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Everything we are looking at tells us that the market is continuing a topping
process that began with the NASDAQ topping in late January. Since then the
tops have been rotational with the Dow Jones Industrials topping in mid-February,
the S&P 500 in March and the TSX Composite in April. All of them made at
least short term lows around May 17, 2004. Not surprisingly numerous sectors
have also seen rotational tops. In Canada that process started with tops in
the gold and mining sectors last December. Since then only one sector, Consumer
Discretionary has seen slight new highs.
An interesting indicator is the Volatility Index or VIX. The VIX is an indicator
favoured by some market technicians. The VIX is developed by taking the weighted
average of implied volatility for the S&P 100 Index (OEX) calls and puts
and measures the volatility of the market. As the market rises the VIX falls
and of course as the market falls the VIX rises.
The market is considered overbought if the VIX is trading under 20 and oversold
above 30. Currently the VIX is around 15. At the recent lows in May it reached
barely above 20. The VIX did reach a reading of around 22 at the time of the
March lows so there is a small positive divergence with the May lows. The absolute
lows were seen in April at 13 when the market failed to see a higher price
high giving us a negative divergence. At important market lows in 1998, 2001
and 2002 the VIX reached over 50. Even at other lows over the past decade the
VIX often went over 30. At the March 2003 lows the VIX was still around 40.
The recent lows in the market don't even qualify as a correction based
on the VIX.
The VIX continues to give us overbought complacency readings and the divergences
being seen are at best neutral. Not an overwhelming endorsement for a new bull
run. The US markets continues to struggle at significant levels of resistance.
The bell weather S&P 500 has been topping along the 4 year MA over the
past few months and is in the vicinity of the tops seen in late 2001/early
2002 and the 1998 top. The NASDAQ is running into a comparable massive resistance
zone around 2000. The Dow Jones Industrials has performed considerably better
but is trading in the massive congestion zone formed between 1999 to 2001 in
the range of roughly 9900 on the downside and 10700 on the upside. The TSX
Composite performed the best of them all but put in a double top in March/April
above its 4 year moving average and above the 1998 and 2001/2002 tops. Targets
on the double top are at least 7900. The low in May was just under 8100.
Grant you not all technical indicators are negative as ones like breadth and
the advance/decline line have been supportive to the recent up move. But sentiment
indicators remain uncomfortably high and even in the most recent up move from
the May lows the market has often shown weakness in the latter part of the
day. This suggests that the smart money is exiting the market. Volume has been
lagging as well and without any significant influx of volume, any rise in the
market is limited. Insider selling has been evident for months and has recently
run 2 to 1 in favour of sales.
Many point to the surging economy as a prime reason for the market to move
higher in the coming months. The most recent job numbers have been strong on
both sides of the border. But the US numbers are, in particular, strong on
the quantity but weak on the quality. Fully two-thirds of the job creation
has been in low wage, part time, and service industry jobs. These jobs are
also quick to go if things slow down. If employment growth had been normal
over the past few years we would have 8 million new jobs instead of the 1 million
in the last three months. Wage growth has been essentially flat while the consumer
has propped up the market by going deeper in debt whether through consumer
credit or through mortgage refinancing.
But recent consumer credit growth is showing some clear signs of slowing suggesting
that the consumer may be tapped out. And the mortgage market remains high risk. The
Economist, June 3, 2004 pointed out the real risk in the housing market
with rapid growth in prices not only in the US but globally propped up by cheap
money much of it at variable rates. Borrowing against rising housing prices
is another form of leverage and has allowed spending to remain at high levels
outpacing income growth.
But there is now a real risk to rising interest rates. Even Alan Greenspan
has indicated that he may need to increase interest rates because of inflationary
risks. But we believe that this is a red herring as the real risk is not inflation
but remains deflation on a massive scale because of the huge overhang of debt.
Rising interest rates may be forced on Greenspan as the market is already pricing
in interest rate hikes. But Greenspan knows that in an overleveraged economy
that rising interest rates is the last thing the market can handle. Already
rising long term rates are forcing hedge funds, investment dealers and the
banks to divest themselves of the carry trade (carry trade is when one borrows
short rates and reinvests the proceeds in higher yielding securities in either
domestic or foreign markets).
The debt situation in the market with the consumer, corporations and government
is very vulnerable to rising interest rates. At current low levels, levels,
which are below the rate of inflation, would be devastating just doubling.
Of course what is needed is ongoing low interest rates and pushing the money
supply to even higher levels in order to stave off a problem. Over the past
few months the money supply growth (M3) in the US has been rising at over 10%/annually
and is on pace to increase over $1 trillion in 2004, an unheard of pace. Rapid
monetary growth is of course poor for the US$ and good for gold.
The world is awash in debt and the US has become the world's biggest
debtor. Somehow there is this (unproved) belief that the world will continue
to finance this debt instead of recognizing that instead it is an Achilles
heel. There are already banking problems out there in Japan, China, and Russia
but while these areas are of grave concern the real focus should be on the
leveraged US financial system. The Hedge Funds (and other funds as well) are
making no money this year. Huge leverage in a rising interest rate environment
and the need to unwind risky carry trades will continue to put pressure on
them and increase the risk of a failure in an environment that is sure to get
more volatile (similar to the failure of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM)
in 1998).
And as we head into the summer election period volatility should remain high
with Homeland Security increasing the threat of a terrorist attack; the risk
of further destabilization in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Middle East
that could lead to higher oil prices; and, a new one in the risk of political
instability with the Senate threatening contempt charges against John Ashcroft
for failure to release information regarding the Iraqi torture scandal that
points to a possible cover up all the way to the top. This is coupled with
reports from Washington leak sheets (Capital Hill Blue) that point to increasing
unstable behaviour in the White House comparable to the Nixon White House.
The biggest risk to the stock indices lies in the heavily weighted Financial
Sector. Our chart of the TSX Financials shows that we have broken down under
the prior lows seen in March. The current rally has taken us only back to those
levels on weak volume. Our top short choice is the Royal Bank of Canada (RY-TSX,
NYSE) (www.rbc.com, 416-974-8393). The problems of the
Royal Bank have been put front and center with the recent computer problems
that left customers without information or access for almost a week.
The second key area, which appears very vulnerable, is the Information Technology
sector. Here our chart is showing a roll over pattern with the potential for
a growing series of lower lows and lower highs. Here there are high profile
problem companies such as Nortel Networks (NT-TSX, NYSE) (www.nortel.com, 905-863-1103). Nortel remains
a prime short candidate as the company remains under SEC and potential criminal
investigation. As well one high flyer Research in Motion (RIM-TSX, RIMM-NASDAQ)
(www.rim.net, 519-888-7465) now appears to
be topping out recently giving us a sell signal with significant negative divergences.
Other TSX sub sectors that are either breaking down or look vulnerable are
Utilities, Health Care, Industrials, Real Estate and Telecommunications. Despite
the cry that the market is climbing a wall of worry investors should worry
and be aware that the risks are rising and that the market continues to show
signs of topping out.
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