Words from the (Investment) Wise for the Week That Was (Feb 11 - 17, 2008)
by Prieur du Plessis
Financial markets ended the past week on a subdued note as economic data,
credit concerns and recession talk dominated investors' mood.
The Fed kept itself in the headlines during the week. Ben Bernanke spoke before
the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday morning and reiterated that the Fed "will
act in a timely manner as needed to support growth and to provide adequate
insurance against downside risks". He also noted that "the outlook for the
economy has worsened in recent months, and the downside risks to growth have
increased". Bernanke's comments caused renewed worries among many pundits.
The rather disturbing developments in the bond insurance market also gave
investors food for thought, pondering the outcome of Warren Buffet's "rescue
offer" to the monolines, and New York governor Elliot Spitzer's deadline for
them to find fresh capital within three to five business days in order to avoid
a "tsunami-like disaster".
Before highlighting some thought-provoking news items and quotes from market
commentators, let's briefly review the financial markets' movements on the
basis of economic statistics and a performance chart.
Economy
The economic news during the past week saw an unexpected rise in retail sales
last month, industrial production for January back at the record level of
September 2007, and the trade deficit falling by 6.9% in December - a bigger
improvement than expected.
On the other hand, manufacturing activity in New York recorded its biggest
decline on record, the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment dropped
to its lowest level in 16 years, and import prices surged by 13.7% from a year
ago - the highest reading since the start of the data series in 1982.
The combination of these reports was interpreted by many as a deterioration
in the US economic outlook. Reacting to President George W. Bush's statement
that the economy remained "structurally sound", Bill King (The
King Report) remarked: "If things are so structurally sound, why all the
Third World bailouts of leading US financial institutions, a stimulus package
and 125bps of rate cuts within 8 days?"
The next week's economic highlights, courtesy of Northern
Trust, include the following:
1. Consumer Price Index (Feb 20): A 0.2% increase in the CPI is predicted
for January following a 0.4% gain in December. The core CPI is expected to
have moved up 0.2% compared with a 0.2% increase in December. Consensus:
+0.2%, core CPI +0.3%.
2. Housing Starts (Feb 20): Permit extensions for new homes fell 7.1%
in December, which leads us to conclude that there was a large drop in housing
starts during January (965 000). Starts of new homes fell 25.8% in 2007. Consensus:
1.01 million as against 1.0 million in December.
3. Leading Indicators (Feb 21): Interest rate spread, stock prices,
and projected orders of durable goods posted declines in January. Initial jobless
claims, consumer expectations, vendor deliveries, and real money supply made
positive contributions. The manufacturing workweek held steady in January.
The net impact is a 0.1% drop in the leading index during January following
three consecutive monthly declines. Consensus: -0.1%
4. Other reports: NAHB survey (Feb 19) and Philadelphia Fed Survey
(Feb 21).
Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall
Street Journal Online indicates how different global markets fared during
the past week.
Equities
Global stock markets closed the week broadly higher with the MSCI World Index
gaining 1.9%. Japan was the star performer among mature markets and rose
by 4.7% on the back of better-than-expected fourth-quarter GDP data.
Investors were relatively upbeat during the first three trading days of the
week and US stocks recorded their first three-day rally since December 27,
2007, but the mood turned for the worse after Ben Bernanke's testimony on Capitol
Hill. The net result was nevertheless still a gain for the leading indexes,
with the Dow Jones Industrial Index and the S&P 500 Index both improving
by 1.4% and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index edging 0.7% higher.
Gold and silver stocks (-2.2%), financials (-1.1%) and retailers (-1.1%) were
the notable decliners for the week.
Emerging markets in general outperformed developed markets, with Russia (+6.3%),
Brazil (+3.7%), India (+3.7%) and Hong Kong (+2.9%) all chipping in useful
gains. The New Year celebrations resulted in the Chinese markets being closed
for the first two days of the week.
Bonds
The yields on longer-dated government bonds were pushed higher as a result
of mounting inflation concerns, whereas shorter-dated maturities fared better
on the expectation of rate cuts. The US 10-year and 30-year bond yields closed
the week 12 and 14 basis points higher respectively, but the two-year yield
declined by 3 basis points. This resulted in a gap of 187 basis points between
two- and 10-year yields - the widest since July 2004.
The yield curve also steepened in the UK, Germany and France, albeit on a
more modest scale than in the US.
Currencies
The US Dollar Index declined by 0.2% for the week on Ben Bernanke's grim economic
outlook and the prospect of further rate cuts in the US.
