, Financial stocks have the lowest percentage of buy ratings of any sector at 35%, while Energy has the highest at 63%. Consumer Discretionary, Materials, and Consumer Staples are the three other sectors (along with Financials) that have below average buy ratings compared to all stocks in the S&P 500.

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Source: Bespoke, December 8, 2008.

David Fuller (Fullermoney): Commodities - are they the most promising asset class today?
“I do think commodities have significant recovery potential, despite the global economic slump, deflation threat and depression fears. Moreover, I believe that the fundamentals for commodities have now improved more than for all other asset classes.

“Consider the following bull points:

1. Interest rates have fallen, which is currently better for commodity speculators than commodity producers, because contangos have shrunk considerably, lowering rollover costs.

2. However, the credit crunch means that it is now more difficult for commodity producers to obtain necessary financing. Consequently, miners and oil producers are deferring development projects and laying off workers, while farmers find it more difficult to finance the purchase of fertilizers and equipment. These problems are not fully offset by the lower cost of energy.

3. Prices for all commodities are much lower today than during the first half of 2008, not least because speculators have been shaken out and traders are actually short. This is good news for those who wish to buy oversold commodities. However it is a big disincentive for commodity producers, many of whom are now reducing production.

4. While the global economic slump has reduced demand for commodities somewhat, these are essential resources which the world cannot do without, unlike luxury goods, the latest fashions, lavish holidays or expensive restaurants.

5. The US dollar has peaked and commenced what is likely to be a significant retracement of gains seen since July. This is bullish for commodities because most are priced in US dollars.

“What could significantly delay or even prevent a big rally for commodities? The reflationary efforts could fail, or more likely take many more months before they turn a global economy that is still contracting. If so, there could be some additional downside risk and base formation development would most likely be lengthy. The US Dollar Index could fail to maintain its downward break. Improved weather patterns could lead to increased supplies of agricultural commodities.

“For these reasons, Fullermoney maintains that commodities are best purchased following setbacks. Positions are most safely built incrementally.”

Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney, December 11, 2008.

Financial Times: So long, super-cycle
“The severity of the crisis has surprised natural resources companies’ executives, commodity traders and Wall Street bankers alike. After all, the commodities boom of 2003-08 has been the most notable for a century in its magnitude, duration and the number of commodities whose prices it has lifted. The sudden plunge poses a fundamental question: is this just a temporary blip within an upward trend, with prices likely to rebound in the medium term, or is it the conclusion of another commodities cycle of boom and bust, with a period of relatively stable prices coming ahead?

“The common belief in the industry itself, and among most Wall Street analysts, is that the market is undergoing a correction but that the boom years have not ended. As many point out, the main drivers of what many have come to see as a commodities super-cycle - such as strong pent-up demand in emerging countries and supply constraints caused by a lack of investment over the past 20 years, along with the rise in resource nationalism - are intact. The current drop is, in the words of one senior mining executive, a ‘reset’ of the boom, not the end of it. Prices will rebound, in this view, and continue rising.”

Click here for the full article.

Source: Javier Blas and Krishna Guha, Financial Times, December 9, 2008.

Bespoke: Consensus gold estimates
“Below we provide the consensus price target for gold through 2012. These target prices are based on the median of 21 gold analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. As shown, analysts currently aren’t expecting a big rally or a big decline in gold over the next few years. By mid-year 2009, analysts are expecting gold to be at $825/ounce, which is less than $10 from its current price of $816. At the end of 2011, analysts expect gold to be down to $790, and then down to $762 by the end of 2012.”

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Source: Bespoke, December 12, 2008.

Casey’s Charts: Gold stocks - time to bottom feed
“The previous low point for the ratio of the XAU gold stock index to the price of gold was 0.16, when gold was trading around $270 an ounce in October of 2000. Today, the XAU is trading a mere 57% higher than it was in October of 2000, compared to a gold price that has increased by 184%. As a general rule of thumb, anytime the ratio is above the 25-year average is the time to sell, and below its average says gold stocks are cheap. With the ratio bouncing off the lowest level since the inception of the XAU index, it signals a SCREAMING buy for gold stocks!

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“Picking the bottom of any market is near impossible, but knowing when something is grossly undervalued can be easy. Gold has long been considered a hedge against inflation, and with trillions of new government bailout dollars ready to circulate into the system, buying precious metal stocks at these distressed prices is the chance of a lifetime.”

