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Is the 6-year cycle peaking already? That's the opinion of at least one respected
colleague who sees the market as having reached its apex in the interim earlier
this year. The chart of the S&P 500 (SPX) index below - if the parabolic
structure follows through - would seem to confirm this assessment.
One major piece of anecdotal evidence that the broad market is undergoing
a pivotal topping process is the current rage in America and in other countries
for poker and other casino-style gambling games.
For instance, an article appearing over the AP news wire this weekend headlined "Newsstands
flush with poker magazines" spoke of the popularity of Texas "hold 'em" and
other high stakes card games and how it has created a plethora of magazines
aimed at luring younger players into the gambling mania. This is typical of
a mania - it requires constant advertisement and propaganda to bring in new
participants in order to keep the mania alive.
But if you thought the Internet stock mania of the late '90s was extreme,
or even the current real estate bubble, the poker craze is the apotheosis of
speculative insanity. It is gambling and speculative mania at its essence without
any of the trappings of respectability that may attend other manias (at least
superficially). As Michael Mainelli, professor of commerce at Gresham College
in London has put it, "Betting markets are clearly coming to resemble other
financial markets."
Betfair, a London-based online gambling concern, is the world's largest online
poker operator with daily betting volumes often exceeding the volume of trade
on the London Stock Exchange. As John Gapper of the London Financial Times
recently noted, "The development of financial markets in the past decade has
demonstrated [that] falling trading costs lead to rising volumes. As it becomes
easier and cheaper to make bets, all kinds of unexpected trading approaches
- both to take risk and to offset other exposures - are unleashed." In other
words, gambling begets gambling until massive speculative bubbles are created.
What we are witnessing is yet another bubble in the making!
To paraphrase what a colleague recently told me, "The gambling craze is the
last gasp manifestation of the average person's attempt at keeping up his current
lifestyle by increasing returns when every other investment vehicle has proven
insufficient."
And what recourse will those citizens have who are badly burned in this gambling
mania (which is inevitable)? They certainly won't be able to redress their
grievances to the government as both state and national governments are active
supporters of gambling (whether in the form of state lotteries or, in the case
of national governments, as an endorser or authorizing agent of various online
betting endeavors).
In light of the gambling insanity sweeping the world, I can't help but think
of a line spoken in the famous Japanese samurai film, "Yojimbo," by Toshiro
Mifune: "Gamblers...pretty nice to be rid of them!"
There are two bromides worth mentioning here: "What's bad for GM is bad for
the U.S. economy," and "What's good for oil is bad for stocks and the economy." These
statements hardly need clarifying as the recent GM woes are only too well documented.
Just recently, GM, Ford and other automakers have resorted to extreme discounting
tactics in an attempt at luring buyers. This is part and parcel of deflation,
viz., competitive undervaluation out of sheer desperation.
Samuel J. Kress of SJK Capital drew attention to this facet of K-wave deflation
that we're now experiencing. In his Special Edition V he wrote, "The excesses
that accrued during the past half century beginning with the economic/market
super cycle and the post World War II expansionary economic boom have begun
to be reduced since the terminal high of 2000. The system is being purged,
and is evident in the public, private and corporate sectors. The three basic
assets in life - financial, physical and human - are contracting: debt is being
reduced; plants are being sold or closed; jobs are being replaced by machines
and by exportation of our manufacturing base to developing countries. Clearly,
this is liquidation in its infancy which is the forerunner of deflation, the
precursor of the terminal series - depression, war and revolution."
This purgation of the system is nowhere more evident than the recent high-profile
trial and conviction of former WorldCom CEO Bernie Ebbers. I recall from my
early readings of Wall Street history that whenever corporate scandals and
systemic corruption is brought out in the headlines in the form of show trials,
etc., it usually coincides with a top. Will this time prove to be any different?
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