Elsewhere, the Swedish krona appreciated by 2.3% against the US dollar and
1.1% against the euro after the Riskbank's surprising increase of the Swedish
base rate by 0.25% to 4.25%. The British pound (+0.9%) also gained against
the US dollar as a result of poor UK inflation data tempering expectations
for aggressive rate cuts by the Bank of England.
Commodities
The Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index (+2.3%) powered ahead during the past week,
resulting in an all-time high.
Leading the pack was platinum that jumped by 9.6% to a record level of $2
060 as investors remained concerned about electricity rationing in South Africa
- which represents 80% of world production - adversely affecting global supplies.
The gold price was less fortunate and declined by almost $20 from Monday's
high.
US wheat also experienced significant interest last week, necessitating the
doubling of the trading band before limits up or down are triggered. Hard red
spring wheat jumped by 28% to a record of $19.88 a bushel.
The West Texas Intermediate oil price rose to a one-month high of more than
$95 a barrel on supply concerns of refinery problems and Hugo Chavez threatening
to cut off sales of Venezuelan oil to the US. Cold weather in the US also supported
the prices.
Now for a few news items and some words (and graphs) from the investment wise
that will hopefully assist to make sense of markets' action during the shortened
week ahead.
Barron's: Interview with Jeremy Grantham - This credit crisis has a long
way to run
"People
think the Federal Reserve can stop a bear market because they can throw money
at it and lower interest rates. It is even more certain we can collectively
stop a bear market if some fiscal stimulus is thrown in. To which I say, 'Oh,
you mean like 2000 and 2002?' - when they threw what I call the greatest stimulus
in American history, an unparalleled series of interest-rate cuts, cumulating
in two, almost three, years of negative real returns, real interest rates coupled
with a really substantial tax cut, which would never have happened without
9/11.
"The combination would have gotten the dead to walk, and it stopped the bear
market eventually. But the Standard & Poor's 500 was down 50% and the Nasdaq
- which was all anyone talked about back then - went down 78%. And a puny five
to six years later, people are saying there is not going to be a bear market
because the Fed is going to lower rates and because the government is going
to have a stimulus package. But we have just been there, done that, and we
had a nice bear market."
Goldman Sachs: US recession pulling rest of world down
"Markets continue to trade down and express concerns about world economic growth.
Several weeks ago we described our changed view that the global economies and
financial markets would 'recouple'. Initially recoupling started in Europe
and Japan, but now we are seeing evidence of this in Asia, particularly China.
Several indicators we use to gauge future economic momentum show a strong downward
trend.
"We believe that in the coming months we will see increasing signs that the
US recession is having a broader impact on the rest of the world: Eurozone
growth has been dependent on exports which makes the economy vulnerable to
external shocks; Japan suffers from weak domestic consumer spending and is
exposed to the US and China; and Chinese GDP growth slowed from 12% in Q3 to
8% in Q4 of 2007, and we have cut our growth forecast for 2008 to 10% with
risks to further downgrades.
"Markets have sold off considerably but we still feel that many macro economic
issues still have to play out, particularly outside the US. Policymakers in
the US have reacted aggressively which, combined with the falls we already
have experienced, has improved the outlook for risky assets, but negative macro-economic
data releases such as the weak ISM numbers show that markets still react very
strongly to negative surprises."
Source: Leo van der Linden and Frederik de Nerée, Goldman
Sachs, February 11, 2008.
Financial Times: G7 leaders say world economy vulnerable
"The world economy remains vulnerable to downside risks stemming from tighter
credit, a deterioration of the US housing market, higher oil prices and rising
inflation, according to G7 finance ministers gathering in Tokyo on Saturday.
"Although 'long-term fundamentals remain sound' and recession in the US and
elsewhere could be avoided, according to the final communiqué, the world's
richest nations said they stood ready to 'take appropriate actions, individually
and collectively, in order to secure stability and growth'."
Source: David Pilling and Jonathan Soble, Financial
Times, February 9, 2008.
Bill Cara: G7 meeting spells stagflation
"The reports from the G7 meeting in Tokyo seem to be saying that stagflation
is enemy #1, which is another way of saying slowing economic growth and possible
recession is problem 1a and inflation is problem 1b.
"Like the 1970's that followed the Vietnam War, stagflation has reared its
ugly head again. During those years, neither equities nor fixed income markets
were healthy. It wasn't until 1982 when global economic factors coalesced to
underlie the 20-year period of global expansion. The only question now is whether
the BRIC emerging economies need the engine of a strong US economy or whether
they can do it on their own."
