|
Offering an annual forecast has to be one of the biggest mug's games on both
Wall Street and Bay Street. That doesn't prevent many from trying. At least
nobody claims to have a crystal ball or mystic powers. We certainly don't.
But if there is one thing we have learned about technical analysis, it is that
patterns repeat themselves. And that forms the essence of our forecasts.
W.D. Gann, the famed technical analyst of the early 20th century, showed that
he could accurately determine the points at which stocks or commodities should
rise or fall within a given time. We confess we are not experts on W.D. Gann.
But we do follow Gann experts such as Michael Jenkins of Stock Cycles Forecast (www.stockcyclesforecast.com).
So his thinking does creep into our writings and we certainly appreciate what
we have learned from Mr. Jenkins. But we also read a lot of other material
and try to maintain a broad perspective. And it is that perspective that we
hope forms the basis of our writings.
Market performance in 2006 has exceeded most forecasts. After the rather flat
year of 2005, expectations were not high for 2006 being much better, although
Abby Joseph Cohen of Goldman Sachs predicted 1,400 for the S&P 500 (and
she was pretty close).
In May the market started to fall, raising the spectre that the four-year
presidential cycle of market troughs was getting under way. Even after the
market rallied back in July, the expectation was that if the four-year trough
was indeed commencing, the rally would not last. We cited the 60-year cycle
that showed a secondary top in August following a major top in May 1946, and
then a sharp collapse into October. It didn't happen this time.
The Record to Date 2006 - To December 15, 2006
| Dow Jones Industrials - up 16.1% |
S&P 500 - up 15.2% |
NASDAQ - up 11.4% |
Russell 3000 - up 14.4% |
TSX Composite - up 14.1% |
| Tokyo Nikkei Dow - up 5% |
London FTSE - up 11.4% |
German DAX - up 21.8% |
Hong Kong Hang Seng - up 28.5% |
Paris CAC 40 - up 17.5% |
| Oil - up 3.9% |
Natural Gas - down 29% |
AMEX Oil Index (XOI) - up 24.4% |
TSX Energy Index - up 3.2% |
|
| Gold - up 18.5% |
Silver - up 48.3% |
Gold Bugs (HUI) - up 22.5% |
TSX Gold Index - up 27.5% |
US Dollar Index - down 7.5% |
| Gold in Cdn$ - up 18.3% |
Gold in Euros - up 7.6% |
Gold in Yen - up 23.1% |
US 10 Year Treasuries - up 5.3% |
Fed Funds - up 26% |
| US CPI - up 3% (Oct) |
M2 - up 4.0% (Oct) |
US Government Debt - up 8.3% (Nov) |
Household Debt - up 6.6% (Q3) |
Business Debt - up 6.5% (Q3) |
Instead the bulls have continued to follow the 1936 bull market that just
kept going up into year end with barely a pause. Last year we noted "So
1936 might be worth a look given the continued flow with the 1930's cycle (70
years)". In 1936 the mid-year pause occurred in April/May and after
that it was almost straight up into year end. Indeed, after a brief pause in
December 1936 the market continued its amazing rise into early March 1937.
After that it was lights out for five years as the 1937-38 bear market wiped
out over 50 per cent of market values, and despite some rolling around over
the next few years the final bottom did not occur until 1942.
Almost forgotten in the market euphoria since last July is that the energy,
precious metals, and metals and mining sectors have also had a good year. They
too topped in April/May along with the broad market but that has been largely
it ever since, except for the metals and mining sector that just kept going
up. The TSX Metals & Mining sector was showing a spectacular 72.9 per cent
gain at December 15. While the TSX Energy Index lagged at +3.2 per cent on
the same date, its bigger US cousin the XOI Index was up a sharp 24.4 per cent
despite Natural Gas struggling all year (down 29 per cent). Silver was also
a big performer. up 48.3 per cent. The Gold Bugs Index gained 22.5 per cent
and the TSX Gold Index 27.5 per cent.
The gains in the commodity sectors overwhelm the gains in the broader market,
but since they have been generally down since topping in April/May it has felt
as if they were poor performers this past year. Not so. Since 2000 the commodity,
energy and precious metals sectors have solidly outperformed the broad market.
