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The Normal Business Cycle
As refined by Martin Pring in his book The All-Season Investor, economic
and stock cycles can be broken down into stages. The complete normal business
cycle usually lasts approximately 42 - 54 months, but this typical length can
be altered by monetary policy. Business activity goes from the despair of the
depths of recession to the euphoria of the peaks of business expansion and
back again. During this pendulum of activity the main investment vehicles -
stocks, bonds and commodities - change in their perceived value. It is important
to recognize where the pendulum of business activity is, in which direction
it is swinging and the relative value of investment vehicles in the context
of this cycle. Each of the six stages provides better risk/return for certain
asset classes over others.

We have very likely just entered Stage 6 of the Business Cycle.

Stage 6 is a period in which business activity is in decline and entering
into recession. Bonds, stocks and commodities all begin turning downward. This
decline in business activity is largely a result of increased interest rates.
Rates have increased from 1 % 3 years ago, and are now at their highest level
since April, 2001. In June, 2006, the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates
for the 17th time in a row to 5.25 %. Other current global rates include 4
% in Europe, 5.5 % in the U.K., 8 % in New Zealand, and 0.5 % in Japan.
In a historic policy change, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) on 3/9/2006 scrapped
its five-year-old super-loose monetary policy and announced intentions to increase
rates. A small move higher is widely expected later this month (August, 2007).
Japan is the second biggest economy in the world, and their eventual move to
a tightening policy will pressure the Yen and our bond yields higher. During
the past decade, the yen-carry trade has underpinned the global markets. Anyone
who borrowed for next to nothing in Yen and bought U.S. Treasuries received
a twofold payoff: the yield difference plus the dollar's rise versus the yen.
But when the Bank of Japan eventually raises rates and more investors buy into
Japan's revival, the yen is sure to rise, resulting in a rapid curtailment
of the yen-carry trade. Realization that this trade is moving against investors
may send shockwaves through global markets.

During Stage 6, stocks begin the early phase of their bear market in
anticipation of declining earnings. The bearish influence of falling bond prices
(higher yields) also pulls interest sensitive stocks downward.

The S&P 500 and the Wilcox 5000 Indices have sharply pierced their 200-day
moving averages in last week's market action. In addition, the peak of the
bull market in equities is usually marked by a decrease in the number of stocks
participating in the rally. The NYSE advance-decline line during the most recent
market advance showed a negative divergence to equity indices that warned of
an impending correction. Another early sign of a market top is underperformance
by riskier small caps (Russell 2000) as money rotates to the relative safety
of larger issues.

The interest-sensitive Dow Utility Average tends to lead trend changes in
the broader averages. On July 27, 2007, it breached its 200-day moving average
for the second time since April, 2004.

The Semiconductor Cycle is usually a good proxy for the general market's trend
in relation to the business cycle. The action of the Semiconductor Index currently
argues against a significant market decline. After a period of weakness in
the second half of 2006, the SOX has recovered and its 50-day and 200-day moving
averages continue to trend upwards.
But the Financial Select Sector SPDR (BKX) paints a different picture. It
tends to lead trend changes in the NYSE. The Banking Index peaked in February,
2007, but has since spiraled rapidly downward below its 50-day and 300-day
moving averages.


The Fed target interest rate is highly correlated with the CRB, and commodity
prices have a greater than 90% correlation with three important inflation measures
(PPI, CPI, GNP deflator). Commodities during Stage 6 begin their decline. A
huge part of this cyclical bull market in commodities has been the Chinese
economy's need for natural resources, and the US housing boom. The collapse
of the US housing market will contribute to the decline in commodities.
These stage sequences are not in fixed time slots. And there also may be a
reversion to an earlier stage of the business cycle. The average recession
varies from nine months to two years, the expansionary phase from one to three
years. The relative duration of each stage and the overlap of stages varies
from business cycle to business cycle. However, in any given cycle, monitoring
the three investment categories will guide us fairly accurately through the
course of the business cycle.
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