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Part I
With last week's Fed rate hike decision out of the way, I was expecting to
see a little more clarity regarding the stock market's direction. Unfortunately,
with this bit of ambiguity removed, the market still seems worried, and as
a result we did not see anything near the rally I was expecting. This week,
I'd like to review what happened in the context of last week's observations
and present a framework for what to expect in the coming week.
Please note that in Part I, I'm not trying to make any predictions, just looking
to identify technical trends and support and resistance levels that will either
confirm or negate the trends in effect. Part II is where I'll weigh in with
my own two cents. I plan to make this a weekly report, so if you're interested
in being notified immediately when it goes up on my website, please sign up here.
Part I: Current Trends
As expected, last week the Fed raised short-term rates to 4.25%. While the
accompanying statement removed some amount of ambiguity regarding further rate
hikes, it hardly clarified anything. Is the Fed done or not? When will they
stop? What will Bernanke be like as new Chairman? The statement was like a
Rorschach test for each individual market, causing each to reflect its own
individual bias / opinion / insecurity. The entire market is like a painting,
and each individual market is a brush stroke in the larger, ever evolving picture.
Let's take a look at each individual market to see what is emerging:
S&P 500

The stock market reacted immediately, as soon as the Fed's statement was made
public at 2:15. The market cheered and popped up for a decent gain, but the
enthusiasm petered out by the close. It managed to close up for the day, but
it was nothing like the price explosions (both up and down) that we have seen
as a result of past Fed meetings. Wednesday saw a continuation of the muted
rally, but by Thursday and Friday, the bears were back, bringing the market
back almost exactly to its Tuesday close. The weekly chart thus added a new
bar, but no new information (see
last week's report) The market remains in its tentative, lazy uptrend.
From the daily futures chart (March contract) we see that the market broke
through its consolidation downtrend, but hardly convincingly. We'll just have
to continue to watch this market for signs of a break or bounce. The new range
is bound by 1274 on the downside and 1284. Watch for moves outside of this
range to determine likely future direction.
US Dollar Index

The dollar fell off a cliff with the Fed's announcement, but has so far stopped
short of breaking through its six-month uptrend. The daily chart looks terrible
- we're likely to see further declines and a test of the weekly trend line
in the coming week or so. Watch the 89 level carefully for signs of a break
or bounce. I know that sentiment is extremely bearish, but technically speaking,
the intermediate trend is still in tact, and that trend must be respected.
Bonds
The most curious event of all last week was the big rally in Treasury Bonds
and Notes. While the Fed was busy pushing short-term rates higher, the bond
market was busy pushing long-term rates lower, something Chairman Greenspan
has in the past referred to as a ‘conundrum.' The result of this conundrum
is a flattening yield curve, one that is threatening to invert, an event that
nearly always leads to a recession. Greenspan has said that a recession may
not result this time, but his reasoning on this likely has more to do with
his leaving office on a high note than any logic. The New York Fed is on record
as saying that an inverted yield curve has essentially predicted every recession
since 1950, with only one false signal. This may help explain why stocks have
failed to rally.
Inflation Complex
The metals and the energies - what I call the inflation complex - saw dramatic
declines this week (with the notable exception of copper), beyond what just
about anyone expected. As I said last week:
The fact that the dollar has been stubbornly holding its ground while gold
has been rising so strongly presents, as Chairman Greenspan himself might put
it, a conundrum. One of these markets is not telling the truth. If the inflation
that gold is signaling is real, then we should see a decline in the dollar
and the US stock market soon, and oil should resume its bull market, rising
in tandem with gold. However, if the Fed were to indicate that inflation is
in check, gold may turn down sharply in a "buy the rumor, sell the news" type
of event.
Gold
indeed declined sharply, from its high north of 544 to a low south of 500 in
Asian trading. But the mystery remains: both gold and the dollar declined together.
These two seem to have become best buddies of late, rising and falling together.
The meaning of this new relationship is yet to be revealed.
After the huge decline in gold, it is reasonable to expect at the very least
a decent dead
cat bounce or a consolidation and rise to new highs. The open gap on the
daily chart is ripe to be filled. One need only refer to the gold charts of 1979 and 1980 to
see how big declines are simply precursors to even bigger price rises. $500
is obviously key support for the bulls.
Oil
After a brief rally early in the week, oil declined with gold and the dollar
at the end of the week. As the chart shows, the week ended in (what else?)
an ambiguous spot, with daily prices resting at the top of oil's downtrend
from the Katrina highs. The bulls have a chance to bounce off this support
next week and start the next leg up in the rally, if they are going to. It
is possible that last week's declines were just the first pullback in a new
advance. On the other hand, further declines should confirm the resumption
of the downtrend that began in August.

