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A Treasury coup, with some help from the Bank of Japan
Wall Street has been waiting for tomorrow all month long. What's going
on tomorrow? Operation Buy, a coup for dollar policy if the Bank of Japan
submits to recent political pressure and allows a yen devaluation to
support global bond prices and stimulate the Japanese export sector.
But gold shares might just steal the show...
Under the suspect assumption that the Bear Market is over, General Electric
Co Bulls roared loud this morning, and sent bears scrambling for cover.
GE shares gapped by $1.45 at the open. Then they churned to end three
cents off that high, made in the minutes after the bell rang. What can
we say except that Bulls rallied into the third period on yesterday's
news about tomorrow? (referring to our coverage of this in yesterday's
daily outlook to subscribers)
Volume was a heavy 33 million shares. The gap could be a runaway, and
carry enough momentum to at least charge for heavy resistance at $42.50,
about 6% higher than today's close. A successful breach of that resistance
would mean only that the post Sept trend is in continuation, rather than
consolidation, as the chart currently implies.
That said the trend that controls GE's bear market will be intact even
if bulls make a higher high here this week.
A straight trendline pits bear market resistance near $50. A more scientific
approach to technical analysis pits bear market control at the last lowest
high in the primary sequence, which just happens to be this year's high
at around $53. The peak in 2000 was at $60, which is the first high in
this sequence.
The statistical approach would pit bear market resistance at the 200-day,
or 50 week, moving average near $43 at the moment. Today, GE shares closed
at $39.72.
A $13 rally is required to challenge real bear market resistance. Though
even such a test represents a 33% gain from today's handle. Will they
do it? I dunno.
Momentum is back but coming off of lower ground on the indicators. There
is not enough substance in Jeff Immelt's (new GE CEO) outlook in our
view to cut it. We've learned that in order to guarantee the bullish
profit forecasts (that we reported on yesterday), GE plans to slash 3000
jobs at GE capital, and consolidate (or divest?) about 24 different businesses,
which will incur about $400 million in savings. That's all great as far
as running a business goes, but the point is that this model assumes
a business contraction.
The point here being that when analysts interpret this as a sign that
confirms their bullish views on the economy, that this marks an end to
the profit contraction, they are sadly mistaken as professionals.
Even technically, to challenge bear market trend control, there would
have to be at least a little more optimism about the top line in yesterday's
pep talk. At the moment, top line growth forecasts are for about 10%
next year, but much of that is explained by the raft of acquisitions
GE intends on making. According to Bloomberg:
"General Electric, the largest company by market value, expects
to make acquisitions of industrial businesses that will add $1 billion
in profit and $7 billion in sales by 2003. It expects to continue
to make purchases in its finance operations. Those figures aren't
included in the $100 billion in possible acquisitions the company
is looking at right now, including purchases at GE Capital with about
$300 billion in assets, Immelt said. ``Top line growth has been slowing
with the economy,'' said Jeff Graff an analyst with Key Asset Management
in Cleveland, which owns about 26 million GE shares. ``GE will make
acquisitions of key technologies a bigger part of their growth strategy." -
Bloomberg
So to expect a multiple expansion (rising PE ratio) in that environment,
when the shares are already trading at 29 times trailing 12 month earnings,
or 25 times 2002 "anticipated" earnings, is to require a lot
of bullishness. Far more than we've got.
There is no question that managements prefer to acquire assets with
stock, and so to the extent that this is the case here, we may have to
consider that the vested interests "want" to move their shares
higher. But so what. Vested interests always want to move their stocks
higher, unless they're playing games.
To justify current valuations, earnings must grow at around 20% into
the future. Such an outlook is sustainable in a BENIGN economic expansion,
but is not when the economy is contracting and such profit growth increasingly
depends upon internal divestitures, or downsizing. And while earnings
have grown at that rate for GE in the past, here and there, its long
run growth is closer to 12% (10 year annual growth rate in earnings according
to Valueline).
From 1991 to 1995 the market priced GE's earnings near 15 times earnings.