The Wall Street Journal: Bernanke open to a sizable rate cut
"Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned that intensifying credit and
financial-market pressures are likely to restrain economic growth and left
the door open for a sizable interest-rate cut next month.
"Mr. Bernanke, testifying at the Senate Banking Committee, said he expects
'sluggish growth' in the economy and a 'somewhat stronger pace' later in the
year, thanks to rate cuts and fiscal stimulus. But he cautioned that housing
and labor markets could deteriorate more than anticipated, emphasizing that
'downside risks to growth remain.'
"Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, at the same hearing, said the government's
recent actions - including the $168 billion economic-stimulus package and efforts
to modify homeowners' mortgages - would help soften the housing-market correction.
But he warned that 'those programs alone will not be sufficient ... It's going
to take time and some pain before we work through this.'
"Mr. Bernanke said market worries about mortgage defaults and the ripple effects
of bond insurers' woes are contributing to tighter lending standards. 'More-expensive
and less-available credit seems likely to continue to be a source of restraint
on economic growth,' Mr. Bernanke said. Declining home values and a softening
labor market - along with higher energy costs and lower equity prices - are
likely to affect consumer spending, he added.
"Mr. Bernanke hinted that officials may soon start discussing an endpoint
to the rate cuts. He said the Fed would have to assess whether policy is 'properly
calibrated' and whether the recent rate cuts 'are having their intended effects.'
Because interest-rate changes take more than six months to work through the
economy, Mr. Bernanke said the Fed's near-term policy decisions must take into
account improvement expected in the economy later this year."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Disappointing tidings from small business
sector
"Small businesses aren't quite pleased with the state of affairs. The Small
Business Optimism Index fell 2.8 points to 91.8 in January, the lowest reading
of this index in the current cycle and since January 1991 when the index held
at 91.4. From the chart, we can see that readings of this magnitude are associated
with recessions. In the last recession of 2001, the index hit a low mark of
96.3 in October 2001."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): January retail sales point to weak Q1
performance
"Retail sales increased 0.3% in January after a 0.4% drop in December and 0.8%
gain in November. Changes in retail sales in November and December were previously
estimated as a 1.0% increase and a 0.4% drop, respectively. Excluding autos,
gasoline, and building materials, retail sales in the fourth quarter show a
2.2% annualized increase previously estimated as a 3.0% gain. This implies
a downward revision of fourth quarter GDP (+0.6%), holding other things constant.
In the addition, the 1.5% annualized gain based on the January data for the
first quarter suggest a weak quarterly performance that is consistent with
our forecast of consumer spending (-0.6 %) for the first quarter."
Bill King (The King Report): US housing will require long period to recover
"Goldman Sachs' Ed McKelvey: It is already clear that the current recession
in US housing activity resembles, in depth and duration, the deep cycles that
were de rigueur up through the late 1980s rather than the minuscule ones that
have occurred since then.
"However, the dynamics of the current cycle are much different than those
older ones. Whereas they featured a buildup of pent-up demand, leading eventually
to a sharp and sustained recovery, this one features pent-up supply, the correction
of which will require lower levels of production for a long period. This may
frustrate market participants who contemplate housing investments that may
look like bargain basement opportunities, as they are less likely to be bargains
than to stay in the basement, at least if our view of the sector is right."
Bill King (The King Report): US economy structurally sound?
"Bush acknowledged that problems exist but reiterated the same trite bromides,
'the economy remains structurally sound' and GDP will soften in the first half
of 2008 but accelerate later in the year.
"If things are so structurally sound, why all the Third World bailouts of
leading US financial institutions, a stimulus package and 125bps of rate cuts
within 8 days?"
The New York Times - DealBook: Buffett's bond backstop not a cure-all
"In offering to reinsure the nation's troubled bond insurers, Warren Buffett
is not proposing a bailout of Wall Street -- it's more about Main Street.
"At first blush, Mr. Buffett's proposal, which he made public on CBNC Tuesday
morning, might have seemed to be a cure-all for companies such as MBIA, Financial
Guaranty Insurance and Ambac, which have either lost or are at risk of losing
their precious AAA ratings. But look closer and you will see that the billionaire
investor is prepared to provide an extra safety net only for insurance policies
covering municipal bonds - debt issued by cities, sewer authorities and the
like, which rarely default anyway.
"His offer doesn't extend to collateralized debt obligations and other risky
securities linked to subprime mortgages whose value has plunged in recent months.
