|
January 04, 2009 Market Outlook 2009 - Thoughts of a Professional Investor |
|
|
Many highly successful traders exercise their skills within a framework of fundamental analysis. Given that lesson, I like to take reflection time at the beginning of each year to establish macro themes around which I can trade. One year is a relatively short time with regard to macroeconomic themes. Scenarios typically develop over much longer periods, building as events unfold and psychology shifts. In addition, time unfolds within a trader's imagination at a much faster pace than in reality. In other words, one's fundamental analysis may be thorough and one's conclusions accurate, yet the scenarios envisioned may not come to fruition for quite a bit longer than anticipated. A trader must invoke patience and pay close attention to market signals, not only to trade at the right time but also to not trade at the wrong time. Many of the expectations outlined below have been discussed in daily posts to my market blog. Macroeconomic Backdrop It is academic to try to pinpoint exactly when a crisis begins, but it is safe to say that by the time Bear Stearns collapsed in March, we were entrenched in our current crisis. The panic came in autumn (who would have guessed?) with the stock market meltdown. Crises tend to last anywhere from days to years after the manifestations of panic, depending on the scope of the preceding resource mismanagement. Given the current situation, it would be hard to imagine recovery occurring directly after the panic. In fact, 2009 is likely to be remembered for soaring unemployment, massive waves of bankruptcies, and scores of bank failures. Just how big is the problem? Well, take a look at its foundation. From 1995 to 2000, unmitigated monetary expansion created a stock market bubble which sent the S&P 500 from 450 to 1550. The ensuing recession... and they always come when resources are misused... promised to be nasty. By 2002, the SPX had fallen back to 750. If healthy market forces had been allowed to do their work, the entire bubble would have been unwound, a few inefficient blue chips would have folded, and lots of smaller inefficient companies would have followed. To the chagrin of policy makers, prices of goods and services would have dropped (I like lower prices. Don't you?), resources would have returned to higher utility, and by now Americans would have been enjoying a productive (rather than speculative) economy along with a selection of bargain stocks with promising futures. Instead, the Federal Reserve forced more credit down our throats and induced an even larger bubble. While the tech bubble's scope was measured in the hundreds of billions, the housing bubble dwarfed it. Tens of trillions of dollars were tossed around the globe in the forms of ill-advised loans and ill-advised derivatives on those loans. Yet despite its enormity, the housing bubble only managed to push the S&P 500 back to nominal highs. Why? Because it was all a fraud. Real wealth cannot be created simply by printing money. The housing boom was soaking up resources that would have been more efficiently used elsewhere or even left in the ground. Inefficient businesses thrived because they had access to capital at below-market price. We basically robbed our future resources simply for the guise of economic activity. We are now entering a period of depression, in the classic economic sense, in which debt is detroyed, prices fall, and inefficient businesses... except those fraudulently supported by governments... fail. I do not believe that any government action can prevent this process from unfolding. Efforts by western central banks to force more credit creation will change nothing but the level of inflation economies suffer when expansion returns. Furthermore, reactionary antics by a new set of politicians are likely to deepen the coming depression through inefficient policies of regulation, taxation, and price controls. Stocks Bonds and The Dollar This luxury will not last. Market forces will eventually discipline the Fed through a combination of higher rates and inflation. The turning point will also mark a secular trend change for bonds, which have enjoyed a 27-year bull market. It is possible that the recent run carries the signature of the parabolic-style move that ends such long-term bulls. I suspect we will see the inflection during the course of 2009. With regard to the bond market's effect on stocks, the recent flood of money into bonds has likely stunted the extent of the stock market rebound out of November. Ironically, if bonds fall fast enough, the rise in rates could likewise stunt stock performance. Commodities Wishing a healthy and prosperous New Year to all...
|
|
Deric O. Cadora Deric O. Cadora is the editor of The DOCument, a daily newsletter offering stock market commentary, macro economic discussion, and technical trade signals. Deric is a professional investor and the proprietor of Atavia, Inc., a thriving web applications and web hosting company. His investment experience spans two decades, during which time he served as principal of a broker-dealer and developed proprietary statistical trading models. Copyright © 2005-2009 Deric O. Cadora Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
« BullionVault.com
-- Buy gold online - quickly, safely and at low prices »
« Honest Money: A History of U.S. Gold & Silver Currency -- by Douglas V. Gnazzo Maestro, My Ass! -- by Michael Ashton » « 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. » |