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One of my favorite cartoons of all time is that of a very scrawny mouse caught
out in an open field with a rather large hawk swooping down on it. There is
no place to run, no place to hide. All the mouse can do is face the hawk and
give him the bird, so to speak. The caption runs something like, "In the face
of total disaster the only appropriate response is utter defiance."
And while the economic data is not a total disaster, it has not been good
this week. Yet the response of investors everywhere is defiance, or at the
very least serious nonchalance.
Recession possibilities? "What recession? I spit on your talk of recession." They
continue to assume that things will turn out much better than merely OK. All
manner of investments are priced for perfection, perfection being defined as
growth slowing enough to take out inflation risk yet not enough to hurt the
ever upward rise of corporate profits. Goldilocks is the name of the game.
The stock market did close down somewhat today, yet as trading came to the
end of the session, it rose over 100 points from its low of the previous few
hours. All you can do is just marvel at the amazing capacity of investors to
embrace risk in the face of this week's economic data, which we will look at
in some detail today.
And after we dissect the parade of bad news, I will tell you why it is not
all that bad. I continue to believe we will see a recession next year, but
not a major one. Let's jump into the data.
Housing: The Roof Leak Gets Worse
Let's start with the outlook for housing. This week we had the housing data
for October. Permits and actual starts were down 28% and 27.4% (respectively)
from one year ago. New home sales fell for the first time in three months,
down 3.2% from the previous month, which the first chart below clearly shows.
Anecdotal evidence suggests that November will be even worse.

We are seeing inventories of homes for sale rise. And it could get worse,
as foreclosures in sub-prime loans are rising. The mortgage bond market is
showing some signs of strain. About 3.3% of sub-prime mortgages made THIS YEAR
are now delinquent by more then two months. Think about that for a second.
Borrowers or lenders could not see (or did not care about) problems coming
even a few months in advance.
While traditional mortgage defaults are not a problem as yet, delinquencies
in ARMs (adjustable rate mortgages) are becoming an issue. Yields on these
issues are rising even as overall mortgage rates are flat to down, because
investors are demanding higher returns to offset the higher risks that are
now becoming increasingly obvious.
Late payments are accelerating, after lenders began to require less documentation
for loans and financed more homes without down payments, New York-based Bear
Stearns & Co. analyst Gyan Sinha said in a Nov. 14 report.
About 38% of the most common sub-prime mortgages this year were for the full
value of the home, up from 31% in 2005 and 21 percent in 2004, according to
Bear Stearns. Sinha said 45.5% of the loans this year required "low documentation" of
borrower income and net worth, up from 44.5% in 2005 and 40.1% in 2004. The
data reflect "common methods of allowing first-time homebuyers to borrow more
than they can afford," Sinha said. (Bloomberg)
Putting even more pressure on sub-prime loans is the notice by Moody's and
Fitch that they are considering downgrading certain sub-prime bonds. (More
on the risk in reaching for yield below.)

Look at the rise in total homes for sale. The trend is not good. Paul Kasriel
of Northern Trust tells us that "Total construction outlays fell 1.0% in October,
after a downwardly revised 0.8% drop in the prior month. The 1.9% drop in residential
construction spending in October is the seventh consecutive monthly decline.
The main message is that the housing market recession's bottom is not here
yet."
When residential fixed investment drops 10%, we have had a recession in the
US. The chart below does not reflect this week's data, which will only make
it look worse. RFI is down by more than 10%.