That may by why one firm has already rejected his offer. Mr. Buffett is still
waiting to hear from the other two.
"Bond insurance is not a sexy business, but it is proving to be a market-moving
one these days. Wall Street is watching carefully to determine the fate of
companies such as MBIA, which has insured billions of dollars' worth of securities
held by top securities firms. If these insurers, known as monolines, should
become unable to pay out on their policies, the effects would ripple through
much of the financial industry."
Financial Times: Monolines given five days to find funds
"Eliot Spitzer, New York governor, gave bond insurers three to five business
days to find fresh capital, or face a potential break-up by state regulators
who want to safeguard the municipal bond markets."
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): US credit crisis escalates as defaults
spread
"Defaults in the US housing market are spreading from sub-prime to the much
larger stock of top-grade housing debt, threatening to set off a wave of even
bigger losses for banks and investment funds.
"The Mortgage Bankers Association says default rates on all outstanding home
loans in the US have reached 7.3%, the highest level since modern records began
in the 1970s. Arrears on 'prime' mortgages have reached a record 4%, confounding
expectations that middle-class Americans with good credit records would be
able to weather the storm.
"While sub-prime and close kin 'Alt A' total $2 000 billion of debt, the prime
market in all its forms is roughly $8 000 billion. If prime default rates rise
on their current trajectory, they could ultimately cause huge financial damage."
Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph,
February 13, 2008.
The Wall Street Journal: Lenders step up effort to avert foreclosures
"Prodded by the Bush administration, six major mortgage lenders are due to
announce today a stepped-up effort to rescue homeowners on the brink of foreclosure.
Under the latest plan, dubbed Project Lifeline, the lenders promise to seek
contact with homeowners who are 90 or more days overdue on their mortgages.
In some cases, homeowners will be given the chance to 'pause' their foreclosure
for 30 days while lenders try to work out a way to make the loans affordable.
"Unlike the plan announced in December to freeze interest rates at current
levels on certain adjustable-rate loans, this latest effort is to involve all
kinds of home loans, not just subprime mortgages, a higher-cost variety for
people with blemished credit records or high debt in relation to income.
"The participating banks, which service about half of the US mortgage market,
are Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Countrywide Financial Corp., J.P.
Morgan Chase & Co., Washington Mutual Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. -
all members of the so-called Hope Now Alliance. They are working with the US
Treasury and Department of Housing and Urban Development."
John Parry, Reuters: Depression risk might force US to buy assets
"Fear that a hobbled banking sector may set off another Great Depression could
force the US government and Federal Reserve to take the unprecedented step
of buying a broad range of assets, including stocks, according to one of the
most bearish market analysts. That extreme scenario, which would aim to stave
off deflation and stabilize the economy, is evolving as the base case for Bernard
Connolly, global strategist at Banque AIG in London.
"'Avoiding a depression is, unfortunately, going to have to involve either
a large, quasi-permanent increase in the budget deficit - preferably tax cuts
- or restoring overvaluation of equity prices,' Connolly said.
"'If conventional monetary policy is not enough to produce that result, the
government may have to buy equities, financed by the Fed,' Connolly said.
"Legal changes would be needed to give the Federal Reserve and the US government
the authority to buy stocks. Currently the Federal Reserve can buy only debt
issued by the Treasury, as well as US agency debentures and mortgage-backed
securities."
Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): US bonds are smelling inflation
"The bonds appear to have topped out. This occurs when the bond market senses
an expanding economy ahead or rising inflation ahead. So what are the bonds
sensing? Something 'changed' on January 23, shown by the black reversal day
on the chart. Today the long bond broke below its red 50-day moving average,
indicating that rates are turning up. My guess - the bonds are smelling inflation."
David Fuller (Fullermoney): Government bonds could be hit hard
"The chart patterns of bond futures are an inverse mirror image of stock market
indices. In other words, the selling climax in stock markets on 22nd January
was matched by a buying climax for long-dated government bonds, which are taking
their cue from the equity markets.
"If stock markets continue to steady on diminishing concern over global GDP
growth, long-dated government bond prices will be hit hard. The Australian
government 10-year bond price gives a preview of what could happen in the UK,
Continental Europe, America and Japan."
Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney,
February 15, 2008.
