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Two years ago in The
Return of Capital, Not The Return on Capital, we stated: "...as
an indicator of a major trend reversal, 'Tens of thousands' of Japanese homemaker-traders
are leveraging their bets on a fall in the yen. As global margin calls come
in, investors will unwind their positions, and the homemaker-traders will
find that they were the last ones to the party. We expect the Yen to appreciate
for the long term, causing major pain for these novice investors." The weekly
chart below of the Japanese Yen shows just how wrong those homemaker-traders
have been.

With that in mind, this week's Wall Street Journal article: Small
investors make big bets on currencies should be of interest. It reports
that U.S. day traders are trading in foreign currency with leverage "as much
as 500 to 1. That allows an investor to put up just a few hundred dollars
of capital to make a bet of tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars." How
widespread is this kind of trading? It "now approaches $120 billion. That
is up about 20% from a year ago and nearly double the level three years ago,
according to Aite Group, a Boston-based financial-services industry research
and advisory firm." And why are these neophytes drawn to trading foreign
currency? "The heightened interest in currency trading comes as the dollar
is sagging." Just as in 2007, we have novice day traders betting with large
leverage on a falling currency. Expect a similar uptrend in the depressed
currency, this time the U.S. dollar, as leveraged day traders meet a fate
similar to the Japanese homemaker-traders of two years ago.
The Death of Diversification
The U.S.
dollar, just like the Yen in 2007, is being used in "carry trades, which
allow traders to borrow cheaply in low-yielding currencies" and "give speculators
like big hedge funds and prop trading desks at major Wall Street firms extra
leverage to engage in ultra-low-cost speculation and reap rich rewards." Dr.
Marc Faber assisted us in describing the Yen carry trade environment back
in January of 2007: "the
art dealers are bullish on art, the commodity traders bullish on commodities,
the real estate guys bullish on real estate, the stock traders bullish on
stocks, everybody has something to buy."
Now, the dollar carry trade has created the same problem for wise investors
looking for undervalued investments.
"Investors
are moving in lockstep like never before, driving up stocks, commodities
and emerging markets and risking a replay of last year, when they
all plunged the most since World War II. The Standard & Poor's 500
Index, whose increase in the past three months was the steepest in seven
decades, is rallying in tandem with benchmark measures for raw materials,
developing- country equities and hedge funds. The so-called correlation
coefficient that measures how closely markets rise and fall together
has reached the highest levels ever, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg." - Financial Times
In last year's unwind, diversification did not reduce portfolio risk. When
all asset prices are overinflated by credit (through a large supply of/weak
currency) there is only one haven; the formerly weak currency. As we recommended
two years ago: "Therefore the wise contrarian strategy is interest-bearing
cash. Over the next few years, most assets will fall in value as risk returns
to the market and leverage is unwound." With sentiment levels extremely one
sided (only 3% of traders surveyed were bullish on the dollar), a
swing in the emotional pendulum will reverse the dollar carry trade and
cause speculative investments (which would include most assets) to collapse.
***More For Clients and Subscribers***
With sentiment higher
than it was at the peak in October 2007 and the
market rising since March on waning volume, an Acapulco cliff dive from
current levels would not be surprising. Time
magazine described the scene during the Crash of 1929: "Around the floor
word spread that the House of Morgan and the New York banks had put a cushion
under the market. The market rallied. It looked as if the Morgan "miracle" had
staved off disaster." What followed was Black Tuesday:
"From the bell's first ring, it was panic; by day's end an incredible 16,410,030
shares had been dumped, capping the selling that had wiped out an estimated
$25 billion in stock values. Not until 2½ hours after the market's close
did the tickers catch up and carry the final sale. There was no longer any
attempt by bankers or anybody else to stem the collapse. In just six days the
whole world of easy prosperity had been buried."
Predicting A Major Decline
Crashes are very rare and are almost impossible to predict. Yet the likelihood
of their occurrence can be very high if conditions are ripe. As always, we
warn that anything can happen. All we can do is assess the current environment,
learn from historical examples and attempt to stay ahead of the herd. We continue
to recommend that
investors protect principal.
As Paul Tudor Jones stated when predicting
the Crash of 1987, we wait for "...some type of decline, without a question...it
will be earthshaking, it will be saber rattling, and it will have Wall Street
in a tizzy and it will create headlines, that will be, that will dwarf anything
that has happened to this point in time."
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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