Figure 2 - Graph showing changes in residential fixed investment (RFI) to GDP
since 1947 with recessions marked by cyan vertial bands. Chart by
Guerite Advisors.
Housing market recessions generally take years to work out, not months. This
one is going to get worse before it gets better, with a bottom probably not
coming until the middle of 2007. And as housing construction slows down, the
15% of the growth in the US economy that has been related to housing is going
to disappear. While many market commentators, looking for good news a few months
ago, cited nonresidential construction as performing well and adding to growth,
we have seen that sector drop for the last two consecutive months by over 1%.
Things will not grind to a halt, but they are going to slow down even more.
Manufacturing: The Gears Get Jammed
The ISM manufacturing survey came in with a much lower than expected 49.5.
When the index is below 50 that means that manufacturing is slowing. This breaks
a string of 42 straight months of expansion. There is a fairly strong connection
between the ISM index and GDP, and we could expect a slower GDP this quarter
and next. And if the ISM continues to show contraction, we would typically
expect a recession to follow. How likely is the ISM to show more contraction?
Norbert J. Ore, chairman of the Institute's manufacturing survey committee,
said the index will probably stay below 50 "for several months" as the housing
and auto industries bottom. It may then rise above 50, he said on a conference
call with reporters. And the data was down in many areas. New orders, production,
employment, order backlogs, and inventories were down. Prices were up.
Notice that last three-word sentence in the above paragraph: Prices were up.
October ISM data showed prices paid for raw materials down to the lowest level
since February of 2002, which had many economists telling us that this showed
inflation was getting under control. Economists expected November prices to
again be lower. They not only rose, but went from 47 last month to 53.5 this
month.
Bernanke and a gaggle of Fed governors warned this week that inflation is
still an issue. They are jawboning the markets with a constant barrage of speeches
suggesting they are not as likely to cut rates as quickly as the market now
thinks. Futures markets disagree and are now pricing in a 64% chance that the
Fed funds rate will be cut in March. Please remember that the futures market
does not get a vote in the Fed Open Market Committee.
This week we were also told that the third quarter was not as bad as the first
GDP data released last month suggested. GDP was revised upwards to 2.2% from
1.6%. This was mainly due to inventory buildup and rising imports being revised
higher. But higher inventories mean that manufacturers will slow production
in the future, which is just what the ISM numbers show. The market reaction
was to embrace the positive in the upward revision, which is that things are
not as bad as they seem, while ignoring the source of the revision, which is
not as positive. Recession? I spit on your recession.
Retail: It's All On Sale
Wal-Mart sales were down by 1%, with the company downgrading forecasts for
December. Tiffany sales and profits were up 23%. Barry Ritholtz did a 30-store
survey of discounting and sales and found that sales prices and promotions
are quite high. He tells us, "The most recent review of price cutting is that
they are both deep and broad. Our quick survey of both brick and mortar coupons
and online savings codes shows that discounting is ramping up dramatically.
This will likely pressure Q4 profit margins."
You can see his list at http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/files/discount_coupons.pdf.
As readers know, I have seven kids, and that means Christmas is not cheap.
It is a lot of fun, but definitely not cheap. Normally I just go to stores
and buy what I want toward the end of the season. I can tell you that this
year I am going to make an actual list of the items I want and have my assistant
look for the coupons and discounts. Every 10-20% helps.
Last week I wrote about the dollar dropping, and this week we watch it continue
to fall, with further deterioration coming with the weaker ISM numbers, as
investors think that the Fed will cut rates and make the dollar less attractive.
But not everyone is worried about a falling dollar.
This week, while staying at the Helmsley in New York (and sleeping on one
of the most uncomfortable mattresses I have experienced in years), I walked
into the bar on Sunday night to get a drink before going to bed. Looking around,
I noted there were 34 mostly middle-aged ladies in the bar and no men. Thinking
this was somewhat odd, I asked one of them if there was some sort of convention.
The pleasant accent that came back was from Ireland. It turns out that much
of the hotel was occupied by ladies from Great Britain and Ireland on a shopping
holiday.
They were positively giddy about the prices. "Everything is half what we would
pay in London or Dublin." They were hiring limos to go shopping so they would
have enough room for their packages on the way back.
And this does bring up a positive point. US companies which do business overseas
are getting a boost in sales and potential profits, although the costs of doing
business (and especially traveling) overseas are rising. In my own case, I
work with my London partners (Absolute Return Partners) to help European investors
find alternative investment portfolios. As is normal, we typically get a percentage
of assets under management. Almost all of the money is either in pounds or
euros. That means that my part of those fees is actually rising in dollar terms
(by an admittedly small percentage, as the dollar is down only about 5% over
the past few weeks), although the costs of staying in London and Europe are
rising as well, and by what seems like more than 5%. The pound is back to where
it was when George Soros famously decided to break the Bank of England back
in 1992. It is almost to $2.
(And since I complained about the Helmsley mattress, just so that you know
I am not entirely negative, the recent upgrades in mattresses and pillows by
Marriott is fantastic. Would that all hotels would follow their example.)
The Inverted Yield Curve Gets Steeper
The yield on the 10-year bond dropped to 4.43% as of the close of the markets
today, although it touched 4.4% right after the release of the ISM data. The
bond market is clearly expecting a slowdown, and the yield curve is signaling
an increasing chance of a recession. Look at the curve and bond rates below.
Notice that 3-month T-bills are 23 basis points lower than the Fed fund rate.