Source: Casey’s Charts, December 5, 2008.

Profit NDTV: Asia beats US in gold futures trading
“Asia, which accounts for 60% of the world gold imports, has overtaken the US in gold futures trading, with Mumbai and Shanghai exchanges growing rapidly, leading trade magazine Futures Industry has reported.

“According to the latest edition of the US-based magazine, data from the first eight months of this year show that the combined volumes in gold futures trading at exchanges in Shanghai, Tokyo, Taiwan and Mumbai reached 49.8 million contracts, far ahead of the 34.3 million contracts traded in the US.

“‘From January through August this year, seven of the top 10 gold contracts in the world were Asian,’ it said, adding that much of that growth was in Mumbai and Shanghai.

“‘Some of the boom is undoubtedly driven by the search for a safe haven as the value of stock investments continues to evaporate,’ the magazine said noting that Asian investors may also have a greater cultural predisposition toward gold than Westerners.

“Asia imports 60% of the world’s gold and its exports 40%. India is the largest consumer of physical gold in the world, followed by the US, and then China. And this year, China became the world’s largest gold producer - a title south Africa had held for more than 100 years.”

Source: Profit NDTV, December 9, 2008.

BBC News: UK economic slowdown “worsening”
“The UK economy contracted 1% between September and November, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) has estimated.

“This fall followed after a 0.8% drop in the three months to the end of October, said the think tank. Indicating that the rate of output decline is ‘accelerating’, the NIESR now expects a fall of more than 1% in the last three months of the year.

“Official data showed that the economy shrank 0.5% from July to September. But it will not be until January that the Office for National Statistics reports on the final quarter’s GDP.

“If it reports a decline for the three months to December, then the UK will be in officially in recession under the generally accepted definition of two consecutive quarters of decline.

“The NIESR says it has a good track record in forecasting GDP growth in advance of the official figures. The latest data from NIESR is just the latest indication that the UK economy is most probably falling into a recession.”

Source: BBC News, December 10, 2008.

Victoria Marklew (Northern Trust): Swiss rates head toward zero
“The Swiss National Bank (SNB) effectively lopped another 50bps off its main policy rate today, lowering its target band for three-month Swiss franc LIBOR to 0.0-1.0% (down from 0.5-1.5%) and aiming for the mid-point of 0.5%. This brings the easing total to 225bps since October 8.

“The SNB warned that the sharply worsening global climate will push Switzerland into recession next year. Chairman Roth stated that growth is likely to be negative, not just in the first two quarters of 2009 but for the year as a whole. The bank is now forecasting a contraction in real GDP of between 0.5% and 1.0% next year. The inflation forecast was also revised down, with the bank now seeing the annual rate averaging 0.9% next year and 0.5% in 2010.”

Source: Victoria Marklew, Northern Trust - Daily Global Commentary, December 11, 2008.

Financial Times: Japan contracts faster than expected
“Japan’s gross domestic product contracted much more rapidly in the third quarter than previously thought, official data showed on Tuesday, amid new indications of distress in the world’s second-biggest economy.

“The revised GDP data showed a quarter-on-quarter fall of 0.5% for the three months to September, compared with last month’s preliminary estimate of a 0.1% decline.

“The economy contracted at an annualised rate of 1.8% between July and September - a much more precipitous pace than the annualised 0.5% decline suffered in the same quarter by the US, centre of the global financial crisis.

“Analysts said the revision, though bigger than expected, reflected relatively technical factors involving inventories and government spending rather than worrying new information and so would not dramatically change assessments of the economy’s prospects.

“‘The downgrade in headline growth does not look as bad as the headline suggests,’ UBS said in a research note.

“However, the news the recession was deeper than thought came as the Cabinet Office said its latest composite index of business conditions showed the economy ‘worsening’.”

Source: Mure Dickie, Financial Times, December 9, 2008.

Financial Times: China’s export fall worse than predicted
“The impact of the global financial crisis on China became clear on Wednesday when the government revealed that exports fell in November for the first time in almost seven years.

“With demand in many of its main markets slowing sharply, Chinese exports declined 2.2% from a year earlier. Imports also fell 17.9% from a year earlier, according to Chinese customs figures, prompting the government to announce plans to further boost the economy.

“The Chinese data shocked economists. The figures were far below forecasts, even in the light of sharp slumps in exports in November from both Taiwan and South Korea.

