(October 14, 2007)
Important note: One of the following charts was created using the Reuters
Ecowin service - a service that I am currently trialing. However, as I have
mentioned before, this data is not cheap - and there is a good chance I won't
end up subscribing to the services UNLESS I get many more subscribers over
the next few weeks. For those who have wanted to subscribe
to our newsletter, now is the time to do so! For existing subscribers,
please pass this message on to your friends or family who may be interested
in our services.
Dear Subscribers,
Let us begin our commentary by first providing an update on our four most
recent signals in our DJIA Timing System:
1st signal entered: 50% long position on September 7, 2006 at 11,385;
2nd signal entered: Additional 50% long position on September 25, 2006 at
11,505;
3rd signal entered: 100% long position SOLD on May 8, 2007 at 13,299, giving
us gains of 1,914 and 1,794 points, respectively.
4th signal entered: 50% short position October 4, 2007 at 13,956, giving us
a loss of 137.08 points as of Friday at the close.
As of Sunday evening on October 14th, we are 50% short in our DJIA Timing
System (subscribers can review our historical signals at the following
link). In our "Special Alert" on the morning of October 4th, we briefly
discussed our reasons for going 50% short in our DJIA Timing System. I had
briefly discussed them again in last
weekend's commentary, and as a result, would not repeat them here, but
as of Sunday evening, two of the three reasons are still valid. The one reason
that has been invalidated - the continuing strength in both the Shanghai and
Hong Kong stock markets - has the least influence in our decision to go short
in our DJIA Timing System. In fact, one could even argue that a stronger Chinese
and Hong Kong market would attract more capital away from the US market, as
exemplified by a recent
Morningstar article describing how many mutual fund managers with a domestic
mandate are now trying to take advantage of the boom in Chinese shares by buying
up shares on the local exchanges, Chinese ADRs or companies that do a great
deal of business with the Chinese.
For now, the most important reasons for us staying 50% short in our DJIA Timing
System (and potentially going 100% short) remain technical in nature. Moreover,
given that most of the world's economies are now slowing down (as signaled
by declining readings in our MarketThoughts
Global Diffusion Index), and given the increasing bullish readings in our
sentiment indicators this week, the overall case for a short position in our
DJIA Timing System just became significantly greater. Aside from the latest
readings in our MGDI, another leading indicator of economic growth (container
traffic within the Port of Los Angeles, which we discussed in last weekend's
commentary), had also been signaling weaker economic growth going forward.
These readings are also being confirmed by the recent weakness in US railroad
car loadings, as shown in the following chart courtesy of Reuters EcoWin:

Aside from total railroad car loadings in the US, I have also shown the rate
of growth for the top four types of goods that are shipped on US railroads
today, those being: coal, chemicals, grain, and motor vehicles & equipment.
Interestingly, even coal shipments - the one category that has had the strongest
growth since early 2004 - is now seeing negative growth. The only major category
that is experiencing growth is chemicals (it is thus of no surprise that third
quarter margins of all major chemical companies exceeded the consensus).
Given that railroad companies had been the strongest industry within the Dow
Transports over the last 12 months, my guess is that we have seen the top in
the Dow Transports in mid July - and at some point, this will put pressure
on the Dow Industrials as well.
However, given that much of the strength in the U.S. stock market has been
focused on the Dow Industrials over the last 7 weeks, there is a good chance
that the Dow Industrials will continue to rise over the next couple of weeks,
but we believe that any all-time highs will be short-lived. Should this occur,
however, chances are that many other major market indices will not confirm
this all-time high, such as the Dow Transports, the Dow Utilities, the S&P
400, the Russell 2000, the American Exchange Broker/Dealer, the Value Line
Geometric, and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Indices. Should the Dow Industrials
make another all-time high - preferably in the 14,200 to 14,500 area, and should
this be accompanied by continuing weak breadth and divergences among many market
indices, then we will establish a 100% short position in our DJIA Timing System.
As always, whenever we change signals in our DJIA Timing System, we will inform
all our subscribers via email as soon as we make the change.
Let us now begin our commentary. Last week, I happened to drop by into an
old camera store in South LA. The owner of the store was a fellow in his late
50s who had been collecting older cameras since the mid 1970s. Most of them
were bought at estate sales. Some of these cameras dated back to the 1870s,
but the most amazing part was this: Modern photography technology had essentially remained
unchanged ever since George Eastman pioneered the use of photographic film
in the late 1880s. 35mm film, meanwhile, had been around since 1914. Virtually
all the older cameras were in fine working condition, which meant that with
the right size film, and under the right conditions, we could have started
taking and processing pictures with the older cameras that dated back to the
late 19th century. However, over 100 years after the arrival modern photography,
digital cameras revolutionized the industry in only a decade. The arrival of
the first true digital camera came in 1990. Kodak itself marketed a digital
camera with a 1.3 mega pixel resolution for $13,000 in 1991. Mega pixel digital
cameras were generally not available for the consumer market until 1997, however,
less than 10 years later, Nikon would announce
a nearly complete exit out of the film market. Moreover, it is estimated
that over 90% of all cell phones manufactured today carries a digital camera.
