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Signs Of The Times:
"'Blank-check' shell companies, also known as a 'special purpose acquisition
company' raised $4.1 billion on 33 IPOs so far this year, compared with
$1.4 billion on 22 offerings during the same period a year ago."
- Wall Street Journal, June 26
During the final year of the South Sea Bubble of 1720 there were some 485
new stock issues. Many were touts about "new" technology, and
one was about a deal that was so good it had to be kept a secret.
"UK pension fund with £ 8 billion in assets plans to double its
commodity allocation to 2% over the next 18 months.
Chief Investment Officer said 'reducing the volatility of returns is
the reason behind our investment in commodities.'"
- Reuters, June 27
Glad they included the explanation - thought they were talking their book.
"Regulators Tighten Subprime-Lending Rules"
- Wall Street Journal, June 30
The BBB subprime mortgage bond we've been following plunged from 100 in August
to 73 on February 27. The rebound took it to 84.60 on May 24 and the old low
of 73 was taken out a week ago Wednesday and it only took a few days to get
down to 68.
It is not certain if this is based upon transaction or a math model.
"United Capital Hedge Fund Halts Withdrawals [by clients]"
- Bloomberg, July 3
The fund has been positioned in subprime mortgage bonds. Where is all that "liquidity" when
you really need it?
Stock Market: Last week the BIS published an overview on the financial
markets that was meant to be sobering and, as belated as it is, sobriety is
the usual consequence to "Rational Exuberance". So far sobriety
has been selective.
Our rational exuberance theme has served to emphasize that certain characteristics
of the culmination of a great boom are common to each one. Other than the signature
of outstanding technical dynamics, the key items include important changes
in the yield curve and in credit spreads.
As we've been noting, typically the final stages of a bull market are accompanied
by 12 to 16 months of curve inversion. This began in February 2006 which suggests
that culminating excesses would be probable in the March to July window.
So far so good, and the next step in this pattern has been that typically
the wheels start to fall off the most salient speculations as the curve reverses
to steepening. Inversion reached its maximum in late February and had reversed
to steepening in May.
Outside of credit instruments, the most intense speculations have been recorded
in base metals and the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The latter generated a rare "Upside
Exhaustion" reading in May. These types of signals were last seen in
the first half of 2000. Opposite signals ("Downside Capitulation")
were registered on a number of sectors and exchanges in late September 2002
as that bear concluded.
As represented by nickel and lead, intense speculation accomplished the biggest
percentage gains in a hundred years of data. That's on a real basis, as deflated
by the PPI and the gains were away beyond previous "bests". Copper did it to
May 2006, nickel to this May, and lead is still working on a huge record gain
(some 3% of concentrate production has been shut down due to a "lead-poisoning" investigation).
Since nickel's high on May 21 the decline amounts to 34%. From a sensational
high in late May Shanghai's initial hit amounted to 21%.
Then we have the second phase of what appears to be an exceptional liquidity
problem in the subprime mortgage game. This is not just a problem presented
by the end of a sensational ramp up of price. Essentially the markets have
to deal with the culture of pricing by mathematic models. Exacerbating this
artificiality has been that with all the "bundling" of various
mortgage bonds has been the convention of rating the quality by mathematical
models as well.
As if that is not enough, there is the culture that because of the assumption
of infallibility enormous powers have been granted to central bankers. (One
of the most disastrous promoters in financial history, William Patterson, backed
the formation of the Bank of England in 1694. The promotional material included
the still appealing notion that a central bank with the power to issue notes
beyond reserves would "infallibly" lower interest rates.
A brief, but comprehensive, story by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard is worth reading: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/07/02/bcncrunch102.xml
It includes some fine word craftsmanship with "mutant capitalism", "This
is the big one: all portfolios will be shredded", as well as some
comments from the BIS report.
Our conclusions are that the immense liquidity problem created by financial
engineering will eventually be cleared through trade-set prices.
Mr. Margin is having serious meetings with the big brokers with considerable
exposure to the mess. Before it is over Mother Nature will be converting even
Keynesians to the ancient benefits of sound money.
In the meantime, the SSEC has been working on the test of its May exuberance.
The high was 4336 and the test made it to 4312, from which the action has been
dull.
That's until today when the 5.3% slump set a series of descending highs and
lows. This violates the major trend line and taking out the 3600 level will
establish the down trend.
Given the excesses of an "Upside Exhaustion" on the monthly
reading, and changes in global credit markets, this could be the start of a
cyclical bear market. As this possible transition comes in it will have profound
consequences on the senior stock exchanges.
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