“‘This is the worst collapse in Chinese exports since 1999 and is probably just the beginning of a prolonged export contraction,’ said Isaac Meng, economist at BNP Paribas.

“The drop in imports, the biggest since the early 1990s, helped push the monthly trade surplus to a record $40 billion, the fourth month in a row that the surplus has broken records.

“The government pledged on Wednesday to do everything it could to maintain ‘stable, healthy’ growth next year. At the conclusion of the three-day Central Economic Work Conference, an annual meeting of top policy-makers, officials said they would boost public spending in order to promote domestic demand.

“A report on state radio about the meeting said the government had reaffirmed its policy of keeping the exchange rate ‘basically steady’, but would take other measures to deal with falling domestic demand.

“Until last month, China’s exports had held up much better than most observers had expected, increasing by 19% in October compared to the same month last year.”

Source: Geoff Dyer and Jamil Anderlini, Financial Times, December 10, 2008.

Financial Times: China inflation falls as growth slows
“China’s consumer price inflation fell to a 22-month low of 2.4% in November, giving the central bank free rein to cut interest rates further to offset an abrupt slump in the world’s fourth-largest economy.

“Economists had expected inflation to moderate to 3.0% from 4.0
% in the year to October. In the event, the reading was the lowest since January 2007.

“Nie Wen, an analyst with Huabao Trust in Shanghai, said the plunge meant real, inflation-adjusted interest rates in China were now back in positive territory even though the economy had run into fierce headwinds.

“‘The government will become more decisive in cutting rates,’ Nie said.

“Jing Ulrich, head of China equities at J.P. Morgan agreed. ‘We believe there is further scope for the central bank to ease monetary policy in an effort to avoid an excessive slowdown and stave off deflation,’ she said in a note to clients.

“‘Definitely we are going to move into a deflationary environment in China, probably through the first six months of the year,’ said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia-Pacific economist for Societe Generale in Hong Kong.”

Source: Financial Times, December 11, 2008.

Bespoke: Deflation coming in China?
“It wasn’t too long ago that one of the biggest worries facing the global economy was that improved standards of living in China would lead to higher wages for its workers. This, it was feared, would cause the country to begin exporting inflation around the world. As recently as August, PPI data from China showed that inflation was running at a rate of 10.1% year over year (y/y). Since then, however, pricing power in China has collapsed as evidenced by last night’s [Tuesday] release of the November PPI, which showed that prices are now up by just 2.0% y/y. At this rate, it won’t be long before we start seeing minus signs.”

13-dec-22.jpg

Source: Bespoke, December 10, 2008.

Financial Times: Rouble exodus hits Russia’s credit rating
“Russia on Monday became the first G8 country since the start of the financial crisis to have its credit rating downgraded after Standard and Poor’s took fright at the recent exodus from the rouble and sharp drop in oil prices.

“S&P said it had lowered Russia’s foreign currency credit rating by one notch from BBB+ to BBB because of the ‘rapid depletion’ of the country’s foreign exchange reserves and the ‘difficulty of meeting the country’s external financing needs’. It said the outlook for the rating was negative.

“Russia’s reserves have fallen by $128 billion since August to $455 billion, as the country battles the capital flight that began following the war with Georgia and escalated as the oil price fell and the global crisis worsened.

“S&P said Russia could be forced to spend all $200 billion now parked in its two sovereign wealth funds on recapitalising the banking system and covering fiscal deficits in 2009 and 2010.

“The agency expects Russia to run a current account deficit next year of 2.6% of gross domestic product due to the oil price fall, putting further pressure on the balance of payments.

“‘There are a lot of layers of concern,’ said Frank Gill, primary credit analyst at Standard and Poor’s. ‘There are macroeconomic and political risks … and Russia has not operated a current account deficit since 1997 and that was less than 1% of GDP.’

“The thought of devaluation raises the spectre of the 1998 rouble crash that wiped out Russians’ savings, although economists say any devaluation this time would be far less severe.”

Source: Catherine Belton, Financial Times, December 8, 2008.

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Governments Keep Making Mistakes: Jim Rogers

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008


Jim Rogers, CEO, Rogers Holdings, appeared on CNBC’s European Squawk Box this morning with Geoff Cutmore, to discuss the progress of markets and his outlook.

