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Today, I wish to address the subject of bull and bear markets. This cyclical
movement in asset prices, investors will call, when prices are rising, "bull
markets" and when prices are declining "bear markets". On the surface this
seems simple to understand. The Dow goes up, it's a "bull market", the Dow
goes down it's a "bear market". But, in reality, bull and bear markets are
far more complex. Let's assume we have just five asset classes. Real estate,
stocks, bonds, cash, and gold (or a hard currency for which money supply growth
is kept at the rate of real GDP growth leading to stable prices). At present,
it is clear that the Fed is printing money. So, all asset prices except bonds
will rise in value. But, some asset prices will increase more than others.
Since October 2002, the Dow Jones has rallied in US dollar terms, but against
gold it has depreciated (see figure 1).
Figure 1: Dow Jones Industrial compared to Gold, 1996 - 2006

Source: www.decisionpoint.com
So, we can say that, yes, the Dow has been in a bull market since October
2002 in dollar terms, but it has been in a bear market in gold terms. This
is an important point to understand. In case we should experience continuous
monetary inflation, which could lift, over time, all asset prices such as stocks,
real estate, and commodities, some asset classes will increase more in value
than others. This means that some asset classes while rising in value could
deflate against other asset classes, such as happened with the Dow against
gold since year 2000. I have pointed out in earlier reports that since 2002,
all asset prices rose in value. But recently, some diverging performances emerged.
Bonds started to decline and seem to be on the verge of a significant long
term break down (see figure 2).
Figure 2: 20 Year Treasury Bond Fund (Leh) iShare (TLT), 2003
-2006

Source: www.decisionpoint.com
I have also mentioned in earlier reports that, in times of monetary and credit
inflation, such as we have now in the US, bonds are the worst possible long
term investment.
Another asset class, which has recently begun to depreciate against gold are
home prices (see figure 3)
Figure 3: US Home Prices in US dollars and in Gold

Source: The Value
Gold Report
As can be seen from figure 3, since last summer, home prices while only declining
moderately in dollar terms, have declined significantly in terms of gold. So,
whereas it took over 500 ounces of gold to buy a typical house in the US last
summer, now, it only takes around 380 ounces of gold. In other words, home
prices have declined over the last 9 months by 25% against the price of gold!
What I really want every reader to understand is that bull and bear markets
are extremely complex and an asset class, which seems to be in a bull market
may not necessary be in a bull market when compared to a hard currency such
as gold. In this respect the following is also important to consider.
Conventional wisdom has it that a true market bottom, which offers a once-in-a-lifetime
buying opportunities, only occurs after a devastating bear market. In this
context, the following severe market declines usually spring to investors'
minds: the 1929-1932 bear market in US equities; the collapse in the US bond
market between 1970 and 1981, when yields on 30-year US Treasuries rose from
6% in 1970 to 15.84% in September 1981 and sent bond prices tumbling; the 1973-1974
Hong Kong stock bear market, which brought the Hang Seng Index down by 90%
to its December 1974 low at 150; the great sugar bear market, which sent prices
down from 70 cents per pound in 1973 to 2.5 cents in 1985; or the Japanese
bear market post-1989, when the Nikkei dropped from 39,000 to less than 8,000
in April 2003. Moreover, major market lows are associated by investors with
total despair and panic among market participants, depression in the asset
class that was subjected to the bear market, bankruptcies in that sector, and
overwhelming negative sentiment.
But, as Russell Napier shows in his recently published book Anatomy of
the Bear -- Learning from Wall Street's Four Great Bottoms the key element
in undervaluation can also be a period of time "when the advance in stock
prices has failed to keep pace with the economic and earnings growth" within
the system (The book - an excellent read - is available from Amazon.com or
from CLSA directly. Contact victoria.tang@clsa.com).
Napier shows, for instance, that at the market low in 1921 the Dow Jones Industrial
Average was no higher than it had been in 1899 -- 22 years earlier -- while
nominal GDP had increased by 383% and real GDP by 88%! Similarly, by August
1982, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was no higher than it had been in April
1964, and was down by 70% in real or inflation-adjusted terms. According to
Napier, August 1982 represented the fourth-best buying opportunity for US equities
in the last century, aside from 1921, 1932, and 1949 (see figure 4). The
important message one might take from Napier's book is that it usually takes
a long time -- about 14 years -- for stocks to travel from overvaluation to
undervaluation, and that the nominal low in stock prices isn't always the best
time to buy equities. What is more important is the real level of equity
prices and various valuation parameters that indicate deep undervaluation.
Thus, while the Dow Jones bottomed out on December 9, 1974 at 570, and stood
at 769 at its August 9, 1982 low, in real terms the Dow had lost another 15%
since the 1974 low (see figure 4).
Figure 4: Dow Jones Industrial Average in Real Terms, 1884
- 2006

