(March 23, 2008)
Dear Subscribers,
Before we begin our commentary, let us now review our 7 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 on October 4, 2007 at 13,956;
5th signal entered: 50% short position COVERED on January 9, 2008 at 12,630,
giving us a gain of 1,326 points.
6th signal entered: 50% long position on January 9, 2008 at 12,630, giving
us a loss of 268.68 points as of last week at the close.
7th signal entered: Additional 50% long position on January 22, 2008 at 11,715,
giving us a gain of 646.32 points as of last week at the close.
I will provide an update of our inception-to-date performance after the end
of this month. Suffice it to say, our long-term track record remains good -
especially relative to our benchmark, the Dow Industrials Industrial Average.
Moreover, our last two signals - which collectively brought us from a neutral
to a 100% long position in our DJIA Timing System, are again collectively in
the black. I expect the Dow Industrials and other major market indices, such
as the S&P 500, the Dow Transports, the Russell 3000, and the Russell 2000
indices to continue their ascent over the next several months.
Let us now get on with our commentary.
What a difference a week makes. This time last week, as the Bear Stearns acquisition
was announced, many folks were staring at the edge of the abyss, as the value
of many broker/dealers' shares were being openly questioned. After all, if
Bear Stearns was valued at only $2 a share (or $240 million), how much could
Lehman, Merrill, or Morgan Stanley be really worth, especially in a credit
crunch environment? Even though the $2 a share offer was initially shocking,
it wasn't a total surprise, as Bear Stearns really had little say in the price
of the offer, given the Federal Reserve and the Administration's push to get
some kind of deal put together last weekend (in hindsight, it turned out that
the Fed instructed JP Morgan to not pay more than $2 a share, as the Fed did
not want to give the impression that it had bailed out Bear Stearns). Soon
after the market opened, however, this question became irrelevant, as the price
of JP Morgan's shares tacked on more than 10% in a down market, which essentially
meant that the Bear Stearns acquisition was adding value to the tune of over
$100 a share on the Bear Stearns common. Moreover, with the Fed's 25 basis
point cut of the discount rate, as well as its promise to "backstop" the 20
primary dealers by allowing them access to the discount window, the Fed had
ended the liquidity crisis with a single stroke. While there will be tremors
as the financial sector continues to deleverage (think Thornburg Mortgage and
CIT Group), systematic risk had significantly declined with the implementation
of the Fed's 6-month "liquidity put" for the 20 primary dealers.
Subscribers should remember that these "boom/bust" cycles are an inherent
part of our capitalist society. For the most part, the social and political
atmosphere of the United States ever since her founding has allowed the "animal
spirits" in all of us to express themselves - whether it is in entrepreneurship,
business, investment, speculation, adventure, or in sports. Such "animal spirits" will
no doubt exaggerate themselves at various times - and it is such "exaggerations" that
bring about our boom/bust cycles. Moreover, such expression of "animal spirits" is
not only inherent but is necessary to further advance the capitalist society.
As John Maynard Keynes expressed in Chapter 12, "The State of Long-Term Expectation" in
his book "The
General Theory of Employment , Interest, and Money" in 1936:
Even apart from the instability due to speculation, there is the instability
due to the characteristic of human nature that a large proportion of our
positive activities depend on spontaneous optimism rather than on a mathematical
expectation, whether moral or hedonistic or economic. Most, probably, of
our decisions to do something positive, the full consequences of which will
be drawn out over many days to come, can only be taken as a result of animal
spirits - of a spontaneous urge to action rather than inaction, and not as
the outcome of a weighted average of quantitative benefits multiplied by
quantitative probabilities. Enterprise only pretends to itself to be mainly
actuated by the statements in its own prospectus, however candid and sincere.
Only a little more than an expedition to the South Pole, is it based on an
exact calculation of benefits to come. Thus if the animal spirits are dimmed
and the spontaneous optimism falters, leaving us to depend on nothing but
a mathematical expectation, enterprise will fade and die; - though fears
of loss may have a basis no more reasonable than hopes of profit had before.
It is safe to say that enterprise which depends on hopes stretching into
the future benefits the community as a whole. But individual initiative will
only be adequate when reasonable calculation is supplemented and supported
by animal spirits, so that the thought of ultimate loss which often overtakes
pioneers, as experience undoubtedly tells us and use them, is put aside as
a healthy man puts aside the expectation of death.
This means, unfortunately, not only that slumps and depressions are exaggerated
in degree, but that economic prosperity are exaggerated in degree, but that
economic prosperity is excessively dependent on a political and social atmosphere
which is congenial to the average business man.
Hyman Minsky - a student
of Joseph Schumpeter - took Keynes' thesis to its logical conclusion by laying
out a typical roadmap of such boom/bust cycles in capitalistic societies -
or what we would call the "Minsky framework" today (I highly recommend reading
his books "John Maynard Keynes" and "Stabilizing an Unstable Economy" for more
of his insights). More importantly, Minsky believed that capitalism in itself
is inherently unstable - and that the Federal Reserve should come in as a lender
of last resort and to set/slash interest rates in order to stabilize a financial
crisis or a severe economic downturn. Fans of the Austrian economists (note
that Joseph Schumpeter was never an advocate of Austrian economics) would no
doubt disagree with this view. But it really does not matter. We have had a
Federal Reserve since 1913 and there is no political will to dismantle it.