Jim Rogers, CNBC, October 22, 2008

click image for video

Rogers stated that the economy is in for high inflation given the size and nature of the central bank interventions and injections in to the financial system, and pre-ambles this saying,

The world is unfolding. The American government keeps making mistake after mistake after mistake. Other governments do too. Unfortunately this is going to be a mess,” Jim Rogers, CEO of Rogers Holdings said Wednesday.

“Bernanke, and Paulson and the guy at the NY Fed, Tim G-r-eithner [or whatever his name is: slips Rogers] have been wrong every week for the last two years. Why do you think they know what they’re doing?”

He has covered most of his “shorts,” and wishes that he had not yet covered them, as their has been more downside.

He is long short-term US government bonds and short and shorting long term government bonds as he believes that we are heading for inflation. He has been buying agricultural commodities, though he admits that his timing is bad, as they are down.

“I bought some more agriculture earlier this week and it promptly went down. The fundamentals for commodities and agriculture have not changed,” says Rogers. “What’s happening in the world right now means that there will be less supply of everything coming out of this, and nobody can get a loan for a new zinc mine or a loan to increase their crop production.”

Rogers adds that

“What’s happening now is that we are in a period of forced liquidation; we’ve had 8 or 10 of these in the last 100-150 years; 1929 in the US, 1974 in the UK…We’ve had these before. The things that come out on the other side have always been the things that are unimpaired. The US financial system is impaired. The investment banking system is impaired.”

“But, commodities and agriculture are totally unimpaired by all of this. If history’s any guide, the things to buy will be the things that are doing fine; water treatment in Asia [for example], agriculture’s gonna do fine; that’s what you should buy.” Rogers adds, “However, my timing’s not very good.”

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke should resign for keeping alive “zombie banks” that should be allowed to fail, he said.

The Japanese government refused to let financial institutions fail in the 1990s, Rogers said.

“It’s 18 years later and their stock market is 75 or 80 percent below what it was 18 years ago,” he added.

Rogers also said that interest-rate cuts are coming.

“I know we are going to get aggressive rate cuts everywhere, that’s why I’m long short-term government bonds in the U.S., but shorting long-term government bonds because it’s not going to help, it’s going to add to inflation.”



Source: CNBC


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Jim Rogers: Long agricultural commodities, RMB, Short investment banks

Sunday, March 30th, 2008


March 30, 2008 - On March 12, 2008, Jim Rogers appeared for a live interview on CNBC Europe. If you missed it, just click on the link below.

Just watched it… It is a must watch. In his usual candour, Mr. Rogers tells it like it is. If he woke up in Bernanke’s place, he would quit, and then abolish the Fed for providing t”socialism for the rich.”

His calls - Invest in agricutural commodities (in his opinion, this will be the most profitable trade for the next 2 to 5 years), long the Renminbi, short the investment banks.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=682734828&play=1

Even if you don’t like the guy, its a good interview with one seriously interesting and knowledgeable person.

Thank you Mr. Rogers.

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Eastern Promises - Opportunity in Agricultural Commodities

Saturday, February 16th, 2008


Feb. 15, 2008 - Joe Friesen and Marcus Gee of the Globe and Mail published an excellent article Eastern Promises on how demand for all things agricultural commodities are being driven by growth from Emerging Markets. The piece features commentary by Don Coxe, Chief Investment Strategist, BMO Capital Markets, on food and the agricultural boom. This piece features lots of anecdotal and empirical information.

Here are some excerpts:

India’s consumption of pulses — yellow peas, lentils, chick peas, green peas — has doubled in a year. In a country where millions are strict vegetarians, pulses are an essential protein source that go into the preparation of dal, which is cooked every day in millions of homes. India’s struggling, still backward farm industry can’t keep up with the demand.

World food prices

 

“It’s not our part of the world that changed things, it’s the millions of people over there that are no longer content to get along with a bowl of rice and a few loaves of bread. They’re adding meat and dairy to their diet and we aren’t producing enough feed grains, enough vegetable proteins, to supply their need,” said Donald Coxe, global portfolio strategist for Bank of Montreal.

“Milk is the new oil. Milk demand worldwide is rising faster than oil demand. That’s because of the new Asian middle class.”

“Western Canadian farmers, unless they have an all-out crop failure, are going to have the biggest year in their history,” Mr. Coxe said.

