SIGNS OF THE TIMES:
"The Existing Home Market is in Freefall"
- Bloomberg, October 3
Chief Economist, High Frequency Economics
"Exorcising Ghost of Octobers Past"
"Despite Housing Slump, Crashes, Such as in 1987 Likely to Stay Memories"
- Wall Street Journal, October 15
"I think the Fed has taken care of the Summer's harrowing turbulence
by cutting short-term interest rates, pumping money into the system and
seeming determined to prevent recession."
- Wall Street Journal, October 15
As we like to say, so long as prices are rising the street will ardently
believe the most preposterous stories. This week's harvest of convictions
seems to be doing just that - prices are up and it is due to the immense
wisdom and influence of policymakers.
However earlier in the summer, these pages reviewed the usual policymaker
options as trying to use more credit to solve a liquidity crisis that is
eventually consequent to any binge in easy money. As the saying goes, "When
the Fed is the bartender, everyone drinks until they fall down".
The recuperative powers coming out of the initial plunge have been impressive,
but it has been mainly a rebound from a serious deterioration of liquidity.
The other Fed tool that we thought would be dragged out would be the "first" cut
in fed funds, which would prompt a short squeeze. As with conditions following
the great booms since 1873 - the senior central bank is typically behind
the change to market rates of interest declining. This has been the case
this time around, and we have been noting that during a big boom treasury
bill rates go up and when they turn down it provides a warning on the longevity
of the boom.
This has worked out with the rebound as the bill rate has increased from
2.60% to 4.31% on Monday, and the drop to today's 4.00% is signaling that
the next phase of the credit contraction is starting. On the big picture,
short-dated rates have always declined until the contraction is over, and
it is ironical that the first cut was very briefly celebrated in early January
of 2000. This time around the celebration has been outstanding, making the
stock market all the more vulnerable to a long series of cuts in administered
rates.
As most stocks, corporate bonds, and commodities begin their next slide
the establishment will again seek solace in the "durability" of the economy.
The problem with this is the usual sequence of events. In this case, as
in June, the subprime bond turns down, then traditional corporate spreads
take to widening, the stock market declines, and then some time much later
the economy begins to weaken.
In this regard, the hot big sectors have been China, energy and the techs,
and as we noted last week proxies for these are at "Upside Exhaustions" which
is a dispassionate measure of speculative impetuosity.
Underneath this performance has been the change in the credit markets that
we take as a cyclical change. Our advice has been to use the rallies to lighten
up across the board.