The S&P 500 is still about eight per cent under its highs of 2000 and the
NASDAQ has not recouped even 38.2 per cent of its huge 2000-02 collapse. The
Dow Jones Industrials has seen new highs but it has been a lonely walk.
The seventh year of the decade has a decidedly mixed record. The record for
the Dow Jones Industrials since inception is a dead heat of six up and six
down.
It doesn't particularly help us if the prior year (ending in 6) was an up
year or a down year. When years ending in 6 were up (seven times), the year
ending in 7 was down four times and up three times, including the past two.
When years ending in 6 were down (five times) the year ending in 7 was up three
times and down twice (and down big, both times).
The coming year will be the third year of George W. Bush's second semester.
There were eight other presidents who enjoyed second terms since the inception
of the Dow Jones Industrials. Here the record clearly favours the bulls with
six up and two down. It is also a pre-election year and the general record
for the market shows that the first 6-7 months tend to outperform. Typically
the incumbent President is opening up the spending spigots in order to stimulate
the economy in the prior year to the election to help increase the odds of
re-election.
With the record of years ending in 7 a dead heat, following an up year in
6 slightly favouring the bears, the third year of a second-term president favouring
the bulls, and a the pre-election year also favouring the bulls we have to
turn to our key cycles to look for a hint of what is to come for 2007.
Michael Jenkins has always emphasized the importance of the 100-year cycle.
One hundred years ago we had the San Francisco earthquake (April 1906) and
a financial panic known as the "poor man's panic" in 1907. This time, a few
months earlier, we had the New Orleans hurricane disaster in September 2005.
The housing market did not begin its collapse until several months later. With
housing supply clearly exceeding demand we do not believe the bottom has been
seen. The economic fall out is being delayed and 2007 might soon bear the brunt
of that collapse.
Thirty years after 1907 came the 1937 collapse that wiped out most of the
1932-33 advance. And 30 years ago, in 1977, the market collapsed on the back
of huge (for those days) trade deficits, a sharply falling US dollar and rising
interest rates.
Ninety years ago, in 1917, WW1 was raging. The USA entered the war in April
1917. In May the draft started and the market kept falling all year long. Now
we are hearing that they are talking about increasing troop numbers in Iraq
instead of withdrawing and we read they are preparing plans for a military
draft. We are reminded that US warships continue to gather in the Persian Gulf,
offshore from Iran. The US has been in a bellicose, off-and-on spitting match
for years over Iran's nuclear program, most recently with its volatile President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
One of the bullish cases for the market in 2007 is the master 60-year cycle
that saw a small up year in 1947. But that followed a down year in 1946. The
10-year cycle is also encouraging, as 1997 was a very sharp up year. But the
10-year Japanese cycle is very negative as the Tokyo Nikkei Dow collapsed in
1997-98 following an up year in 1996.
The four-year presidential cycle that was due to bottom in 2006 also has an
interesting history. On occasions it has not worked, as we have seen in 2006.
The last time we stretched out was 1982-87 where the market kept rising into
1987 before the famous stock market crash that October. The 1932-37 market
also stretched further than expected. Of course, what followed was a huge collapse
in 1937-38. We also found that the market stretched in 1912-17 and the 1917
collapse was quite vicious. The lesson seems to be that while we can get through
the fourth year without making our trough, we do not survive the fifth year
without paying for it.
We remind everyone that we still have our major long-term cycles in play.
The cycles outlined by Ray Merriman of MMA Cycles Report (www.mmacycles.com)
include a 90-year cycle and a 72-year cycle that in turn sub-divide into 36-year
and 18-year cycles. He believes both the 90-year and 72-year cycles bottomed
at the time of the Great Depression in 1932. If so, then the 72-year cycle
low is due 2004 +/- 12 years and the 90-year cycle is due 2022 +/- 15 years.
The two overlap from roughly 2007 to 2016, so we are just entering that time
period now.
The 36-year cycle last bottomed in 1974 and has a range of 30-42 years. The
current 36-year cycle low is due during 2004-16. Finally, an 18-year cycle
low with a cycle range of 15-21 years last occurred in 1987. It is due to unfold
2002-08, so it is possible that one bottomed in 2002. The next one would be
due between 2017 and 2023, which is also the outer range of the 90-year cycle.
