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"When the facts change, I change my mind." ~ John Maynard Keynes
Long-Term Technicals Continue to Outweigh Valuations
During bear markets investors have to weigh numerous inputs when making asset
allocation decisions. From the list below, investors would be well served to
place higher weights on housing and the market's technical health. In terms
of managing risk in the short to intermediate term, they are more important
than valuations or general economic conditions. Stocks will bottom before the
economy, but only when we can see some light at the end of the economic tunnel.
Housing stabilization is a key component in helping us see the economic light.
It is impossible for any market to bottom without technical improvement showing
up on a chart. As of this writing, the charts tell us to continue to place
a high priority on principal preservation. However, some additional gains in
many asset markets would provide some reasons for hope.

Short-Term Trends Show Some Improvement
Over the weekend, President-elect Barack Obama said he would put forth the
largest spending package on infrastructure since the 1950s. On another front,
legislators are said to have reached an agreement with the Bush administration
to bailout the auto companies. It will be important to keep our eye on some
key markets in the coming days to see if these latest government announcements
can spark a meaningful rally.
Recent moves in many asset markets off the November 20, 2008 lows have only
come back to downward-sloping trend lines which started in late September 2008.
In Monday's pre-market activity, we are seeing some good signs. The dollar
is down. The Yen is down. Oil is up. Gold is up. If we can see some impressive
breaks of the September 2008 trend lines, it would be a good first step for
the bullish case. However, with the rapid fall in asset prices in recent months,
we would expect to see sharp rallies off the lows. It remains to be seen if
any of these rallies can hold. With improved valuations, we will keep an open
mind. The longer-term trends, illustrated later in this article, are still
of concern.
Stock Rally Off Lows Is Nice, But...
The S&P 500's recent rally off the lows is somewhat impressive. However,
as of the 12-05-08 close, it appears to be nothing more than a bear market
rally. The pink lines show the basic downward-sloping trend channel since 09-19-2008
(see chart below). As of the close on 12/05/2008, the current rally is trying
to break the short-term trend (see red circle), but we need to see more. A
break of the pink channel would be a positive step and add a little more credibility
to the current rally.

Housing Still a Problem for Credit Markets
Since assets tied to residential housing are causing problems with balance
sheets and in turn the credit markets, housing prices remain the primary fundamental
area of concern for investors. Based on the latest figures from Case-Schiller,
we still have over 9 months of supply of existing or "old" homes on the market
(10/2008). At the end of September 2008, 11.4 months of supply of new homes
remained on the market. As stated several times in the past, we cannot expect
to see any real stability in home prices until we get down to at least 6 or
7 months of supply. Prices of homes will continue to be under pressure, which
means more problems for financial institutions. More problems for financial
institutions will mean more problems in the credit markets. Recent liquidity
injections and asset swap/purchase programs by the U.S. government will provide
some support to housing, but they do not directly address the inventory overhang.
Short of bulldozing homes, no government program can directly or quickly correct
current inventory imbalances.
Students of market history also know "boom" assets from the last bull market
usually lag in the next bull market. Anyone who thinks residential housing
is going to be the best place to park capital in the next bull market will
probably be mistaken. Investing is always about opportunity costs. Housing
will eventually stabilize, but should not offer the best bang for our opportunity
cost buck.
Valuations Are Better, But Could Become Even More Attractive On Further
Declines
The chart below, from Where
Valuations and Technical Support Intersect, shows valuations have improved
enough to warrant an open mind about positive outcomes from stocks.

Since the chart above was created, the S&P 500 declined below both 840
and 768. The brief stay below 768 does not rule out the possibility of stocks
holding above that level. However, as we will illustrate below, the technical
health of the market still needs to show some improvement.
Your Brokerage Statement Will Improve Before the Economic Headlines
In Stocks
Will Bottom Well Before The Economy, we discussed the stock market's
tendency to bottom several months before economic news improves. Dr. John
Hussman looked more broadly at the same concept by reviewing economic and
stock market trends during and after bear markets in 1954, 1958, 1961, 1970,
1975, 1980, 1982, 1991, and 2001. His general finding was "regardless
of how stocks perform during a recession, the market is nearly always advancing
strongly by the time that the recession has three months to go."(entire
Hussman article). Assuming stocks do not begin a strong advance until
the last three months of the current recession, we may not see a bottom in
stocks until March or April of 2009. If the recession drags on past the spring
of 2009, a bottom in stocks could come even later. We cannot solely rely
on the often quoted Wall Street assumption of "stocks always bottom six months
before the economy." However, based on history, it is a good bet someone
looking at charts (a technical analyst) will spot a turn in stocks well before
someone reading the Wall Street Journal or writing fundamental research reports
(a fundamental analyst). Fundamentals are still important, but they are going
to be a lagging indicator for asset prices as this recession comes to a close
at some undetermined point in the future.
Long-Term Technical Trends Remain Negative
Since stocks have bottomed at least three months before the end of economic
downturns between 1954 and 2001, it is logical to assume we should see some
technical improvements in financial markets before better news in housing,
employment, and economic output. It is difficult, if not impossible, to review
the long-term technical trends in almost any asset market and draw positive
conclusions. If anything, a review of long-term trends leaves open the possibility
of new lows across almost the full array of risk asset classes. Yes, we have
seen some improvement in shorter-term trends, but here we are focusing on longer-term
trends. We do not use technical analysis as a forecasting tool. Our technical
analysis is more like a car's temperature gauge, which measures current conditions
and changes when conditions change. John Maynard Keynes said when replying
to a question about monetary policy during the Depression, "When the facts
change, I change my mind." From our investment perspective, when the charts
change (show meaningful improvement), we will become more open to putting hard-earned
principal at risk.
Relative Strength Leaders A Concern
Bear markets need some industry groups or sectors to lead during the transition
back to a bull market. The charts below paint a "good news / bad news" picture.
The good news is we have several industry groups that have encouraging relative
strength trends using the S&P 500 Index as a basis for comparison. For
example, the trends in relative strength of transportation stocks are positive.
Transportation Stocks - Relative Strength (1989-2008)

The bad news is even a leading sector of the market is showing weak trends
in terms of price. Price, not relative strength, is what really matters to
our bottom line.
Transportation Stocks - Price (1989-2008)

A link to numerous industry group charts showing similar characteristics is
at the bottom of this article.
Commodities, Gold, and the Dollar Not Forecasting Inflation/Recovery Yet
Countless government bailouts and liquidity facilities have flooded the financial
system with new funds. It is almost universally accepted these practices will
be inflationary once the economy and credit markets find some footing. Therefore,
it is logical to assume assets that can help protect purchasing power would
be in demand if we were on the cusp of an economic recovery. Inflation-protection
assets and "weak dollar" assets are not in great demand and remain firmly in
downtrends. We would expect oil, gold, and TIPS to show some legs if we could
see light at the end of the economic tunnel.
Commodities - CRB Index - Price Trend

Gold - Price Trend

Oil- Price Trend

If the current rally can continue, we will see some meaningful improvement
in the charts. Many charts have not yet shown even very short-term improvement
(see charts of commodities, gold, and oil above). When the appetite for risk
returns, we would expect to see rapid and readily apparent reversals in many
charts, including the U.S. dollar, oil, and yen. As of Friday's close, the
yen and the dollar have done nothing to suggest any radical shift in terms
of the risk appetite of investors.
Yen - Price Trend

U.S. Dollar Index - Price Trend

We will continue to monitor developments on both the fundamental and technical
fronts. If action is needed (bullish or bearish), we will change when the facts
change.
More Industry Group Charts
More
Charts...Click Here...Opens New Window
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