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Despite reports of miles of idled railcars parked in the middle of nowhere,
transportation traffic continues to grow, particularly in shipments of coal
and agricultural products, which grew about 12% each from 2006. The decrease
in intermodal traffic (simply put, containerized cargo shipment of imports)
is off-set by the increase in export shipments. And, the increase in exports
is due primarily to the weak dollar.
Speaking of the weak dollar, as an aside, it would appear that we're making
the transition, by default rather than by design, from an importer to an exporter
economy. The transition may be a long process, but the eventual outcome may
not be all that inconceivable. And, if that were to happen, the Dollar would
not only have to decline further, but it would also have to give up its de
facto reserve currency status. One of Japan's major mistakes was letting its
currency appreciated too much too quickly. And, according to professor Paul
Krugman's recount during one of his trips to Japan, Japan had once expressed
its desire of wanting its currency to become the world's reserve currency.
We'll pick up on this discussion later. For now, let's return to the transports.
The combined TSI (Transportation Service Index) that measures monthly changes
in the output of both the freight and the passenger transportation service
industries rose 1.5% in January from December. The combined TSI of 112.11 was
also 2.36% higher than the same month a year ago (see Chart 1 below).
Construction spending on transportation seems keeping up quite well with the
performance of the TSI.

Chart 1
$33.14 billion Total Construction Spending on Transportation in January, while
it had tapered off a little from November and December, was 15.27% higher than
January 2007 (see Chart 2 below). This explains why the Transports (the
Dow Jones Transportation Average) outperformed the DJIA (Dow Jones Industrial
Average). In fact, amidst the gloom and doom and over $100 oil, the Transports
had formed a Head-and-Shoulders bottom, or an inverted head-and-shoulders pattern.

Chart 2
The Transports chart has been flipped vertically for easier viewing of the
formation (Chart 3 below). It appears that the Transports had already
broken below the neckline (black circle), which completes the formation of
the pattern. The subsequent retracement to the neckline is but a classic throwback
before continuing its due course downward (upward when this chart's in its
normal position). The distance between the Head and the neckline (see X mark)
indicates a probable target of 5600, which would surpass the Transports' July
2007 high.

Chart 3
Since the movement of goods, people, and services, may be considered as a
leading indicator of the economy, the positive divergence of the Transports
versus the broader market could perhaps be considered as a positive indicator
for the stock market.
There's little doubt that we're still mired in the credit crisis that had
started with the rise of subprime mortgage defaults in 2006. However, every
end-of-the-world scenario that's been repeated over and over again for the
past two years should've all been discounted by the market already. There's
also little doubt that we're in a bear market, and the economy's slowing down.
However, the DJIA's 2,500-point selloff from October appears quite excessive.
That's a rush of fear.
But nothing's more excessive than the housing market selloff. The median sales
price in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area had dropped more than 30%
over just the last 8 months. That too was quite a rush of fear. Still, nothing
goes straight down. The greed (the bargain hunters) is starting to return to
the market as home prices pummeled rapidly. The number of units sold had finally
begun to pick up, and the marketing time had started to shorten.
It's a probability in the statistical world as well as the real world that
reversion to the mean usually follows after the pendulum's over-swung. That's
why both the stock market and the housing market are looking to bounce back,
at least until it starts making financial sense for those shareholders that
are trapped holding shares at higher prices and those homeowners that are trapped
holding upside-down mortgages to sell. Then, the market shall resume its downtrend
as supply once again overwhelms demand.
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