1. Happy Holidays
First off, Merry Christmas, Happy Chanukah, and Joyful Holidays to all of
you. I would like to say thank you to all of you for all of the support that
you've given me this year. Remember to give thanks for everything you have
during this holiday season, and send up a prayer for those who are less fortunate.
Because I am a trader, I tend to write about money, the markets and other such
worldly things. But at the end of the day, I know that money is just an illusion
- bits of paper that we play with and trade for, but that don't make a lick
of difference in the things that truly matter. As I always like to say, the
best things in life are free, and there is no amount of money that can buy
them.
2. 2006: To Bull or Not to Bull
If there is anything that I have learned in my years of watching the market,
it is that anything can happen! So that we're not taken by surprise, I'd like
to take a look at two opposing viewpoints on the stock market and the economy
in 2006 and beyond. The bullish viewpoint, held by Harry Dent (read his free
forecast) among others, holds that we're on the brink of a new bull market
that could bring the Dow up to 40,000 (literally) in the next several years.
The bearish viewpoint, most prominently held by Robert
Prechter, holds the exact opposite: that we're on the brink of a deflationary
depression that will ultimate bring the Dow down to 400 or below! Literally.
Now, you may be a bull or a bear and have already made up your mind about
where the stock market is going. But I urge you to keep an open mind and take
a look at both arguments. My generally bearish outlook made me laugh at the
idea of Dow 40,000 until I actually read the argument. Considering everything,
including the fact that Helicopter Ben will be sitting in the Fed Chairman's
seat for the next several years, Dow 40,000 is not an impossibility. The case
for deflationary depression is based on cycles and extremes of valuation. Today
the market is so historically overvalued, and global financial imbalances (read:
American debts and deficts) are so large that a correction is all but inevitable.
So without further ado, the arguments!
2.1 The Case for Deflationary Depression
Robert Prechter's argument, based on the Elliott
Wave Principle, is that we are on the brink of a major deflationary depression.
That's depression with a capital D. The public is so heavily leveraged while
at the same time invested in the equity and housing markets, that any decline
will have a devastating impact on wealth, further impacting the economy and
leading to a downward spiral into depression.
It is not difficult to imagine a recession next year, for a number of reasons.
High energy prices have been a drag on the economy, confidence is eroding,
the stock market has been struggling to make a new high, and we have a flattening
(if not already inverted) yield curve. People and businesses see these signs
and they begin to cut back on spending, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy.
And because all of the economy's actors - consumers, businesses and the government
as well - are so deep in debt, there is no margin for error. What starts out
as a small recession could slip quickly into a major depression.
As the American economy has matured, it has transformed from a manufacturing
base to a finance base. For example, companies that were once America's great
manufacturers - Ford and GM - are on the brink of bankruptcy. General Electric,
another of America's great corporations has managed to remain prosperous by
transforming itself into a finance company whose main function is the manipulation
of credit and derivatives. This has worked out well during the rising wave
from 1982 until 2000, but when the financial tide shifts, GE will face the
same difficulties as GM and Ford, if not worse.
Banks and financial companies remain the most profitable today, but think
of where their money has come from: fees - mortgage fees, fees for refinancing
homes, and penalty fees. In the case of banks, ATM fees are up to $2.50 per
transaction now! On a $20 withdrawal, that is over 10% in fees. A bounced check
costs $20, a late fee on a credit card is $35. These are highly profitable
but they are also extremely parasitic on the ‘customers' they are supposed
to be serving. Eventually they will bleed their victims dry - many have already
been forced into bankruptcy. As the number of victims increases, and debt -
which is a counter party's asset - is eliminated, it will contribute to deflation.
Deflation means a reduction in the money supply. Today, the money supply is
based completely on debt. Most everyone has spent money they don't have - this
is why they have big credit card bills, automobile loans and big, unpaid mortgages.
The result of all this debt is higher prices for everything. Prices are so
high that it is difficult to afford anything without going into debt. More
money chasing the same amount of goods leads to higher prices.
At the same time, some things have come down in price. For example, I saw
a brand new DVD player on sale for $19.00 at the corner drugstore! This is
unbelievably cheap. How can this be, if there is so much excess debt money
floating around? The reason is that for certain things there is so much excess
supply - a lot of borrowed money also went into building production capacity
in China and elsewhere. This money needs to be paid back, which means there
is a lot of price competition for manufactured goods, which drives prices down.
This is also deflationary.
Depressions occur when the economy contracts severely, which happens when
there is a sharp decline in the demand for goods and services. A recession
next year could easily lead to such a depression as people cut back on excess
spending to meet the payments that really matter: the mortgage. Many families
require two income earners to meet all the monthly expenses. If one income
is eliminated, that means a lot of discretionary spending will be cut. Ebay
and Craigslist do a booming business as unnecessary goods go up for sale. Pretty
soon, everything is up for sale, from the third car, to the second car, then
to the vacation house, the stocks and bonds (that are already crashing) - all
in an effort to salvage value.
A deflation such as this contracts the total supply of money and credit. When
that happens, the nominal prices for virtually everything, from stocks to bonds
to commodities, go down. Even consumer goods go down in price in a severe deflation.
