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In our last public update we said we were closing our long gold and AUD/USD
positions and looking to buy dollars again. We have had to wait on the sidelines
for the past two weeks, but the dollar index appears to have finally bottomed
at the exact 78.6% (square root of 61.8%) retracement of the January to February
rally. Since the dollar trade is simply one part of the overall holistic approach
we take with the market, in this update we will show why the current backdrop
in oil, bonds and euros is similar to that of October 1998 and what to expect
going forward.
Readers may recall that on December 13, 2004 we made the case for a rebound
in crude oil, and added that traders not comfortable in the futures market
should look to get long XLE, the energy iShare. Below is the same chart we
showed on 12/13/2004.
Readers may also recall that we showed a relative strength chart of the OIX:SP500
and said it pointed higher. Since then we have experienced a "blowoff" style
top in that ratio. In our chart below we show similar blowoffs in the OIX/SP500
ratio and the corresponding tops in the oil index. Note that the average decline
in oil stocks after the blowoff top was about 30%. As such we have exited longs
and will look to buy again after the coming retracement.
So, while we remain long term bullish on the sector, our call from last December
to climb aboard the oil rally (crude and oil stocks) is no more. We now advise
taking profits off the table.
When oil stocks run swiftly ahead of financial stocks, any market watcher
should take notice. The recent surge in the ratio between oil stocks and financial
stocks is the greatest since October 1998 so we feel it warrants a brief discussion
of that turbulent time in the markets.
In the chart below we show the oil/financial stock ratio followed by the T-bond
and the euro in 1998. Note that in many cases a falling dollar and falling
yield environment can be very bullish for financial stocks - like they have
been for the past two years. But this is not the case when the falling dollar
and low yields work their way into runaway oil prices. As you can see below,
the surge in the oil/financial stock ratio occured amidst a sharp rise in oil
prices, bonds and the euro/dollar. But this was quickly unwound.


Recall that the Canadian dollar is tied to oil and commodity prices in general.
Here we quote from a Bloomberg story written last week: "Yesterday the Canadian
dollar rose 1.4 percent to 82.45 cents; the two-day gain is the biggest since
October 1998." Whenever a reporter draws reference to something "big" that
happened in the past but does not tell what immidiately follows we look it
up. As you can see, in the chart above the EUR/USD crashed between October
and December 1998, then continued to decline in 1999.
Admittedly, the financial backdrop in late1998 was completely different than
today, but if we ignore the fundamentals and follow the 1998 market action
as an example it says that oil and the euro are headed into major tops.
So as crude oil nears our target of $60 - which we called for back in December
- we are fascinated by the similarity between now and late 1998. Recall that
in numerous updates we have said that at rally to $60 would likely coincide
with a major stock and bond market top and rebound in the dollar - or decline
in the euro. In the chart below we show the likely price action in these markets
over the coming weeks to months.


Our forecast relies on the premise that the entire stock and bond market rally
has been a mirage of sorts as a falling dollar simply 'inflated' the global
markets. But as long as the Fed thinks growth is strong it should keep raising
rates this year. This will drain liquidity from the market and the reflation
trend should reverse. As such, our view remains unchanged that the 'reflation
trade' is on its last legs. And if that is the case the main driver of the
reflation - the US dollar - is poised to rally.
Therefore, we are still fascinated with the overt bearish talk surrounding
the dollar. It seems that currency traders are unabashed in calling for a fourth
consecutive year of decline in the dollar. Even award winning economists now
chime in about why the dollar must fall. Leave it to an economist to explain
the obvious. Recall that in 2001 they still gushed about the dollar.
We distinctly remember the same bearish talk in early 2003 as the stock market
was holding above its 61.8% retracement of the 1991 to 2000 rally at 775 in
the SP 500. The bears said there was much more downside to come and that an "unprecedented
fourth year of decline" was not really that significant considering we were
coming off of a bubble.
But the 775 level provided the springboard for a bottom in stocks. Similarly,
the dollar index bottomed three previous times around the 80 level over its
30-year history and a break through here would likely spell the end of dollar
hegemony. We are certain that is where things are headed but we still think
the 80 level can act as a similar springboard for the dollar as the 775 level
did for the S&P 500. Also recall just how bearish people were in late 2002
on the stock market. The bears were in control then but paid the price by staying
short the market. We feel the same is in store for dollar bears in 2005.
In essence, b ecause monetary policy does work, but with a lag, the "reflation
trade" finally picked up some steam in 2003 and carried the stock market through
its steep downtrend line, only to prove the bears wrong. The market has been
with the bulls ever since.
But monetary policy works the other way as well and a full year of rate hikes
has now made it a losing money position from an interest rate perspective to
be short the dollar. As such, we have repeatedly warned that once the downward
momentum in the dollar is broken, the dollar could stage a large rebound. And
when that happens the stock market is likely to retrace a significant portion
of its "ill gotten gains." Therefore, much of our analytical work relies upon
intermarket trends to correctly position our portfolio.
Finally, in the chart above we have zoomed in on the dollar's "three tests" of
its lows. If the third test were to mimic what we saw in the SP 500 in March
2003 at 775 we should see one new spike low and a bullish reversal in the dollar
to mark the third and final "test." This appears the most likely outcome so
we are sitting on the sidelines, watching and keeping our powder dry before
we take another stab at buying like we did in January of this year..
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