Our presidential four-year cycle falls within the context of the 18-year cycle,
where Merriman notes there are usually five of them. As we noted, the current
one was due in 2006 but the cycle does have an observed range of 36-56 months.
The low therefore could occur as late as June 2007.
It is possible that the drop seen into June/July 2006 was the four-year cycle
low. If so, it had to have been one of the most shallow on record. The drop
on the S&P 500 was only eight per cent. The 1998 four-year cycle low drop,
for example, was 21.6 per cent. But the 1994 four-year cycle low fall was only
about 10 per cent, so it is possible. Given the low volatility as measured
by the VIX indicator and the current high bullish consensus factor, we doubt
that the low has occurred. But the thought can not be dismissed and we recognize
that the low volatility (as measured by the VIX) can continue for some time.
There is also the well-known Kondratieff Wave that has an observed range of
50-60 years. The consensus last bottom for the previous Kondratieff Wave was
1949, so once again we are in the range for its trough. The Kondratieff Wave
has generally approximated to the life span of a man, and with man living longer,
it is possible that this one could extend and fit more with the longer 72-year
and 90-year year cycles.


Ten-Year Stock Market Cycle
Annual % Change in the Dow Jones Industrials Average
Year of Decade
| decades |
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
4th |
5th |
6th |
7th |
8th |
9th |
10th |
| 1881-90 |
3.0 |
-2.9 |
-6.5 |
-18.8 |
20.1 |
12.4 |
-8.4 |
4.8 |
5.5 |
-14.1 |
| 1891-00 |
17.6 |
-6.6 |
-24.6 |
-0.6 |
2.3 |
-1.7 |
21.3 |
22.5 |
9.2 |
7.0 |
| 1901-10 |
-8.7 |
-0.4 |
-23.6 |
41.7 |
38.2 |
-1.9 |
-37.7 |
46.6 |
15.0 |
-17.9 |
| 1911-20 |
0.4 |
7.6 |
-10.3 |
-5.4 |
81.7 |
-4.2 |
-21.7 |
10.5 |
30.5 |
-32.9 |
| 1921-30 |
12.7 |
21.7 |
-3.3 |
26.2 |
30.0 |
0.3 |
28.8 |
48.2 |
-17.2 |
-33.8 |
| 1931-40 |
-52.7 |
-23.1 |
66.7 |
4.1 |
38.5 |
24.8 |
-32.8 |
28.1 |
-2.9 |
-12.7 |
| 1941-50 |
-15.4 |
7.6 |
13.8 |
12.1 |
26.6 |
-8.1 |
2.2 |
-2.1 |
12.9 |
17.6 |
| 1951-60 |
14.4 |
8.4 |
-3.8 |
44.0 |
20.8 |
2.3 |
-12.8 |
34.0 |
16.4 |
-9.3 |
| 1961-70 |
18.7 |
-10.8 |
17.0 |
14.6 |
10.9 |
-18.9 |
15.2 |
4.3 |
-15.2 |
4.8 |
| 1971-80 |
6.1 |
14.6 |
-16.6 |
-27.6 |
38.3 |
17.9 |
-17.3 |
-3.1 |
4.2 |
14.9 |
| 1981-90 |
-9.2 |
19.6 |
20.3 |
-3.7 |
27.7 |
22.6 |
2.3 |
11.8 |
27.0 |
-4.3 |
| 1991-00 |
20.3 |
4.2 |
13.7 |
2.1 |
33.5 |
26.0 |
22.6 |
16.1 |
25.2 |
-6.2 |
| 2001-10 |
-7.1 |
-16.8 |
25.3 |
3.1 |
-0.6 |
16.1* |
|
|
|
|
| |
8 up
5 dn |
7 up
6 dn |
6 up
7 dn |
8 up
5 dn |
12 up
1 dn |
8 up
5 dn |
6 up
6 dn |
10 up
2 dn |
9 up
3 dn |
4 up
8 dn |
* to December 15.
If our outlook for the stock market is cloudy to negative for 2007, we can't
help but notice that many analysts continue to view it with great optimism.
