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This was sent to members on 12/29/07
It's a zero sum game, somebody wins, somebody loses. Money
itself isn't lost or made, it's simply transferred from one perception
to another. ~ Gordon Gekko - Wall Street
With 2007 in the books we wanted to focus on what the events of 2008 will
offer traders and investors in the various asset markets. Readers know we have
been looking for the dollar to bottom, bond yields to fall to new lows, equity
prices to violently chop big ranges and for commodity prices to ease. For most
of coming months the media pundits and short-sighted analysts will be focusing
on the proposition of a US recession, the effect on the job market and the
subsequent course of Federal Reserve policy. If we are to see an "official" recession,
by the time we are told it happened the market will already have discounted
the outcome. Sitting around waiting on the data is of little use.
Whether or not we have a recession will not be the big story of 2008 in our
opinion. The orderly or disorderly liquidation of assets and collateral by
banks and other financial institutions such as dealers and hedge funds will
be the most important event. We are witnessing a gigantic transfer of assets
ownership from weak hands to strong hands. Whether the process and final result
causes an "official" recession or not, we don't care, we just want to be on
the right side of the trade. How the market discounts the outcome will show
up in the behavior of asset prices long before it hits the cover of the WSJ.
In order to gauge the economic impact of this transformation, we will want
to look for clues and answers to the following questions:
Currencies - Can the dollar finally put in a bottom v the euro?
Interest Rates - Where does the 10YR yield trade and how does it get
there via the slope of the yield curve?
Equities - Will emerging markets continue to outperform and where do
financials bottom?
Commodities - What happens to crude and the crack spread and specifically
who wins the tug of war, producers or consumers?

We will be measuring the progress and success of the great asset exchange
by monitoring the following developments:
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During a credit crunch cash is king. Those with liquidity are able to
take advantage of the losses by those who are raising equity and/or liquidating
collateral at discounts. Sovereign wealth funds, petro exporters and Berkshire
Hathaway who have all put capital to work in distressed assets in late
2007 share one thing in common. Loads of cash dollars. We expect these
dollars will continue to find attractive opportunity at the expense of
sellers. These cash infusions are occurring at discounts, be it MER, C,
or TXU leveraged loans. Issuers and lenders are selling capitalization
at a loss and the cash kings are buying at a discount. This shrinking of
leveraged balance sheets putting a premium on cash is the principal thesis
behind our bullish USD stance and if it were to find support we think the
attractiveness will feed on itself as foreigners look to invest more into
distressed US assets.
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Forget residential housing, whether the commercial real estate market
can weather the credit crunch will have more important implications for
financial company balance sheets, collateral values and credit availability.
The upcoming $9b Hilton Hotel CMBS offering by private equity firm, Blackstone
Group, will be an important gauge of risk appetite by the lenders of commercial
real estate. It would be the largest CMBS deal ever issued and if it can
get done at a reasonable price the market would be indicating some freeing
up of risk capital which would also alleviate the balance sheet strain
were the banks forced to eat the paper. Failing to sell the deal would
be indicative of a lending market continuing to shy away from credit and
real estate collateral. Thus far massive amounts of LBO debt sit for sale
on major bank balance sheets so this offering could add insult to injury.
However considering the size of recent equity infusions by foreign investors,
it's possible they get it done. We suspect the sheiks may be interested
in some hotel assets.
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The spread between LIBOR and risk-free rates has widened to levels not
seen since the 1987 stock market crash. The elevated risk premium banks
are charging each other for funds is indicative of strain in the banking
sector and this has been well documented. We are anticipating the spread
to narrow from these historical levels but remain elevated. The VIX index
has a high correlation to risk premiums and if we are entering a new cycle
of rising volatility premiums we should also assume risk premiums will
stay high. This higher risk premium will have an adverse affect on asset
price multiples as the cost of capital rises. This adjustment process will
likely continue to be choppy with thin liquidity creating an unpleasant
trading environment for investors as the risk/reward ratio remains inverted.
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Emerging market and commodity based equities such as materials and energy
have been star performers and there is much debate as to whether they can
continue to rally if the US consumer shrinks demand. Emerging markets have
traditionally been correlated with commodity prices and we see no reason
why that won't continue in 2008. We are monitoring various markets and
leaders such as X, BHP and the Australian All Ords index for indications
that the commodity led emerging market rally will continue. Getting a dollar
rally and a top in commodities would in theory be bearish for emerging
markets and commodity related equities so we must keep an eye on all three.
We have a hunch that the narrow crack spread with crude at all time highs
is indicative of weak end market demand and what this relationship does
next year will go a long way in answering the inflation/deflation question.
The ability of the Federal Reserve and other foreign central banks to sufficiently
lubricate the financial system will show up in this performance of these
markets.
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Most analysts who are looking for a slowdown or recession are anticipating
a quick rebound similar to 2002. We disagree on the grounds that this bubble
was a function of credit availability and the collateral values that supported
the credit. The tech bubble was essentially a 1 year event as liquidity
pumped after LTCM coupled with Y2K fears drove speculative capital into
these shares which soared and collapsed within a relatively short time
frame. The credit bubble is a different story in that by nature the transactions
were highly leveraged (some over 100% of already inflated collateral) and
can take up to 3-6 months to complete. We currently have a record +9 months
supply of housing inventory on the market so banks are selling into a very
soft market. The unwinding of this bubble will likely take a much longer
time as banks find it difficult to liquidate their assets and collateral.
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The 10YR could be the big unrecognized story of 2008. The long term channel
has turned the yield lower and is painting a grim scenario if on its way
below the 2003 low. The 10YR yield in the low 4% area is clearly discounting
a deceleration of growth and since we expect prices to make new highs (yields
make new lows) we think there is more work to the downside in banking stocks
throughout 2008. The 10YR yield will likely bottom before financial stocks.
We are looking for banks to trade closer to their book value which is not
yet known. When 10YR yields start to lift it is indicative that demand
for money is rising and banks are freeing up capital. If we can get a higher
10YR yield and steeper curve it would be a positive indication that the
system is normalizing and banks are comfortable their balance sheets can
take on risk.
We can't be sure how these developments unfold. There is a lot of pain in
the system and a lot of desire to avoid pain. The one thing we do expect is
that 2008 will continue to see the strong hands shaking out and taking advantage
of the weak hands. In a credit crunch induced collateral liquidation, somebody
wins and somebody loses. We suspect this particular one shall be quite an emotional
transfer of perception.
Membership
Let me remind everyone that TTC we be raising its monthly membership fee in
February and look to close its doors to retail members sometime in the first
half of the year. Institutional traders have become a major part of our membership
and we're looking forward to making them our focus. If you're a retail trader/investor
the only way to get in on TTC's proprietary targets, indicators, forums and
real time chat is to join before the lockout starts, and if you join before
February, you can still take advantage of the current low membership fee of
$89. Once the doors close to retail members, the only way to get in will be
a waiting list that we'll use to accept new members from time to time, perhaps
as often as quarterly, but only as often as we're able to accommodate them.
To get you started I will run the refund offer again. . Subscribe by January
15th and stay for 7 days with full access to charts, chat and all TTC member
privileges. At the end of your trial, if you're not satisfied, simply send
me an email and I'll give you a full refund, no strings attached. It's that
simple! There's no better value on the web than TTC and now there's no reason
not to check it out for yourself. Click here to
register for your free trial!
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