People assume the Fed can save the day by lowering interest rates, but just
as you can lead a horse to water but cannot make him drink, you can offer a
man a loan, but you cannot make him borrow and spend. In such a pessimistic
environment as a depression, no one will want to come near a loan. They will
only want to pay back what they already owe (and are woefully behind on). Prechter
believes that we're facing such a possibility today.

Charts
produced with Track'N Trade Pro
The stock market peaked in 2000, bottomed two years later, has been rallying
for three years. All of this could simply be viewed as a huge, slow motion dead
cat bounce. That being the case, the next leg in the decline, the violent
third wave in Elliott
Wave terminology, could be on the way next year.
2.2 The Case for the Next Bubble Boom
In some respects, Harry Dent is just as pessimistic as Robert Prechter. It's
just that he doesn't expect the next depression (yes, that is still depression
with a D) to start until sometime after 2010. In the meantime, he believes
we're likely to see a powerful surge that takes the Dow up to 40,000 before
then. Dent claims that we are in a continuing bubble boom that did not end
with the 2000 - 2002 crash in stocks anymore than it did with the 1987 crash.
Rather than being a huge dead cat bounce, the market has been forming a base
for the last 16 months that will lead to the mother of all rallies.

Charts
produced with Track'N Trade Pro
Baby boomers have always been the primary force driving market movements in
the US economy, and there is still no end in sight to this pattern. One of
their primary concerns is retirement, which is causing them to seek sources
of growth for their investments. As a result, they drove the stock market to
historic highs in 2000. When this boom ended, they shifted their investments
to housing, driving this sector to historic highs as well. Now that this sector
is topping, they are looking for the next hot sector in which to grow their
money. This is another reason that we've seen mini bubbles in commodities such
as oil and gold recently - it is this hot, baby-boom money looking for a return.
So, where is the next hot market? Dent predicts that the stock market will
rise once again, and the long sideways correction we've seen from 2003 to present
is similar to the basing pattern that preceded the huge stock market rallies
from 1925 - 1929 as well as from 1995 - 2000. In spite of all the bad news
to hit the economy - from 911, the Iraq War, the most corrupt and manipulative
presidential administration since Nixon's, the terrible hurricanes, and an
oil shock - the market has held its own. This is a good sign for future gains.
Both previous rallies mentioned above, in the 1920's and the 1990's, were
technology driven. There were brand new technologies that spurred innovation,
drove good deflation, and produced must have items for consumers. Harry Dent
further notes that the 1925 - 1929 boom came a decade after a big boom from
1915 - 1919 when automobiles were first popularized. 1925 - 1929 built upon
and extended that earlier boom. By extension he suggests that although 1995-1999
looked like the mother of all booms, there is still a bigger one yet waiting
in the wings (the mother of the mother of all booms). This one will build substantially
upon the information and communications technologies (ICT) infrastructure --
computers, cell phones and the internet -- that has been put in place over
the last decade.
3. Nystrom's Two Cents
Imagining the Dow at 40,000 is almost as difficult as imagining it back at
400. Both worlds would be radically different from the world we live in today.
A Dow 400 world would be a deflationary world, where the cost of everyday
goods would also have fallen dramatically. The value of a dollar would therefore
be much greater than it is today. In such a world, 25 cents might get you a
burger, shake and fries, and a movie to boot (as it once did), instead of the
$25.00 it would cost you today. But few people would be able to afford it.
It would be a world with mass unemployment, hunger and social strife. It is
often forgotten that the very survival of the United States was put into question
during the Great Depression of the 1930's because of the social unrest.
On the other hand, a Dow 40,000 world would most likely be highly inflationary.
Not only would the Dow be four times higher, but the price of bread, milk and
eggs would likely be as well. As I mentioned, everyone expects Chairman Bernanke
to have an inflationary impact on the economy, and this may be his legacy.
However, Dow 40,000 would also not likely be possible without the economic
fundamentals to support it. What kind of new technologies could possibly cause
such a boom?
I remember when Netscape came public in August of 1995. I was a stockbroker,
and nobody in our office knew exactly what Netscape was or what it did, but
we could all tell by its opening price that it was something big! Initially
priced at $28, it shot to a high of $75 on the same day of its IPO! It had
the biggest opening-day jump in history, eclipsing the last record holder,
Boston Chicken, by a huge margin. (There was something simple that everyone
could understand: Chicken.) Netscape was something entirely new, and it was
like seeing the first shooting star in a meteor shower. First there was one,
then there were a few others that soon followed - Spyglass and Uunet come to
mind - that were also working on internet infrastrucure. Then came a slew of
shooting stars that tried to capitalize on that infrastructure. Some stuck
around: Amazon, Yahoo, Ebay come to mind - others didn't: Webvan, Pets.com,
Kozmo.com (remember them?) and a slew of others. The question that remains:
Is the technology meteor shower over? Is this all we get before the deflationary
depression begins? Or was that just the first wave of some Amazing technologies
that are still to come and propel the market higher? What is Google -- the
last shooting star we'll see, or the first of many more innovative companies
to come?
I would love to hear what all of you think about this question. You can post
your comments directly to my website here: 2006
and Beyond: Boom or Bust? Alternately, you can email
me directly.
I have my own thoughts on the subject, but I will save them until next week
for my 2006 year outlook. If you would like to be notified immediately when
I publish them, please
subscribe here. Until then, Happy Holidays to you all.
References:
Elliott Wave International
Harry Dent
Track'N
Trade Pro Charting Software