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One month ago, I pointed out that investors were euphoric about buying everything.
The same still applies as of today. Equity investors, commodity traders, property
investors, art buyers and even bond fund managers are all bullish about the
one or the other asset class. From figure 1, we can see that mutual fund cash
positions in the US have declined to a record low and that such low readings
have, in the past, preceded serious market corrections or bear markets.
Figure 1: US Equity Mutual Fund Cash Positions, 1960 - 2005

Source: www.elliottwave.com
Moreover, from the figure below we can also see that the US stock market has
become technically over-bought and that such over-bought conditions have usually
been followed by meaningful stock market corrections (see figure 2).
Figure 2: Overbought - Oversold Index 2005-2006

Source: www.thechartstore.com
Another indicator, which is negative for the US stock market, is that foreigners
are once again buying US equities at an almost record clip (see figure 3)
Figure 3: Foreign Buying of US Equities

Source: www.elliottwave.com
As is the case for every stock market around the world, heavy buying by foreigners
occurs usually near market tops, while foreign selling has always occurred
very close to market lows such as we had in late 1998, in October 2002, and
March 2003 (see figure 2). So, if we combine the over-bought condition of the
stock market, investors' sentiment high optimism, equity mutual funds' low
cash positions, and also heavy foreign buying, we have all the ingredients
for a stock market correction in the US getting underway very shortly.
There are two questions that preoccupy investors. What might the catalyst
for such a correction be and when such a correction comes, which assets will
decline the most and which ones will show resilience. In particular, investors
in emerging stock markets are concerned that if the US stock market sold off,
emerging stock markets would decline even more, as has always been the case
in the past. I concede that some emerging markets look extended ( Lebanon is
up 45% so far in 2006 and Russia has already climbed by almost 20%). However,
there is a fundamental difference between the past and the current environment
because today, it is not the US or Europe, which are financing economic development
in emerging economies. Quite on the contrary! In an ironic twist of economic
history, today, the poor countries - largely the ones in Asia - are the economies
which are financing the US with their large current account surpluses (see
figure 4).
Figure 4: Emerging Economies Reliance on Foreign Capital,
1970 - 2005

Source: Bridgewater Associates
As we can see from figure 4, emerging economies were highly dependent on foreign
capital in the late seventies and just prior to the Asian Crisis in 1997, but
currently they are accumulating monetary reserves with their current account
surpluses amounting to more than 3% of their GDP. As a result, my bet would
be that emerging markets as an asset class may be less vulnerable than the
US market should a sharp stock market correction unfold. I concede, however,
that some emerging markets, which have experienced vertical price increases
recently, are so over-extended that they could easily drop more than the US
market, which has been an under-performer over the last 18 months. But, should
such a sharp correction unfold, I would feel more comfortable to add to positions
in emerging economies than in the US as I still maintain that over the next
five to ten years emerging stock markets will outperform the US. As to the
catalyst that will trigger the correction, I suppose that inflationary pressures
may necessitate more additional interest rate increases than the market now
expects. Therefore, rising interest rates and declining bond prices could at
some point weight on all asset markets. But it does not really matter what
the catalyst will be. When all asset markets are as extended as they are now
it does not take much for a vicious sell-off to get underway. Still, I maintain
that gold and other precious metals will continue to out-perform financial
assets. Wherever, you may think the Dow will rise or decline my view is that
we shall, eventually, be able to buy one Dow Jones Industrial Average with
between just one and five ounces of gold (see figure 5).
Figure 5: Dow/Gold Ratio, 1900 - 2005

Source: www.sharelynx.com
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Regards,
Marc Faber
GloomBoomDoom.com
Dr Marc Faber is editor of the Gloom
Boom & Doom Report and the author of "Tomorrows
Gold".
Dr Faber is a contrarian. To be a good contrarian, you
need to know what you are contrary about. It helps to be a world class economic
historian, to have been a trader and managing director of Drexel Burnham Lambert
when the firm was the junk bond king of Wall Street, to have lived in Hong
Kong for a quarter of a century, and to have a contact book crammed with the
home numbers of many of the movers and shakers in the financial world.
Famous for his approach to investing, Marc Faber does not
run with the bulls or bait the bears but steers his own course through the
maelstrom of international finance markets. In 1987 he warned his clients to
cash out before Black Monday on Wall Street. He made them handsome profits
by forecasting the burst in the Japanese Bubble in 1990. He correctly predicted
the collapse in US gaming stocks in 1993; and he foresaw the Asia-Pacific financial
crisis of 1997/98 and the resulting global volatility.
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