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Last month we
stated: "we should expect rocket-launched (oh they've saved us) bear market
rallies." Since that time, the DJIA has had two separate blastoffs. That's
all it took for investors to forget about the
massive deflation that is happening in U.S. neighborhoods. We view the
rise of the last two months as a breather before more serious selling takes
hold. Goldman
Sachs agrees and is warning 'delusional' investors of a sell-off of "a
further 15pc over the 'near term.'" Warren Buffett has also recently stated "the
recession will be more severe than most expect." Meanwhile, the Fed is wondering
why all of its extraordinary measures have not increased liquidity. We
advise investors not to get swept up in the bullish hype of the recent upturn
and follow the old Wall Street adage: "Sell in May and go away."
"Panic, as a health officer, sweeping the garbage out of Wall
Street"

Frank Bellew, New York Daily Graphic, September 29,
1873 -- American Social History
Project.
Taxes - A Good Reason To Sell
During a bear market taxes
rise. In 1932, top income rates were
raised from 25 to 63 percent and the Estate Tax was doubled with the
Revenue Act. And that was with a Republican in the White House! Three years
later, the Wealth Tax Act was enacted raising the top income tax rate to
75%. Similarly, according to John Wallis in the "Depression of 1839 to 1843;" "In
1842...Americans in Indiana and Ohio were saddled with property tax rates
eight times higher than in 1836. New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Massachusetts
all had state property taxes, where they had none in 1830." We would therefore
recommend investors to take advantage of relatively low tax rates to sell.
Especially since David Walker, the U.S. Comptroller General, "a leading voice
for fiscal
responsibility," has resigned in disgust.
Margin Call At The Fed?
There is a precedent for a crisis that becomes too great even for the lender
of last resort. In the Panic of 1825, the Bank of England itself came under
suspicion. With its gold reserves dwindling to "under a million pounds" according
to Edward Chancellor author of Devil Take the Hindmost, the Morning
Chronicle warned:
"the Bank of England has to choose between its own insolvency, and the insolvency
of these imprudent speculations, and as it is impossible, in the present
state of things, for the Bank, with any regard to its own safety, to stretch
out a friendly hand to them, the consequences may easily be foreseen."
Chancellor concludes, "In other words the Bank of England was not in the position
to act as the lender of last resort." If the Federal Reserve continues to use
more of its own balance sheet to support the mortgage market, look for this
subject to be revisited.
Even The Curmudgeon Has Trouble Cashing Out
In Edward Chancellor's description of the boom of the early 1820's, Britain's "national
sense of well being was so great, according to the Annual Register, that 'even
the country gentleman, the most querulous of all classes...could
no longer complain.'" Chancellor continues: "speculation flared up in commodities...the
anticipation of exports to liberated countries provoked fears of raw material
shortages." Shortly after, a "torrent of distrust" enveloped credit markets,
and fickle
Fortune had left. In 1826, stocks
were down 80%, while some "went unquoted."
At Lamont Trading Advisors, we provide wealth preservation strategies for
our clients. For more information, contact
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***No graph, chart, formula or other device offered can in and
of itself be used to make trading decisions.
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