Moreover, our Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke, and the NY
Fed's President Timothy Geithner (the second most powerful figure, and
the Vice Chairman of the FOMC) have essentially embraced these beliefs - and
most importantly, have acted according to their beliefs over the last ten weeks.
This is a major reason why (along with historically oversold readings in both
our technical and sentiment indicators) we started turning bullish during the
second week of January - and ultimately going 100% long in our DJIA Timing
System during the intraday lows of January 22nd.
Given the lengths that the Federal Reserve has gone to "back stop" our financial
system, and given its series of rate cuts since January 22nd (200 basis points
in the Fed Funds and 225 basis points in the discount rate over the last two
months alone), the old adage "Don't fight the Fed" certainly applies here.
Moreover, given the stock market's historically oversold status over the last
couple of months (in terms of relative valuations, technicals, and sentiment)
- and given the many positive divergences we are now witnessing (such as the
strength in the Dow Transports over the last few weeks, the higher lows in
the NYSE McClellan Summation Index, and the higher lows in new highs vs. new
lows on both the NYSE and the NASDAQ), the other important old adage, "Don't
fight the tape" also applies. If you are still a U.S. stock market bear at
this point, you are doing both - and it has NEVER paid to simultaneously "fight
the Fed" and to "fight the tape." Following is an example of a positive divergence
(the chart courtesy of Decisionpoint.com)
- as the number of 52-week lows for common stock issues on the NYSE during
the recent decline did not get anywhere close to that during the late January
decline:

Given the many severe oversold conditions we have discussed over the last
few weeks (not to mention very
bullish insider buying, as well as the fact that domestic equity mutual
funds are now due to see their 10th consecutive monthly outflow, surpassing
the previous eight-month streak following the October 1987 crash), the
record amount of investment-ready capital sitting on the sidelines, and very
decent valuations, I am now bullish on the U.S. stock market for at least the
next few months.
That being said, there is no doubt that a "new era" of finance is now upon
us. While I am still bullish on the financial industry and its ability to create
new risk-hedging/speculation products over the long-run, there is no doubt
that some "shakeout" over the next 12 to 24 months is imminent. This is simply
human nature - as financing had been too lax and too cheap over the last few
years due to the "anything goes" environment and the widespread belief that
securitization would dilute risk from the financial sector to the overall global
economy. To some certain, that argument was valid, but unknowingly - especially
to those who invested in Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, or Bear Stearns - the financial
sector had also kept a significant portion of this "toxic waste" paper on their
balance sheets. Now that the "animal spirits" of financial sector CEOs and
Harvard MBA students are being slapped down by the market place - and now that
the politicians are screaming for more regulations, the appetite for risk-taking
in the financial sector is past us, and probability suggests that a significant
part of this sector will deleverage going forward.
In an institutional conference call late last week, Bill Miller of the Legg
Mason Value Trust Fund remarked that global debt had also been growing at twice
the pace of global GDP over the last few years. As such, he expects a significant
part of the world would also enter a deleveraging phase over the next couple
of years. In my humble opinion, the marginal players - such as Bear Stearns,
Carlyle Capital, Thornburg Mortgage, and the subprime mortgage originators
- were the first casualties. While the demise of Bear Stearns marked the end
of the first phase of the deleveraging process, I expect other players to start
falling as general financing gets more difficult and expensive to obtain over
time. Over the longer-run, such deleveraging would be healthy for our economy,
as current account deficits and household debt growth would decline. In the
meantime, any significant amount of deleveraging would be painful for certain
players, as the asset-to-liability ratio of U.S. households (see chart below)
is now at a historically low level of 5.02 (at the end 4Q2007), down from 5.12
at the end of the third quarter of 2007:

Note that I mentioned "certain players" would be hurt by the deleveraging.
Who would those be? In a nutshell, those would be companies whose business
models relied on cheap financing - such as SIVs, a significant number of mortgage
REITs, certain private mortgage lenders, certain private student loan lenders,
much of the private equity industry, and a significant portion of hedge funds
who were involved in either the currency or credit carry trades. Note that
I am not expecting a significant blowup over the next 12 to 24 months, but
I do expect a "slow but certain death" for many of these companies, as credit
lines are pulled and as investors withdraw en masse from some of these sectors
(such as hedge funds). With respect to hedge funds, I expect many of them to
fail as hedge fund investors bail out as financing gets tight and as the various
carry trades (Yen, Swiss, Rand, NZD, and Icelandic Krona crosses, etc) go out
of fashion. Furthermore, many former hedge fund investors will learn that "true
alpha" is really elusive in the first place, and thus will move back into the
traditional "beta strategies" - such as buying, for the most part - the unlevered
and the well-managed companies in the Russell 3000 or EM equities. The UK and
Eastern Europe will also dramatically go out of style, as some of the overly-extended
countries (countries that have a significant amount of foreign bank credit
and a significant current account deficit) such as Latvia, Estonia,, Hungary,
Lithuania, and Romania, go bust.
More follows for subscribers...