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Nearly two weeks removed from the "scary" 500 point Dow drop, Wall St. Strategists
have been correct thus far in saying the slide had nothing to do with foreign
central banks dumping U.S. treasuries -- that's not a problem yet. However,
it should be clear that the decline has everything to do with the gradual contraction
of global liquidity imposed by central bankers from the globe's fastest growing
economies.
Central banks in China and Japan made moves to tighten liquidity and curtail
the rampant growth in their money supplies-- with rumors from India that it
may join in the squeeze. Gold's fall in the immediate aftermath was a validation
of this view. To be clear, any deflationary trend will be slight and temporal
in nature and I maintain my secular view that the trend towards rampant global
inflation is still intact. However, it would be foolish to ignore the affect
this liquidity squeeze will have on most markets, including gold.
Since gold is money, and its long term value is dependant on the inflation
rate of the currency it is measured in, the commodity signaled that the slow
removal of excess global liquidity may be for real; if it is, it will greatly
exacerbate the already weak U.S. economy. Add to that the contraction in credit
due to the collapse in the sub-prime mortgage market and you have a recipe
for a recession and a protracted market decline.
Watching the Fed
Since the economy is already flirting with recessionary levels, Mr. Bernanke
may be forced to flood the system with money in order to counteract the forces
from overseas central banks, his attempt to rescue the housing market and the
economy. If successful, he will be lauded as the next maestro but like all
bailouts, no such rescue will come without consequences, including further
devaluation of the dollar and rampant inflation. Look for this market correction
to continue until gold stabilizes, giving the signal that the liquidity squeeze
is over; the metal's recent bounce from its lows doesn't yet give the "all
clear."
The Market and the Economy
Unlike what most strategists claim, it is important to emphasize what the
trailing PE ratio is, not some ebullient guess as to what next year's numbers
might be. The S&P is currently trading at 17.6 times trailing earnings
and those earnings are falling along with G.D.P. growth.
Further evidence of the weakening economy can be seen in today's non-farm
payroll numbers. The 97,000 new jobs created were well below population increases
and continued to show a weakening trend. The number of jobs cut by the construction
industry (62,000) demonstrates the continued impact housing has on employment
and the trouble in the sub-prime mortgage market will become a more salient
issue in 2007, according to CreditSights Inc. Their research indicates that
the second leg of the housing correction is still ahead of us with an additional
500,000 foreclosure homes coming on the market.
This trend towards anemic job growth should only grow worse and may cause
the credit crunch to spill over into the prime mortgage market. In light of
this scenario it seems prudent to remain cautious, maintaining overweight exposure
to cash and dividend paying foreign stocks.
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