Mr. Coxe said the rise in living standards in India, China and other parts of the developing world, as well as the sudden explosion in demand for corn to make ethanol for gasoline in the U.S., have put a squeeze on markets that’s making all cereal crops and vegetable proteins more expensive.

“So the way I sum it up,” Mr. Coxe said, “is the world is roughly in the position of a family that gave their son who was going to Las Vegas all the money they had and told him to put it on the dice table. He has rolled four consecutive sevens. He has left all the money on the table and now he’s rolling the dice again.”

“We are facing the real possibility of the worst global food crisis for which we have records.

“When people ask me what’s the biggest threat facing China — it’s food price inflation. The consumer price index in China (6.5 per cent) is now the highest rate in many, many years. If you take the food inflation out of it, their inflation rate is closer to 1 per cent.”

 

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Agricultural Commodities - still in the early stages

Saturday, January 12th, 2008


You really have to hand it to Chief Strategists Don Coxe (BMO), Byron Wien (Pequot), and Jeffrey Saut (Raymond James) for accurately calling agricultural commodities higher during the last year.
 
Back in October, in his investment letter, Jeffrey Saut called for continued strength in the agricultural commodities due to the demand from China. 

Unsurprisingly, China is importing nearly 13% of all the soybeans grown in the U.S. to feed its livestock and continues to “throw” cash at its farmers in an effort to produce more meat for Chinese consumption. And that cash flow has caused the U.S. Agriculture Department to estimate that net farm incomes in this country will soar by nearly 50% this year with an attendant increase in demand for farm equipment, irrigation equipment, fertilizer, seeds, etc. Ladies and gentlemen, this theme should have long legs as 3 billion new entrants (read: people) join the world’s economy and per capita incomes rise. While some of the “easy money” for investors has already been made from our recommendations, we think there is still room for additional investment returns. Clearly, there are numerous individual agricultural stocks for participants’ consideration (see recommendations from our previous missives and/or our research correspondents), but a broader-based approach for most investors is likely the best strategy. To this point, we embrace investment vehicles like MK Vectors Agribusiness ETF (MOO), as well as other open-end and closed-end investment funds.  

During the early Summer, following his sabbatical trip to India, Don Coxe also made a powerful case for agricultural commodities (Basic Points, June 07) as a result of his call for food inflation due to the 600-million strong middle-class demand from India and China, and emerging markets in general.
 

…What happened with meat, eggs and milk was what had happened with oil— the assumption that those billions of people in China and India don’t really matter much to us, except in terms of giving us cheap goods and services. That they could be raising our cost of living by driving up the cost of what we eat, and how we heat—that’s a bizarre idea…
…What BHP’s Chip Goodyear calls the supercycle for energy and metals has been joined by a supercycle in grains…
…So we weren’t surprised when the same savants (1) failed to predict soaring grain prices, and then, (2) blamed them on ethanol…
…We now know that when a major Midwest crop failure occurs, it will be the global food equivalent of an Al Qaeda bomb strike that shuts down Saudi Arabian oil production for months.
Coming at a time of a worldwide shortage of feed grains and wheat, it will send food infl ation to peaks not seen since 1974. The force of those shock waves would trigger food riots across the world and topple some precarious Third World governments. It will send food infl ation to peaks not seen since 1974…

From June 15, 2007 Investment Recommendations:

3. The most attractive stock group now is companies which benefi t from food price infl ation—such as meat packers and supermarkets—and those who help farmers to boost outputs, including the feed and seed companies, and the farm machinery manufacturers. The least attractive in the food sector is the ethanol producers. Being permanently short corn is being under permanent stress.

Recently quoted in Rob Carrick’s Globe article, down on the farm is where market growth is heading Don Coxe says,
 
 

“This is not a situation that has been overhyped. Quite the contrary, and it’s still in the early stages.”
 
Mr. Coxe said the agricultural story at its simplest level can be explained as another 600 million people, minimum, being added over the next 10 years to the list of those who have a diet something like what we in the West enjoy. Companies that help satisfy this demand for food have already benefited, and will continue to do so. “This isn’t like saying you should buy this company because they have a really hot product that is going to be a big fad for the next two or three years.”

Byron Wien called agricultural commodities higher in his 2007 predictions, back in 2006.
 
 

Rob Carrick writes:
Increases in demand for food are outpacing supply, which in turn has resulted in high levels of food inflation. A U.S. government inflation report issued last month showed that the rate of increase in food prices had more than doubled over the previous 12 months and reached a 25-year high. Wheat and soybean prices rose close to 80 per cent last year, and corn hit an 11-year high.
 
