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April 1, 2009
Last month in Panic
Selling Will Lead To a Sharp Bounce, we stated:
"Bearish sentiment is everywhere. Investors have finally realized what we have
been discussing for the last two years. And now that we are near a temporary
bottom, some investors are taking action. Unfortunately, investors are reacting
to the past. They should have been in cash during the downtrend...Instead,
investors should be positioning themselves for a counter trend rally: by
either not selling their stocks or if they are in cash, by considering market
exposure (depending on your risk tolerance)."
With the market up roughly 20% in 2 weeks, investors now want to know how
to reallocate their portfolio to profit from the bounce. How sentiment has
changed! It is hard to believe that in the beginning of this month, investors
were selling their stocks to buy CDs. Because the market has come up so far
and so fast we are now less sure that we have established a multi-month bottom.
***More For Clients and Subscribers***
So we will take a wait and see approach until the retest of the early March
low. However investors should sell their Bond positions as we
continue to expect long term interest rates to rise despite the Fed's attempt
to manipulate the market.
How To Prevent Panic
J. Wayne Fears in The Complete Book of Outdoor Survival states; "Survival
instructors teach that the first thing to do once you realize you are lost
is to STOP." STOP stands for Sit, Think, Observe,
and Plan. "By following this simple outline you can control your urge
to panic." Some investors may find this useful as they examine their recent
brokerage statements.
Sit. "By sitting down you can prevent getting into deeper trouble.
This one act can also start the thinking process, and it suppresses the urge
to run or to make hasty decisions. You may need this time to get over the
initial shock that you are lost."
Think. "In a survival emergency, man is at the mercy of his mind.
That is the reason many survival experts refer to the mind as the best survival
kit. In order to survive, one must keep control of the mind by thinking back
to past training, by determination, and by maintaining a positive mental
attitude."
Observe. "Observe your surroundings to discover what problems must
be solved and what resources you have to solve them."
Plan. "Now that you are organized, set plans. Maintain a good survival
spirit. Dispel fears."
Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch
While Bankers have been living the high life (until recently), farmers have
been going through a tough few decades. We found a useful list of "101
Ways To Save Money" on the Alabama Cooperative Extension System website.
But there have been periods in economic history when farmers and ranchers were considered
the big men of the day. As Jim Rogers has stated, in the next decade the farmers
(and not the bankers) will be driving the Maseratis.
***More For Clients and Subscribers***
Since that time, some commodities have gone up in a frenzy (which
in May 2008 we warned would collapse). And collapse they did! The following
chart shows the CRB Index which is near those long term lows once again.

And what can we expect at a major bottom in commodities? Let us look back
to the early 30s, a bottom that supported a multi-decade commodity bull market.
The Suitcase Farmer
"To begin with, quantities of farmers had lost their farms during the hideous
early years of Depression- lost them by reason of debt. These farms had mostly
fallen into the hands of banks or insurance companies, or of small-town investors
who had held the mortgages on them, or were being held by government bodies
for non-payment of taxes, or had been bought in at tax sales (Since Yesterday by
Fredrick Lewis Allen)."
In addition to farm foreclosure, there was
a drop in prices due to a lack of demand (Great Depression) and a drought
of epic proportions which led to the Dust Bowl.
"In the callous old Wall Street phrase, the farms of the United States had
been "passing into stronger hands"; and that meant that more and more of
them, owned by people who did not live on them, were being operated by tenants....More
and more the farm owner, whether or not he operated his own farm, was coming
to think of himself as a business man, to think of farming as a business.
He was less likely to use his farm as a means of subsistence, more likely
to use as much of it as possible for the growing of crops for sale...A striking
example of this trend was the appearance of the "suitcase farmer" - a small
town business man who bought a farm or two, cleared them of houses and barns,
spent a few weeks each year planting and harvesting them, (using his own
tractor or a hired one), and otherwise devoted himself to his business, not
living on the land at all. A Kansas banker told Ladd Haystead, toward the
end of the decade, that he estimated that between twenty and thirty per cent
of the land in western Kansas was owned by suitcase farmers. This was what
was happening to the territory when the victims of drought had fled!" (Since
Yesterday by Fredrick Lewis Allen).
And how did this contrarian suitcase farmer fare?
"Farm prices rose. For example, the farmer who had received, on the average,
only 33 cents a bushel of wheat in 1933 received 69 cents in 1934, 89 cents
in 1935, 92 cents in 1936, $1.24 in 1937 and 88 cents in 1938. The cotton
farmer who had received an average price of 5.6 cents a pound for his cotton
in 1933 received between 10 and 13 cents during the next four years, and
7.9 cents in 1938."
Your Frozen Account Consultant
In January
2007, we stated:
"With the cash you have raised from selling assets, we recommend a portfolio
of 3 month U.S. Treasury Bills, which protect principal. We do provide this
service, but we want to stress that you can call your financial consultant
tomorrow to allocate everything into a U.S. Government-only money market
fund. While this is not ideal, it will initially protect investors, until
more evidence demands further preservation and our services. History shows
that most investors will not take action, but those that do, will be able
to eventually buy assets at bargain prices."
After doing a review of the contents of various money market funds, many are
still holding short-term debts of the
Enron-like entities known as SIVs that hold leveraged mortgage assets.
We see no way around money market fund investors taking losses and possibly
being faced with frozen funds such as happened to auction
rate securities holders. To quote one investor: "It's a moral outrage...Their
pitch was, keep your cash with us, we get a higher rate." And while we may
have a bounce in confidence for a few months, we urge investors to begin the
process of moving your cash to higher ground (U.S. Treasury Bills) for the
next down leg. If long term interest
rates rise as we expect, interest
rate derivatives should provide more fireworks for the financial sector.
At Lamont Trading Advisors, we provide wealth preservation strategies for
our clients. For more information, contact
us. Our monthly Investment
Analysis Report requires a subscription fee of $40 a month. Current subscribers
are allowed to freely distribute this report with proper attribution.
***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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