|
Yes, boring old bonds. While the Dow 12,000 siren song calls the public to
contemplate all those perceived riches they are missing out on, and gold bugs
struggle with their relic's labored activity down in the corrective dumps,
the resource sectors are flashing "on sale" signs (for long term holders),
and the bears try to outlast their Autumn Armageddon, we simply go back to
the heart of the matter; the bond market. The Fed watches the interplay between
their policy and inflation expectations very closely, so why shouldn't we?
On Friday I wrote "The Fed will decide nothing" and what I meant was the bond
market will decide policy for them. Ours is a system of chronic inflation.
That is our growth fundamental. This is beyond dispute as most of the dollar's
former value has gone to money heaven and most major global currencies are
on the same path. In a fiat system, it is growth in liquidity that spurs economic
growth at the expense of currencies. It is as simple as that. But there are
periods where we pretend to hate inflation and it is an enemy that must be
eradicated. We are in one of those periods. Remember, inflation is not the
recent $80 oil or $3+ gas. It is not your tuition, food and housing prices
rising. Inflation is the liquidity in the system, from various money aggregates,
that chases those prices higher. The headlines on the oil price and housing
certainly have helped to tamp down inflation expectations.
As far as asset allocation goes, it is important to continually watch the
relationship between the "free" bond market and the Fed controlled short end.
The $TNX and the rising inflation expectations it implied caused the Fed to
remain firm on its policy. We have now had the predictable decline in rates
(remember our target was 4.6% - 4.8% as rates were touching 5.2% and inflation
remained the primary headline) but even as oil, housing and gold remain under
control, the bond market is getting edgy.


The $TNX is bearing out what I see in industry at the moment; there are a
lot of excess dollars chasing assets. First and foremost commercial real estate,
but also productive business enterprises. The smarter of the money
in this stagnant liquidity pool is seeking to transform itself into something
healthy. The dumber money is just playing in the casino (hot stock sectors).
The yield curve ($TNX/$IRX ratio) appears to be trying to make a bottom, but
we have said that before. At this time it looks like there is a bit of a rounding
bottom trying to happen along with longer term (all of 2006) and short term
(from August) bullish divergence in play on RSI, MACD and other indicators
as well. The implications are critical and must be correctly interpreted in
order to allocate investments in alignment with macro trends. If the curve
turns up in a sustained manner, it will imply that the Fed is becoming more
dovish in relation to the bond market's pricing of debt. Note that this
may not mean the Fed is done raising rates, but a rising curve would mean the
Fed is falling behind the curve. Ten year rates may have seen their
highs (one could envision a double top above 5%), but their relationship with
Fed policy very likely hasn't. If that is the case, this is considered a very
beneficial environment for gold and perhaps a bit later, commodities and resources.
As far as general stocks go, they are having their day in the sun. This cannot
be denied. Corporations are generally doing quite well based on the macro events
to date. While I don't necessarily expect the stock market to crash any time
soon, I do expect it to go back to it's secular under-performance when measured
in things of value, like the various resource sectors. For reference, here
is the most recent Dow-Gold ratio chart I worked up on the blog yesterday.

Stock and ETF symbols relevant to this analysis include SHY, IEF, TLT, GLD
and DIA.
|
Gary Tanashian
http://www.biiwii.com/
Disclaimer: biiwii.com does not recommend that any trading or investment positions
be taken based on views expressed on this site. If you speculate or invest
it is suggested that you consult a financial advisor qualified in your area
of interest.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Gary Tanashian
Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2008
SafeHaven.com
« BullionVault.com
-- Buy gold online - quickly, safely and at low prices »
« Honest Money:
A History of U.S. Gold & Silver Currency -- by Douglas V. Gnazzo »
« Opinions expressed at SafeHaven are those of the
individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of SafeHaven
or its management. Articles are available via RSS/XML. Please
visit RSSHelp for instructions. »
|