If you’re heavily invested in commodities of any kind, the question you have to ask yourself is how much more upside there is. Prices for base metals like copper and zinc have been in a down trend for the past several months as expectations of a global economic slowdown grow. Oil prices would also be affected if economic activity slackens, but there’s a geopolitical component to energy prices that makes forecasting difficult.
 
This brings us to agricultural commodities, which are more immune to economic cycles because of basic supply-and-demand factors like global population growth and declines in the amount of cultivated land. It’s true that agricultural stocks are like food commodity prices in that they’ve soared in the past year, but one expert in the field says retail investors should not be scared to jump in.

Carrick mentions these picks of the agriculture segment:
 

Stocks Ticker 12-Month return
AG Growth Income Fund AFN.UN-T 144.8%
Agrium AGU-T 97.7%
CNH Global CNH-N 144.9%
Deere & Co. DE-N 97.3%
Monsanto MON-N 137.0%
Mosaic MOS-N 361.3%
Potash Corp. POT-T 163.2%
Saskatchewan Wheat Pool VT-T 49.4%
Terra Nitrogen TNH-N 399.4%
ETFs Ticker 12-Month return
Claymore Global Agriculture ETF COW-T 8.6%
PowerShares DB Agriculture Fund DBA-A 38.3%
Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF MOO-A 39.6%

By the way, Mr. Coxe recommends being overweight, even going as far as to ”hoard” agriculture related stocks. Take another look at his recommendations in the most recent Basic Points.
 
 
Download Basic Points, December 19, 2007 - The recommendations are on pg. 34.

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Byron Wien’s Ten Predictions for 2008 and what he predicted for 2007

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008


January 2, 2008 Check out what Pequot Capital’s Byron Wien predicts for 2008 in Wall Street Journal: Here’s a quick summary of his 2008 predictions:

    1. The U.S. economy suffers its first recession since 2001.
    2. S&P earnings decline year-over-year, and the index falls 10%.
    3. The dollar strengthens in the first half to $1.35 against the euro, but weakens in the second half.
    4. Inflation rises above 5% on the CPI and 10-year yields hit 5%. Stagflation becomes a prominent topic on the campaign stump and in op-ed pieces.
    5. The price of oil goes down early in the year (to $80 a barrel) and up again later, rising to $115 a barrel in the second half of 2008.
    6. Agricultural commodities remain strong. Corn rises to $6.00 a bushel and cotton to 85 cents a pound, while gold reaches $1000.
    7. The Chinese stock market gets hit sharply as the Chinese economy slows. China revalues the remnimbi by another 10%. (As an aside he expects several long-distance runners to beg off from the Beijing Olympics due to air quality issues.)
    8. Russia’s new president, Dmitry Medvedev, becomes more assertive in world affairs, and Russia and Brazil lead the BRIC stock markets, while the Gulf Cooperation Council markets begin to attract interest among emerging market investors.
    9. Infrastructure improvement will be an important election theme, bolstering construction and engineering stocks. Water supply becomes a criticial problem world-wide.
    10. Barack Obama is elected president in a landslide over Mitt Romney, and the Democrats end up with 60 Senate seats and a clear majority in the House of Representatives.

  Here’s what he predicted for 2007: Pretty Good Calls

    1. The S&P 500 exceeds 1600 thanks to strong earnings, and market volatility jumps.
    2. China revalues the yuan by 10%.
    3. Crude remains in short supply because of Asian demand, pushing oil to $80 a barrel.
    4. Agricultural prices rise – corn at $5 a bushel, wheat to $7, soybeans to $9 and cotton to 80 cents a pound.
    5. S&P 500 earnings grow by 10% in 2007.
    6. The Fed doesn’t lower rates in the spring, and the 10-year yield rises to 5.5%, with the yield curve resuming a positively sloped shape.
    7. Gold hits $800 an ounce and silver rises to near $18.
    8. Japan’s Nikkei 225 rises 15% as the Japanese economy improves.
    9. Latin America does well, particularly Brazil, where the Bovespa index rises to 55,000 (currently 44,780).
    10. Rudy Guiliani pulls ahead as the leading candidate for Republicans and Barack Obama “gains momentum” for the Democrats.

He appears to have been dead-on 4, 6, and 9.

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