The charts above should give you some idea as to what to expect in the coming
week with regard to prices in the markets discussed. We have clear levels of
support and resistance, but I have my own opinion as to the big picture that
is being drawn.
Part II: Nystrom's Two Cents
The lack of follow through in the stock market to the seemingly positive news
from the Fed is troubling. I expected a strong rally following the announcement,
carrying into the end of the year. This could still happen next week, but if
the markets fail to rally during this seasonally bullish time of year, the
odds increase that something fundamental is shifting under the surface. The
recovery is getting long in the tooth, and in many respects was quite anemic
to begin with in spite of the official numbers. The economy has suffered the
abuse of the catastrophic hurricanes and extremely high gas prices, not to
mention the current slowing of the housing market and rising interest rates.
A rally failure in the market and the flattening yield curve may be telling
us something important.
That important something could be a recession, or at the very least, an economic
slowdown on the horizon next year. While oil prices have come down substantially
- 20% since their August highs, and gas is down, too, the damage to the economy
may have already been done. In spite of recent declines in oil, it will cost
most people much more to heat their homes this winter. These added expenses
are like taxes that remove discretionary spending from the economy. And we
all know what powers the US economy: consumer spending. Significant energy
spikes in the past have nearly always led to recession, and there is little
reason to think this time should be any different. Should a slowdown occur
next year, it will arrive just in time to test the mettle of incoming Chairman
Bernake.
A significant decline in the stock market between now and the end of the year
would be a strong signal that recession is on the way. Falling oil and gold
prices would then make sense, because demand for oil would not be as high during
recession, and the threat of inflation is also reduced.
While declining, oil prices are still at historic highs. But high oil prices
and recessions aren't all bad. Because of all the hype of "peak oil," the search
is on for alternate energy sources and for ways to conserve and cherish what
we have. While these searches seemed to bear little fruit during the 1970's,
this time around technology seems to be moving much faster. Don't be surprised
to find significant alternatives to petroleum as a fuel source in the next
several years. It is no coincidence that the Japanese, so aware of their vulnerabilities
as a result of their lack of natural resources, are leaders in hybrid technology.
(Not to mention that their aging population has spurred them to become the
world's leader in robotics, in a bid help them solve their looming elder health
crisis). Recessions and constraints do wonders for innovation. Necessity, after
all, is the mother of invention.
Will we see the dollar get back to its contracyclical relationship with gold,
and other commodities? They rose together; now they're falling together. Something
has to give, but it remains to be seen just what. The historic imbalances we're
experiencing are likely to have unpredictable effects going forward, and this
will only be exacerbated by having a new guy on the job in the Fed Chairman's
seat.
As many a college gradate has found out only too painfully, life in the real
world is different from what it's like back at school! Bernanke himself has
stated, "[I]f making monetary policy is like driving a car, then the car is
one that has an unreliable speedometer, a foggy windshield, and a tendency
to respond unpredictably and with a delay to the accelerator or brake." Is
this supposed to inspire confidence during these uncertain times?! One thing
that we can be certain of, Bernanke will be no Greenspan!
But then again, Greenspan is no Greenspan either. In his famous 1967 essay, Gold
and Economic Freedom Greenspan railed against the "statists of all persuasions" and
their antagonism towards the gold standard:
In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings
from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. If
there were, the government would have to make its holding illegal, as was
done in the case of gold. If everyone decided, for example, to convert all
his bank deposits to silver or copper or any other good, and thereafter declined
to accept checks as payment for goods, bank deposits would lose their purchasing
power and government-created bank credit would be worthless as a claim on
goods. The financial policy of the welfare state requires that there be no
way for the owners of wealth to protect themselves.
Surprising not only because the words are (for once) crystal clear and easy
to understand, but because Greenspan has said in congressional testimony that
he stands by these views even today. (See
the Ron Paul - Alan Greenspan Transcripts)
The point of this is that we shouldn't expect to know Bernanke, based only
on his past writings. Yes, we all know the story about the helicopter and the
printing press. But what if the economy does not respond the way he expects
it to, based on his academic theories and models? Will he panic, and try something
new? Of course this feeds into the market's uncertainty.
Greenspan the gold bug turned out to be a closet inflationist - a "statist" that
he once expressed such disdain for. It just may be that helicopter Ben is actually
a closet goldbug, or something else. Don't laugh! Stranger, things have happened
in history, and don't forget, we are living history every day, one day at a
time.
To remember that there are still things we do not understand, just think back
to the 1970's for a moment. Back then, it was thought impossible that that
high inflation could be accompanied by high unemployment. There was no room
for such a possibility in the Keynesian economic models. It was so impossible
that there wasn't even a word for it. But sure enough, it happened, and a new
word was invented to describe it: Stagflation. I believe that we may be entering
a similar period - similar in that it will be different from what we have known
in the past. A fictional period in which nothing is what it seems, and strange,
unexpected things occur as truth interferes rudely with that fiction. Moving
forward will demand an open mind, not the certain expectation that future financial
relationships conform strictly to past behaviors, nor that the story of the
economy can be told with government statistics. Stay tuned as we watch history
unfold.
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