Their thoughts should not be ignored. If there is one thing we have learned,
it is that nothing plays out as you expect. While all of the cycles have in
the past worked, there are forces at work against these cycles. There we are
reminded of Alan Greenspan, who as a student of the Kondratieff Wave once declared
that if he ever became chairman of the Federal Reserve, he would stave off
the Kondratieff winter by various means such as injecting money into the system
or supporting the dollar, etc. Of course he did become Fed chairman, and money
supply and debt both exploded on his watch. Money supply (the old M3) about
tripled, as did the official US debt.
What this indicates is that during the Greenspan years there were huge injections
of liquidity (which are continuing in the Bernanke years and who can forget
Bernanke's declaration that if the economy was in trouble he would drop money
from helicopters). While the growth of debt and money in the USA has been a
key provider, it has not been done by the Fed alone. Japan has also been a
big provider of liquidity over the past several years. These huge liquidity
injections played a major role in the internet/technology bubble of the late
1990s and again in the housing bubble in the early part of this decade. That
both have now been pricked does not mean that the ability to inject liquidity
into the system has been halted. Indeed, it may be heightened.
We don't always agree with the economic team of Louis and Charles Gave and
Anatole Kaletsky (GaveKal - www.gavekal.com)
but we do pay attention. In a recent writing of GaveKal Five Corners (December
13, 2006) they commented on the low volatility in the economy and how that
has contributed to the high leverage. We agree that a highly volatile economy
encourages savings and a low volatility economy encourages spending. Combined,
of course, we have both a low volatility stock market and a low volatility
economy - the best of all worlds.
GaveKal attests all of this to our "Brave New World" of globalization, allowing
corporations to expand around the world and concentrate on what adds the most
value: financial management of balance sheets both for the corporation and
the individual, freeing up capital; and evolution from an industrial society
to a knowledge-based society; and that ideas can be generated using a lot less
capital. Combine this with the liquidity booms that have occurred, particularly
since the 1980s following the steep recession of 1980-82, and then it all becomes
understandable. Huge liquidity expansions were seen 1984-86, 1993-94, 1997-99,
2002-04, and another may have begun in 2005-06 (coinciding with the end of
reporting of M3). All corresponded with a sharply rising stock market.
Liquidity contractions were seen 1980-84, 1988-92, 2000-02 and very briefly
in 2004. They corresponded better with stock market corrections either concurrently
or shortly thereafter. It is for these reasons that GaveKal remains quite bullish
into 2007. They also believe that stocks remain quite cheap. Having seen other
forecasts from other analysts, we know that GaveKal is not alone in the bullish
camp.
But we are also reminded that chairman Greenspan said that "History has not
dealt kindly with the aftermath of protracted periods of low risk premiums".
And a protracted period of low volatility such as we have seen in both the
stock market and the economy is inevitably followed by a period of high volatility.
Has gold already discovered that?
Since December 31, 1999 the Dow Jones Industrials is up 8.9 per cent, the
S&P 500 is down 3.0 per cent, the NASDAQ is down 40 per cent and the US
Dollar Index is down 18 per cent. On the other hand, gold is up 114 per cent,
silver is up 132 per cent and the Gold Bugs Index (HUI) is up 363 per cent.
Oil is up 147 per cent, Natural Gas is up 203 per cent, and the AMEX Oil Index
(XOI) is up 141 per cent.
We could go on about other commodities, and the metals and mining stocks as
well, all which have enjoyed at least 100 per cent gains this decade. Even
if GaveKal is right about 2007, these sectors should continue to outperform.
Despite a six/seven month intermediate mini-bear occurring in precious metals
and energy, they have still outperformed the broad market this past year.
Commodities, precious metals and energy all entered new major bull markets
between 1998 and 2002. From roughly 1980 to 2000 these sectors were in a major
bear market while the broad market was enjoying an 18-year bull market from
1982 to 2000.
In 1947, Edward Dewey and Edwin Dakin published a book entitled Cycles
- The Science of Predictions.They detailed a 54-year cycle in
wholesale prices going back to 1790. (This study ties in nicely with the
work of Nicolas Kondratieff). As a part of their study they predicted the
future timing of peaks and troughs in wholesale commodity prices. Each rise
and fall is roughly 27 years.