From 1996 onward, the market doubled that value - the average annual
PE ratio for the past five years is 30. From 1996 to about last year,
however, the rapidly expanding stock market economy boosted the growth
rate in earnings to closer to 20% annually. Such conditions are dangerously
assumed to remain into the future despite their conspicuous cyclical
nature.
What Jeff Immelt is promising is that GE can continue to grow its profits
at that rate into the future, despite a shrinking economy, rising interest
rates, and if we're correct, a falling dollar and rising inflation? If
it can great, but all of those macro variables will also affect how the
market will price those earnings.
Will it continue to price GE's earnings at 30 times, as it is today?
If so, then there is no upside at all, except in the short term. Any
meaningful upside in GE's valuation future will require an expanding
economy with relatively low interest rates and a firm dollar. In other
words, due to its current valuation, further upside or downside is largely
going to be determined by macro circumstances. Of course, in charge of
those circumstances are the world's policymaking classes.
This brings us to the short term, and whether the Bank of Japan tomorrow
will announce that they have submitted to political pressures (from within
and outside of Japan) and will begin buying up the global bond (though
dollar bulls would say US Treasury) market.
Please don't underestimate the impact this is going to have on the markets,
near and far. And we aren't making any inferences between GE capital's
interests and our government's economic interests, aside from the bullish
spillover that GE's shares are likely to get if the Bank of Japan boosts
global bond prices in the morning.
Again, the Bank's Governor has ruled out any radical measures such as
buying foreign bonds, commercial paper, or more JGB's, according to Bridge.
But markets are waiting for something, if only just further easing steps.
If that is all that comes, the recent yen decline will become vulnerable
to reversal. That means we think it will rise, and blow back through
127 (back above the green line on the chart to the right).
If that proves to be correct, our bearish argument for the dollar and
stock markets should take over, and all heck should break loose, since
stock and dollar bulls are all lined up ready for a major yen devaluation.
If, on the other hand, the Bank of Japan actually does announce radical
measures to affect such a devaluation, or one materializes because our
guess is wrong, then Operation Buy is on, and Wall Street should get
impetus as bond prices extend today's rally into the weekend at least,
and perhaps until global investors begin to grasp all the implications
associated with such an intervention, or change in policy.
One of the first things it will say, taken with recent ECB accomodation,
is that dollar policy dominates global banking policy.
And it should, for the dollar, not gold, is the global international
monetary standard, or preferred "vehicle" currency. By "should," of
course, we mean as far as policymakers are concerned. For as far as we're
concerned, banking policy contradicts free market doctrine. In fact,
at extremes, it oppresses free market doctrine, with consequences.
It is no coincidence then that with all of the currency tinkering and
policy positioning dominating capital markets today, the precious metals
markets have been acting up again.
December gold now reversed a three month wedge (though this chart is
daily spot), following silver bulls who late last week set off buy signals
by breaching bear market resistance at $4.30, and that after Platinum
and Palladium rallied in early December.
Gold shares too have been acting well, and this time indeed have predicted
the (later) surge in the yellow metal.
Leading the gold bulls today on North American exchanges were Durban
Deep, Placer Dome, Anglo Gold, and Agnico Eagle, all up from as much
as 12% to 4%.
That wasn't enough to put the gold sector in the top ten performing
stock sectors today, but it was enough to put it in the top 15. Metals
were second.
Durban Roodeport Deep was able to repay a sizeable loan today, which
helped its shares post new 52-week highs.
Placer put in a higher high and has approached bear market control near
$12, with conviction.
Anglo made it through intermediate bear market resistance, while Agnico
Eagle, like Placer, has pushed itself up to within $0.50 of the breakout
region.
Growing speculation that Barrick is going to bid for Normandy sent its
shares higher in Sydney overnight. Whether true or not, it is an indication
of the strengthening sentiment for gold shares.
The rest of this week is going to be pivotal for the dollar, perhaps
the precious metals, and certainly gold shares.
The outcome of Operation Buy, tomorrow morning, should decide short
run direction in these markets. It just might be gold shares that rock
and roll, rather than GE.
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