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As we stated last
October (the month of the stock market's peak); "the stock market is
a sideshow, it can adjust to the economic reality very quickly as it did
in 1929 (especially with credit losses already in place)." Only misconceptions
about the Great Depression cause a dismissal of the similarities. Commodities
are correcting sharply as forecast. The U.S.
Dollar has gained double-digits against other currencies while the Yen
is "soaring to 13 year
highs." The U.S. stock market (DJIA) has fallen below the 'line
in the sand' described in March. And European
countries are faring much worse as expected.
Even our forecast for Mega
Thrift is becoming more plausible.
How Low Can It Go?
As mentioned in April
of 2007, "When the effects of inflation have been extracted, the DJIA
is much more cyclical than Wall Street promoters would care to admit." Steve
Williams of Cycle Pro has updated his inflation-adjusted
Dow Jones Industrial Average chart (below) which we previously cited. The
recent sell off seems insignificant when viewed over the last 200 years.
Our target is unchanged; we expect the market to swing to the lower end of
the trend channel.

On the way to the bottom, the market must relieve bearish sentiment (make
you forget your fear). It can only do this through sharp powerful rallies (where
we all laugh for a day with CNBC on how close we came to the brink). We have
described these as "rocket-launched (oh they've saved us) bear market rallies." Investors
who cheer these sharp up moves as a sign of the bottom should take note of
the chart provided by Tom Denham from Elliotwave.com below.

Inflation - Negative Over the Next 5 Years
Because of high debt
levels, we have continually warned of a deflationary collapse. Now according
to Nouriel Roubini,
"Finally, and more important, yields on Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities
(TIPS) due in five years or less have now become higher than yields on conventional
Treasuries of similar maturity. The difference between yields on five-year
Treasuries and five-year TIPS, known as the break-even rate, fell to minus
0.43 percentage points. This is a record. Since the difference between the
conventional Treasuries and TIPS is a proxy for expected inflation, the TIPS
market is now signaling that investors expect inflation to be negative over
the next five years, as a severe recession is ahead of us."
TIPS are signaling negative inflation for the next 5 years and inflation
below 1% for the next 10 years! Therefore we would like to reiterate
our call to investors to
preserve their portfolios with U.S. Treasury Bills (interest bearing
cash). Higher returns require more risk, which in our view will not be rewarded
in this type of environment.
Only The Treasury Can Print Money
We suspect even the U.S. Treasury will
be eventually challenged by this crisis. As we stated in
January, we expect long term obligations of the U.S. Treasury to rise
in yield. And while the Treasury can print money (which will lead to higher
inflation in the long run, no doubt) other entities without the power of
the printing press may not be able to raise cash to cover their interest
payments.
Remember the Panic of 1837 (that led to a 7 year depression) which we
compared to our present times in May 2007? In the paper, The Depression
of 1839 to 1843: States, Debts, and Banks, John Wallis notes that "Pennsylvania,
Maryland, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Florida all defaulted on their debt in 1841 and 1842." Five of these
ended up repudiating all or part of their debt.
***More For Clients and Subscribers***
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***No graph, chart, formula or other device offered can in and
of itself be used to make trading decisions. This newsletter should not be
construed as personal investment advice. It is for informational purposes only.
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