John Hussman (Hussman Funds): Stock market - remain fully hedged
"The strongest factor driving market returns here is the unfavorable condition
of market internals including price/volume behavior, breadth, leadership, industry
action, credit spreads, and other factors. Meanwhile, it's important to reiterate
that P/E ratios based on 'forward operating earnings' and even our own 'price/peak-earnings'
measures are somewhat corrupted here by the fact that the earnings in these
ratios implicitly assume the continuation of record profit margins about 40%
to 50% above long-term norms.
"As a result, we are also attending to measures that take profit margins into
account more explicitly. To the extent that profit margins are not likely to
be sustained indefinitely, P/E ratios are likely to be a poor metric of valuation,
encouraging investors to believe that stocks are cheap on the basis of recent
earnings, when they are not at all cheap on the basis of long-term earnings
power.
"Again, my guess, and it's just a guess, is that a sustained rally - if only
a sustained bear market rally - will be more likely a) at the point that investors
fully accept recession as common knowledge, so they can start putting 'recession'
behind them without fear that it's still ahead, or b) at the point the S&P
500 declines a full 20% from its high (anywhere below 1250) - again, so they
can start putting 'bear market' behind them without fear that it's still ahead.
Strangely, the market often responds well when investors recognize that their
fears have become reality, because at that point investors can at least begin
to believe that the worst is behind them.
"That doesn't mean that things won't, in fact, deteriorate beyond a 20% market
decline or a shallow and well-recognized recession. But as I've frequently
noted, most bear markets are not simply one-way movements. Bear markets typically
comprise two, three or more separate 10% to 20% declines, punctuated by fast,
furious rallies. It's easy to forget that the 2000 to 2002 bear market included
three bear market advances of 20% from intra-day low to intra-day high, as
well as numerous smaller advances, all of which were surrendered in subsequent
plunges to new lows.
"For now, we remain fully hedged."
Source: John Hussman, Hussman
Funds, February 11, 2008.
Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters): What is the stock market saying?
"The market continues to hold up in the face of rotten news. The stock market
isn't falling apart, but it's not rallying that much either. What could the
market be "saying?" My guess, and it's strictly a guess - difficult times coming,
but only in certain areas. In other areas the living will be easy. The Midwest
will be having a ball with agricultural crops bringing in top dollars. Conditions
will be spotty across the nation, but it may be hard to call it a real recession.
Housing to remain a weak spot. No across-the-board great times, but no disaster
either. Keep your stock-market powder dry, profits may be hard to come by.
"The dyed-in-the wool bears will be frustrated. The good-time bulls will frustrated
too. And inflation will be in the saddle."
David Fuller (Fullermoney): What some smart investors are doing
"First, a drama review. We had a repeat of August's shock and awe last month.
Practically everyone expects a threepeat (an American portmanteau word). George
Soros has become the high priest of US bashers, predicting a road to serfdom.
US banks, issuing bearish reports on each other, propelled short selling on
the New York Stock Exchange last month to its highest levels since 1931! Even
Asian investors have been quaking recently.
"These are reasons enough for investors to despair of worldly goods and head
fatally for the window ledge, except gentle reader, they are contrary indicators.
"Let us now consider what some smart people are doing: Monoline bond insurers
meltdown? You have almost certainly heard about it but guess what - Warren
Buffett wants to assume their liabilities. Banks are Devil's spawn, right?
Well, that may be an exaggeration and Bill Gross of Pimco said 'Citigroup,
Bank of America and Wachovia Corp. were appealing'. Mortgage meltdown? Sure,
but this is an election year, so look at Hank Paulson's latest effort. Lastly,
Barton Biggs, who has seen a few market cycles said yesterday that the market
is 'at or very close to an important bottom'. That remains the Fullermoney
view."
Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney,
February 12, 2008.
Bloomberg: Pimco shows Alwaleed isn't only one in love with Citi
"Citigroup Inc. has never been held in such low esteem by debt investors, and
that's why Prince Alwaleed bin Talal isn't the only one in love with the bank
whose looks are deceiving.
"Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the world's largest fixed-income
fund, and Calvert Asset Management Co. said Citigroup and Bank of America Corp.
are attractive because yields on US bank bonds are near record highs relative
to Treasuries. Alwaleed, the biggest shareholder in New York-based Citigroup,
bought more of the bank's stock even as the S&P 500 Financials Index fell
9.1% this year.
"The world's largest financial companies have incurred $146 billion in losses
from securities tied to subprime mortgages, and Pimco and Calvert say bond
yields compensate for the risk that there's more to come. The firms raised
$84 billion selling equity stakes to investors such as Saudi Arabia's Alwaleed.