Source: Ron Griess, www.thechartstore.com
I am mentioning this because it is possible that the October 2002 lows for
the US stock indices will hold in nominal terms. However, as I have shown above,
the Dow has been declining in gold terms since 2000 (see figure 1) and is,
in my opinion, likely to continue to do so for many years. As a side, Russell
Napier has filled a void with Anatomy of the Bear, since, to my knowledge,
it is the first book to trace the swings from undervaluation to overvaluation
and back to undervaluation, of US stock prices over the past 100 years. The
book also provides much food for thought. If equity prices swing back and forth
between overvaluation and undervaluation, other asset markets such as real
estate, commodities, and bonds will do the same. Thus, I suppose that, in the
same way that US bonds were grossly overvalued in the 1940s, Japanese bonds
were grossly overvalued in June 2003, when the yield on JGBs had declined to
less than 0.50%. At the same time, the April 2003 low for the Nikkei Index
at less than 8,000 may have been the best buying opportunity in Japan of this
generation. In fact, the 2003 lows in Japanese equity prices and interest rates
have similarities to the 1940s' lows in US equities and interest rates. After
the 1940s, US stocks rallied into 1973, but bond prices collapsed into 1981.
Similarly, the stock market rally in Japan, which began in 2003, could last
for many years and be accompanied by a significant bear market in Japanese
bonds, which would drive local institutions and Japanese households out of
their overweight bond and cash positions, which benefited during the 1990s'
deflation, and into equities and real estate. Moreover, if, as Napier explains,
1921, 1932, 1949, and 1982 provided outstanding buying opportunities for achieving
subsequent high returns that tended to last for a minimum of eight years (1921-1929),
but usually for much longer (1982-2000), then I suppose that -- taking the
late April 2003 low of Japanese equities as a generational low -- the bull
market in Japanese equities could easily last until at least 2010 or even longer,
and in the process significantly outperform US equities.
Another lesson from Napier's book could very well be that other Asian equity
markets, relative to other assets, remain grossly undervalued despite their
post-1998 recovery. After all, many Asian stock markets, whether in US dollar
terms or in real terms, are still down by more than 50% from the highs reached
between 1990 and 1994.
Lastly, if, as Napier outlines, it takes about 14 years for equities to make
the journey from overvaluation to undervaluation, the severity of the commodities
bear market from 1980 to the turn of the millennium -- about 20 years -- is
evident. Put into the proper perspective, in real terms (inflation-adjusted)
commodity prices were, in the 1998-2001 period, at the lowest level in the
history of capitalism (see Figure 5). And, although I expect some industrial
commodity prices will suffer from a significant phase of profit taking in 2006,
given the fact that commodity bull markets tend to last anywhere from 20 to
30 years, we may just be at the beginning of an extended rise in the price
of natural resources.
Figure 5: Real Raw Industrial Prices, 1800 -2006

Source: The Bank Credit Analyst
There is another point I should like to add to Russell Napier's excellent
study, which I strongly recommend investors to read. In a world of rapid monetary
and credit expansion, an undervaluation of the Dow Jones might occur, with
a Dow Jones at 36,000, 40,000, or 100,000 or more -- a stock price level that
was predicted by several analysts in 1999. How so?
At present, the Dow is at around 11,000 and the price of gold is at $590.
Let us assume that, as a result of Mr. Bernanke's more efficient paper money
printing machine (incidentally, a machine that has been in operation since
the formation of the Federal Reserve Board in 1913 and which accounts for the
dollar's 92% loss in purchasing power since then), the Dow Jones rises to 36,000
in the next few years. (It won't take another 100 years for the US dollar to
lose another 92% of its purchasing power; more likely is 10 to 20 years.) If
this were the case, the price of gold could rise from $550 to $3,600, which
would bring down the Dow/gold ratio from currently about 19 to 10; or, in an
extreme case, gold could rise to $36,000, which would bring down the Dow/gold
ratio to only 1 (as was the case in 1932 and in 1980).
Thus, in nominal terms, the Dow would have trebled from the present level,
but lost significantly in real terms -- a possibility that I regard as very
likely. In this respect, we shouldn't forget that during the German hyperinflation
period between 1919 and 1923, share prices rose sharply in paper mark terms
but tumbled in dollar terms (then a strong currency), because the rate of the
paper mark depreciation against the US dollar exceeded the local share appreciation.
Thus, by October 1922, an index of shares in local paper mark terms had increased
from 100 in 1918 to 171 billion, while in dollar terms the same index had dropped
from 100 to 2.72! Needless to say, the 1918-1923 German hyperinflation was
devastating for paper mark cash and bond holders.
Now, I am not necessarily predicting that we shall soon experience hyperinflation
rates in the US, but when the Dow Jones and the US housing market will decline
by 10%, it is very probable that Mr. Bernanke will put the money printing presses
into high gear in order to fight asset deflation. So, US asset prices including
homes, stocks and bonds could depreciate in real terms and against precious
metals.
Still, as I indicated last month, aside from bonds, all stock and commodity
markets seem to be now overbought and vulnerable to a sharp correction. In
fact, whereas I am extremely negative about bonds in the long term, I believe
that for the next three months or so, bonds could actually outperform equities
and also commodities. From figure 6, we can see that equities have formed
a rising wedge against bonds since 2005. More often than not, a rising wedge
leads to a sharp downside reversals. This would not necessarily imply that
bond prices will rally much, but the wedge might be broken on the downside
by a sharp downturn in equities.
Figure 6: Global Stocks relative to Global Bonds, 2005 - 2006

Source: Rolf Bertschi, www.credit-suisse.com/techresearch
For this reason, my advice remains to be extremely defensive. Most asset markets
including stocks and commodities are extremely overbought, and there is far
too much speculation in all investment markets. Therefore, severe downside
volatility, also in precious metals, should not be surprising in the period
directly ahead.
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