Not surprisingly, their last peak prediction was for 1979 and their most recent
trough prediction was for 2006. Commodity prices peaked in 1980, while the
trough may have occurred early from 1998 to 2002. If Dewey and Dakin are correct,
then we have entered a multi-year bull market in commodities (including metals,
precious metals and energies). The next idealized peak would be due in 2033.
There will of course be sharp corrections during this long up period, which
will shake many out. But the long-term trend seems to be established and these
periods of corrections are buying opportunities. Gold has an 8.5-year cycle
(all cycles are credited to Ray Merriman) and probably a 25-year cycle. It
is believed that the last 8.5-year and 25-year cycles both bottomed in 2001
- this also fits well with Dewey and Dakin. This means the next 8.5-year cycle
trough is not due until 2008-11. If there is an 8.5-year cycle there probably
is a half-cycle of 4.25 years. We believe that happened in July 2005.
Another subset for gold is an 18.5-month cycle. If July 2005 was both a 4.25-year
cycle low and an 18.5-month cycle low, then the next 18.5-month cycle is due
anywhere from October 2006 to March 2007. After this low we should embark on
another strong up move in gold. If it is accompanied by a wave of liquidity
injections, the next move in gold could be spectacular. Based on the current
triangle pattern that appears to be forming, a move to $1,000 is not out of
the question - quite possibly in 2007.

Silver cycles are very similar although they do not necessarily overlap with
gold. Silver may have already hit its cycle trough back in September 2006.
Silver should target up to $20-$22 in 2007 if the triangular patterns prove
correct.
Oil has what appears to be a four-year cycle, with the last one occurring
in early 2002. That meant the next one was due in 2006 (anywhere from late
2005 to late 2006). The recent lows in oil near $56 may have satisfied that
requirement. However, until we firmly break out once again over $70 there remains
the possibility of a move to lower lows under $50. Patterns forming on oil
would suggest a move to at least $100 once new highs above $78 are made. At
that level it then just equal the price of oil seen in 1980 on an inflation
adjusted basis.
Natural Gas cycles are quite irregular but appear to range from two to three
years, trough to trough. A key cycle low may have been made here recently near
$4.60. There is a possibility of a secondary low in spring 2007. Interestingly,
Natural Gas, after each major low over the past several years, has shot up
to new all-time highs each time. This would suggest that once the low is in,
we could exceed the highs of 2005 at $15.78.

One of the keys for gold and the precious metals is the US dollar. The other
major currencies (the euro and the yen) may have made important cyclical lows
against the US dollar over the past few months. If so, then these lows were
probably important four-year cycle lows and the US dollar should embark on
another major move to the downside. We have targets that suggest a minimum
of 72 for the US Dollar Index.
We have heard stories already about the demise of the dollar and how the Chinese
are preparing to dump their portfolio of US Treasuries. These stories actually
are more likely to signal temporary lows in the dollar. The Chinese are not
foolish enough to dump their entire portfolio of US Treasuries as it is not
in their interests to do so. One has to remember that whatever the Chinese
do will be in their own best interests.
But technically, the dollar has already begun a decline. Even if is the desire
of the US Fed to allow the dollar to decline further, powerful efforts will
be made for it to be orderly. There remains a risk of course that things will
get out of hand. Keep a sharp eye on trade discussions; the Doha round of global
trade talks has already broken down. That doesn't mean they are dead, as powerful
financial interests around the world do not want a US dollar collapse. An orderly
decline, yes. A collapse, no.
Our conclusions on market direction in 2007 are clear. While the broad market
could survive until March, we believe that will be either the high or a secondary
high. Following that we will begin a five-year bear market with a big portion
of the collapse occurring in 2007-08, very similar to the collapse of 1937-38.
Gold and precious metals should resume their bull runs in 2007, with an outside
chance of gold running to $1,000 an ounce. Other commodities should also rise.
Oil should resume its bull market once again once we break out over $70. The
US dollar should go into decline, but we expect it to be orderly, with periodic
sharp corrections.
In early 2007 we will discuss many of the issues that may have an impact on
the markets in 2007.
|