"'The fact that the banking sector has attracted fresh capital in the last
couple of months is huge,' said Mark Kiesel, an executive vice president at
Pimco. 'We've been playing defense for the better part of two years, and the
question we've been asking ourselves is when to go on offense. In the banking
sector, we've started to do that.'"
Source: Caroline Salas, Bloomberg,
February 12, 2008.
CNN Money: Earnings - nowhere to go but up
"Yes, banks had an awful fourth quarter. With 77 of the 92 companies in the
financial sector having reported, the fourth-quarter results from this group
are on track to be the worst for any sector since Thomson Financial started
tracking earnings in 1997.
"The sector has been hit hard by massive losses from heavily weighted companies
such as Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, E*Trade Financial, Morgan Stanley and
Citigroup. And because of the losses, Thomson has yet to be able to determine
just how big of a percentage drop financial earnings have taken.
"But if you strip out the financials, earnings for the S&P 500 would be
on track to rise 11.8% versus a year ago thanks to healthy results from several
other sectors. In particular, technology earnings are forecast to have grown
26% in the fourth quarter, while energy sector earnings are expected to have
grown 20%. That strength is expected to continue in the first quarter of 2008,
with technology earnings expected to grow 10% and energy 24%.
"The performance of tech and energy could add weight to the argument that
outside the financial and housing sectors, the economy is holding up better
than market psychology would suggest, said Peter Brodie, director of investments
at Bryn Mawr Trust Wealth Management."
Source: Alexandra Twin, CNN
Money, February 11, 2008.
BCA Research: Euro area equities - further downside ahead
"The correction in euro area equities ... has further to run. The euro area
equity market tends to be cyclical in nature, making it vulnerable when coincident
macro indicators are weakening (which is currently the case). In addition,
restrictive monetary conditions adds to the risk as past rate hikes and euro
strength are acting as a drag on regional business activity. While the ECB
is starting to shift its tone, monetary relief is still a few months away.
"In the interim, our profit model warns of a further deceleration, at a point
when expectations remain elevated. One caveat worth noting is that euro area
equities still offer attractive valuations, despite strength in recent years.
However, cyclical factors should trump valuations over the next few months.
Bottom line: Euro area equities remain vulnerable to further downside. Stay
underweight this market relative to the US."
Reuters: G7 approves IMF gold sales
"The Group of Seven rich nations on Saturday approved the sale of gold by the
International Monetary Fund from April as part of a broad reform of its budget,
Italian Economy Minister Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa said.
"'There was an acceptance among the G7 that resources should be raised by
selling gold,' Padoa-Schioppa, who is also the head of the IMF's steering committee
(IMFC), told reporters after a meeting of G7 finance ministers in Tokyo. 'The
current gold price means a flow of income can be ensured,' Padoa-Schioppa said.
"Morgan Stanley analyst Stephen Jen said the Fund held 103.4 million ounces
of gold worth some $92 billion at current market prices. That was up from $23
billion just five years ago. 'The IMF is rich, if it wants to be,' he wrote
in a recent note to clients, issued before the G7's approval of the gold sales.
'This is arguably a good time to consider selling some of these gold holdings
and investing the proceeds in financial securities with positive yields.'"
Chris Powell (GATA): Mobilization of IMF gold a sign of central bank desperation
"Before panicking about the Reuters story [above], reporting that the G7 conference
in Tokyo likes the idea that the IMF should raise money for itself by selling
some of its gold reserves, consider a few things.
1) The prospect of gold sales by the IMF has been hanging over the gold market
for years.
2) For almost a decade now central bank gold sales have been accompanied by
higher gold prices, not lower prices. Gold demand has been exceeding gold production
by about a thousand tonnes per year, the gap being covered only by central
bank dishoarding. Even with the rising price gold production is declining,
the price still not being high enough to make greater production generally
profitable.
3) Mobilization of IMF gold suggests that individual central bank gold reserves
are nearing exhaustion or that individual central banks are no longer willing
to dishoard what they have left.
4) There's no assurance that the IMF has the gold attributed to it and no
report as to where the gold is kept.
5) Though it is never questioned by the financial press, the rationale that
continues to be offered for selling the IMF's gold is plainly ridiculous. That
rationale is, as the Reuters story here reports, that the IMF gold should be
liquidated and the proceeds invested 'in financial securities with positive
yields.' But what 'yields' could be more positive than the 'yield' acknowledged
for the IMF gold, an increase in value of 400% in five years? Is the IMF supposed
to be happier with government bonds paying 4% per year against inflation rates
several times that?