The Recession of 2007
An inverted yield curve is the best indicator of a recession coming within
at least four quarters. When we saw the yield curve invert in September of
2000, we had a recession about 7 months later. Look at where the yield curve
was in 2000 as compared to today:

If we had the same timing, that would suggest a recession beginning in the
second quarter of 2007. If the data is all that bad, I can hear you asking,
why will it take so long?
Because it takes time for things to slow down enough to actually put the US
economy into a recession. For instance, new home construction is slowing, but
builders must finish what they started. Real estate construction employment
is down but is nowhere near the bottom.
As I think this is a housing-led recession, we should realize that homeowners
are initially reluctant to drop prices. That takes some time. Further, it will
take some time for lower home prices to really register on consumers and thus
on consumer spending.
Corporate profits are slow to turn down, but they eventually do. As noted
above, there could be considerable pressure on profit margins this quarter,
which will mean more negative earnings surprises in the next quarter. And finally,
manufacturing and housing are significant parts of the economy, but consumer
spending is still the big dog. Consumer spending takes a while to actually
slow.
But that is why I think the recession will be relatively shallow, as much
of the economy is now in services, which are more resilient than manufacturing
or housing. Nonetheless, previous experience suggests it will have a psychological
impact.
We should be glad these things take time. We do not want to see markets or
economies drop precipitously.
But if I am right, the stock market is going to be under considerable pressure
next year. The average drop of the markets is about 40% before and in a recession.
There are reasons to think it will not drop that much this time, but it is
hard to imagine it not dropping by some significant amount. Dow 9,000 is a
real possibility, if not probability. Yet the market is unconcerned, with volatility
as measured by the VIX at close to all-time lows.
Further, credit spreads, the difference between government bonds and riskier
investments, are at levels that really cannot get much lower. Any pronounced
trouble and we could see some serious problems develop in the bond markets
in a flight to quality. I would not want to be long high-yield bonds or other
riskier bonds today without a serious and quick exit possibility if your "stops" are
hit.
Investors, in my mind, are not getting paid for the risks they are taking.
But that is because they do not think they are taking risks. They thought that
in the fall of 1999 and then again in the fall of 2000 as well. We would be
wise to pay attention.
Switzerland, Dubai, Denmark and Chile
As noted above, I was in New York earlier this week, meeting with some of
my international partners. Long-time reader Jerome Schonbachler of EFG (the
third-largest private bank in Switzerland) came over from Geneva. He and his
team are going to work with investors in Switzerland, the Middle East, and
most of Asia. I agreed to go to Switzerland and Dubai next year, although not
sure when. I am already going to Denmark in late August and South Africa next
month, and the partners at EFG which handle Latin America committed me to go
to Santiago sometime as well. The relatively slow traveling year I have been
having is about to change.
For those readers in the above-mentioned countries who have written to subscribe
to my Accredited Investor E-letter, I apologize for taking so long to finalize
the details so we can work with you. But we are (finally!) there.
If you are in the US, Europe, or almost anywhere in the world, and would like
to get my Accredited Investor Letter, you can subscribe at www.accreditedinvestor.ws.
I work with partner firms around the world to help accredited investors find
alternative investments like hedge funds, commodity funds, and other alternative
investments. If you would like to know more, please feel free to sign up and/or
write me. (In this regard, I am president and a registered representative of
Millennium Wave Securities, LLC. Member NASD.)
It is time to hit the send button, as the Maverick's game starts in about
an hour and I want to get there in time for the tip-off if I can, as well as
see my #2 daughter and her boyfriend a little. Have yourself a great week.
Your wondering how this will all play out analyst,
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