To paraphrase Nassim Taleb in his excellent work "The
Black Swan," history, and especially technology, does not move in a linear
or consistent way, but make unpredictable jumps. Too often, most of us get
comfortable with a way of life (or a certain technology) that has been the
prevalent technology for at least over a generation, and are thus blindsided
when it is replaced by something totally different, but more effective. Fans
of Joseph Schumpeter would label this phenomenon as "creative destruction."
Such phenomena can be constantly witnessed in the financial markets. The collapse
in liquidity of the CDO and asset-backed market is a prime example. While most
quants would call this a "six-sigma" event, it is anything but. Of course,
there are always true "100-year events' in the financial markets, such as the
October 19, 1987 crash, the true rise of the emerging markets as a respectable
investment class in recent years, and the Russian Default in 1998, the first
time that a country has defaulted on debt that was denominated in its own currency.
Another similar event occurred manifested itself starting in June 2004 as the
U.S. long Treasury yields failed to decline despite the beginning of Fed tightening.
This was the so-called "Conundrum." Quoting Alan Greenspan in his latest biography "The
Age of Turbulence":
I was perturbed because we had increased the federal funds rate, and not
only had yields on ten-year treasury notes failed to rise, they'd actually
declined. It was a pattern we were accustomed to seeing only late in a credit-tightening
cycle, when long-term interest rates began to fully reflect the lowered inflationary
expectations that were the consequence of the Fed tightening. Seeing yields
decline at the beginning of a tightening cycle was extremely unusual ...
Unexplainable market episodes are something Fed policymakers have to deal
with all the time. On many an occasion I have been able to ferret out the
causes of some peculiarity in market pricing after a month or two of watching
the anomaly play out. On other occasions, the aberration has remained mystery.
Price changes, of course, result from a shift in balance between supply and
demand. But analysts can observe only the price consequences of the shift.
Short of psychoanalyzing all market participants to determine what led them
to act as they did, we may never be able to explain certain episodes. The
stock-market crash of October 1987 is one such instance.
... I did not come up with an explanation for the 2004 episode, and I decided
that it must be another odd passing event not to be repeated. I was mistaken.
In February and March of 2005, the anomaly cropped up again. Reacting to
continued Fed tightening, long-term rates began to rise, but just as in 2004,
market forces came into play to render those increases short-lived.
What were those market forces? They were surely global, because the declines
in long-term interest rates during that period were at least as pronounced
in major foreign financial markets as they were in the United States. Globalization,
of course, had been a prominent disinflationary force since the mid-1980s
... With the new millennium, signs of it [disinflationary forces] became
increasingly evident, even among development countries whose histories were
rife with inflationary episodes.
But even though globalization had reduced long-term interest rates, in
the summer of 2004 we had no reason to expect that a Fed tightening would
not carry long-term rates up with it. We anticipated that we would just be
starting from a lower long-term rates than was customary in the past. The
unprecedented response to the Federal Reserve's monetary tightening that
year suggested that in addition to globalization, profoundly important forces
had developed whose full significance was only now emerging. I was stumped.
I called the historically unprecedented state of affairs a "conundrum." My
puzzlement was not assuaged b the numerous bottles of Conundrum-label wine
arriving at my office.
I encourage readers to read "The Conundrum" chapter in Greenspan's biography
in full. Greenspan would go on to discuss the deflationary forces in the world's
labor markets as a result of continued globalization, as well as the proportionally
high savings rates of the developing countries. Coupled with the lack of investments
that had been made in the developed world over the last few years (as demonstrated
by the large corporate cash flow that had been returned to shareholders), and
thus it is no surprise that interest rates declined across the world. However,
Greenspan is definitely a realist, as discussed in the following excerpts from
the same chapter:
... These data are consistent with the notion that this decade's decline
in long-term interest rates, both nominal and read, is mainly the effect
of geopolitical forces rather than that of the normal play of market forces.
If developing countries continue to grow at a rapid rate and financial
networks expand to lend more readily to the increasing number of citizens
with rising discretionary incomes, developing-country savings rates are bound
to fall, at least back to 1980s and 1990s levels. The inbred human desire
to keep up with the Joneses is already manifest in the nascent consumer markets
of the developing world. Increases in consumption would tend to remove the
downward pressure of excess savings on real interest rates. But that would
likely occur even if the rate of growth of developing country incomes should
slow. In all economies, spending rarely keeps up with unexpected surges in
income; hence savings rates rise. As income growth slows back to trend, savings
rates tend to fall.
So, as erstwhile centrally planned workforces complete their transition
to competitive markets, and as developing countries' increasingly sophisticated
financial systems facilitate the inbred propensity toward higher consumption
and less saving, inflation, inflation premiums, and interest rates will gradually
lose their disinflation buffer of the past decade.
In a press
release that we issued in April 2006, we discussed that the secular bull
market in the US long bond was over, citing four major reasons: 1) The end
of the quantitative easing policy in Japan, 2) The general lack of investment
and the cash hoarding by US corporations were getting excessive and were
not sustainable, 3) There was significant evidence of rapidly increasing
labor costs in both China and India, and that wage concessions with US unions
were in the final innings, 4) Unless crude oil spikes to nearly $100 a barrel
over the next few years, the recycling of OPEC petrodollars would have a
diminishing effect on bond prices across the world.
More follows for subscribers...