6) Those who want gold restored as the independent arbiter of the international
financial system should be thrilled if all central banks and the IMF dishoarded
all their gold at once and got out of the gold market for good. Until then,
there really won't be a market price for gold, just a desperately manipulated
one, a price well below the cost of production - still a bargain."
Jim Sinclair: IMF has history of selling gold at wrong time
"It is important to note that their sales all have taken place at times when
major bull markets were either just beginning or, as in 1976 to 1980, at the
start of the major parabolic move to then all time highs.
"That is the only implication IMF sales have to the price of gold. It has
been the most powerfully bullish event every time they have done it, and will
be again.
"If any newcomer to gold sees the IMF news as a reason to sell gold these
newcomers are as DOPEY as the IMF has proved to be every time, time and time
again."
Goldmoney: Silver set to outperform gold
"The price of gold and silver rarely move at the same rate. The reason for
this outcome is that their respective demand is fundamentally different. To
put it into economic terms, the demand for gold is inelastic, while that for
silver is elastic. In other words, the demand for silver is very sensitive
to changes in its price, while in contrast, the demand for gold is relatively
insensitive to changes in its price.
"The result is that in precious metal bull markets, the price of silver typically
rises faster than the price of gold, and vice versa in precious metal bear
markets."
David Fuller (Fullermoney): Caution regarding medium-term prospects of
precious metals
"... we remain long-term bulls of precious metals but we are also becoming
more cautious regarding medium-term prospects. Throughout their bull move commencing
in 2001, precious metals have been prone to medium-term (multi-month) advances,
usually led by platinum, which end in acceleration amidst a crescendo of bullish
forecasts and price extrapolations.
"Peaks are followed by sharp reactions within the long-term upward trends,
and then many months of ranging in a new support building process. During this
phase investors become despondent regarding gold's prospects and forecasts
for all precious metals are downgraded, only to be raised again in the latter
stages of the next advance.
"Meanwhile, platinum's acceleration and the overall strong upward bias since
last August suggest that we are now at a late stage of this medium-term advance.
Tactics, particularly for futures traders, should be particularly disciplined
at this stage of the medium-term cycle. It is impossible to know exactly how
and when this leg of the uptrend will end but the first clear downward week
for platinum could be an early warning.
"Gold mining shares are unlikely to uncouple from bullion's directional moves
but they have lagged recently due to the weak tone of global stock markets.
Consequently mining shares could be marginally resistant to the next medium-term
setback in bullion, provided equities are firmer generally."
Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney,
February 12, 2008.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): The price of 'peak oil' is famine
"Vulnerable regions of the world face the risk of famine over the next three
years as rising energy costs spill over into a food crunch, according to US
investment bank Goldman Sachs. We've never been at a point in commodities where
we are today,' said Jeff Currie, the bank's commodity chief and closely watched
oil guru.
"Global oil output has been stagnant for four years, failing to keep up with
rampant demand from Asia and the Mid-East. China's imports rose 14% last year.
Biofuels from grain, oil seed and sugar are plugging the gap, but drawing away
food supplies at a time when the world is adding more than 70 million mouths
to feed a year.
"'Markets are as tight as a drum and now the US has hit the stimulus button,'
said Mr Currie in his 2008 outlook. 'We have never seen this before when commodity
prices were already at record highs. Over the next 18 to 36 months we are probably
going into crisis mode across the commodity complex. The key is going to be
agriculture. China is terrified of the current situation. It has real physical
shortages,' he said, referencing China still having memories of starvation
in the 1960s seared in its collective mind.
"The current 'supercycle' is a break with history because energy and food
have 'converged' in price and can increasingly be switched from one use to
another."
Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph,
February 9, 2008.
BCA Research: German growth will continue to weaken
"A sizable decline in the current conditions component of the ZEW survey warns
that the German economy will continue to slow. Yesterday's release showed that
the expectations component bounced off its January low; however, the current
conditions component is more important for policymakers at the ECB.
"At the sector level, turbulence in the credit markets is spreading to cyclically-related
industries such as steel, chemicals and technology, while sentiment in interest-rate
sensitive areas of the economy such as automobiles, construction and retailing
remains poor.
"In addition, record energy prices and the decreased availability of credit
are hurting the consumer - sentiment measures continue to deteriorate, and
retail spending is contracting. Furthermore, exports have yet to feel the pain
of an impending slowdown in the UK, but exports to the US and Japan are already
contracting. Consequently, it is no surprise that our industrial production
model forecasts a continued deterioration in German growth. Bottom line: A
slowdown in growth is paving the way for a rate cut at the ECB by mid-year."
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (Telegraph): Japan next sub-prime flashpoint?
"Just as battered investors had begun to glimpse signs of recovery in America,
the next shoe has dropped with an almighty thud in Japan. Echoes are rumbling
across the Far East.
"The Tokyo bourse has crumbled, suffering the worst start to the year since
the Second World War. The Nikkei index is down 17% since Christmas, and the
shares of Japanese banks are leading the slide.
"The nagging fear is that Japan's lenders - the conduit for the world's greatest
stash of savings - have taken on a far bigger chunk of mortgage securities,
collateralised loans obligations and other exotica from America's structured
credit boom than they have yet revealed.
"Americans and Europeans have so far confessed to $130 billion of the estimated
$400 billion to $500 billion of wealth that has vanished into the sub-prime
hole. Somebody, somewhere, must be sitting on a vast nexus of undisclosed losses.
We may find out soon enough whether the hold-outs are in Japan. The banks have
to come clean under the country's strict new audit codes by the end of the
tax year in March.
"'Right now, we are in the lull before the second storm in global markets,
and Asia is going to be the source of the nasty surprises,' Hans Redeker, currency
chief at BNP Paribas."
Source: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph,
February 12, 2008.
BCA Research: Japanese economy - more bad news
"Last week's data releases showcase a continued deterioration in the broad
Japanese economy. Machinery orders declined for a second month in a row, reflecting
weak capital spending plans for domestic firms and softening global demand.
Export order growth, which until recently has been the single ray of hope for
the ailing economy is now decelerating.
"Moreover, the Economy Watchers index declined further in December to 31.8
(from 36.6), suggesting that a continued retrenchment in consumer spending
and overall domestic economic activity is in store.
"Interestingly, policymakers and politicians remain remarkably upbeat about
the economy, with Fiscal Policy Minister Ota stating that 'There's no need
to be pessimistic about the current state of machinery orders'. Bottom line:
The Japanese economy appears to have slipped into recession. Stocks are likely
to continue suffering and, once risk tolerance among global investors starts
to revive, we expect the yen to weaken substantially. The Bank of Japan will
eventually soften its rhetoric and may even ease if conditions deteriorate
further."
With
25 years' experience in investment research and portfolio management, Dr Prieur
du Plessis is one of the most experienced and well-known investment professionals
in South Africa. More than 1 000 of his articles on investment-related topics
have been published in various regular newspaper, journal and Internet columns.
He also published a book, Financial Basics: Investment, in 2002.
He holds the following degrees: BSc (Quantity Surveying)
(Cape Town), HonsB (B & A) (cum laude) (Stellenbosch), MBA (cum laude)
(Stellenbosch); and DBA (Doctor of Financial Management) (Stellenbosch).
Prieur is chairman of the Plexus group
of companies, which he founded in 1995. Previously he was general manager:
portfolio management at Sanlam, responsible for the management of investment
portfolios with total assets in excess of $5 billion.
Plexus is a pioneer
in the mutual fund industry and has achieved a number of firsts under Prieur's
leadership. These include the authoritative Plexus Survey, a quarterly analysis
of the consistency of the performance of unit trust management companies, the
Plexus Offshore Survey, the Plexus Unit Trust Indices, and the PlexCrown Fund
Ratings.
Plexus is the South
African partner of John Mauldin, American
author of the most widely distributed investment newsletter in the world, and
also has an exclusive licensing agreement with California-based Research
Affiliates for managing and distributing its enhanced Fundamental Index™ methodology
in the Pan-African area.
In 2001 Prieur received the Santam/AHI Business Leader
of the Year award for corporate leadership, business acumen and entrepreneurial
flair. He was also profiled in the book South Africa's Leading Managers (2006).
Plexus received the AHI/Old Mutual Enterprise of the Year award in 1997 and
was also included in the book South Africa's Most Promising Companies (2005).
Prieur is 52 years old and lives with his wife, TV producer
and presenter Isabel Verwey, and two children in Welgemoed, Cape Town. His
recreational activities include long-distance running, motor cycling and reading.
He belongs to the Cape Town Club, Johannesburg Country Club, Gordon's Bay Yacht
Club and Swiss Social & Sports Club.
« Opinions expressed at SafeHaven are those of the
individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of SafeHaven
or its management. Articles are available via RSS/XML. Please
visit RSSHelp for instructions. »