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June 15, 2009 Pivotal Events |
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The following is part of Pivotal Events that was published for our subscribers June 11, 2009. Signs Of The Times:
STOCK MARKETS In the emotional depths of early March it was difficult to imagine having a successful "silly season" that often brews up in the spring. However, there are the examples we have been using from the crash-rebound into the spring of 1930, and 1874. Equal measures of complacency and euphoria are back again, and reasonably close to schedule. Of some importance is that some items are offering warning signs. This has been noted in some recent ChartWorks. On June 1, it was that the Canadian Dollar was in a topping pattern, suggesting a change in currencies. The C$ has declined a little. Next, on June 3 it was that crude oil had registered an Upside Exhaustion, which indicated a concluding high within a few weeks (that was also the case in early June last year). On June 5 it was that gold had become eligible for a correction, and on June 7 it was that the DX was accomplishing a successful test of the December low. The Dollar Index is stabilizing. Last week's edition noted that the rally in the orthodox world started in early March when we called for an important change in currencies. The feature would be a declining dollar that would likely slump to around May. Another warning is that grains have soared enough to register an Upside Exhaustion on Goldman's Index (GYX). For agricultural commodities and stocks the best is virtually in. With the Upside Exhaustion on copper, base metal miners have been vulnerable. Our proprietary Bank Trading Guide has become volatile which often leads the outright "sell" signal. This has sharply increased from 149 in the middle of May to 162 on Thursday, where it became somewhat overbought. We advised reducing exposure in US banks a few weeks ago and with the signal we will advise aggressive selling. These cover the key items associated with the revival of animated spirits, and it is worth adding that Lowry's work indicates that the rally is not the start of a new bull market. This in-depth work confirms our post-bubble model that expected a strong rally, within a bear market. A break in speculative items and firming dollar will have profound implications. Beyond nice timing to the conclusion of another "silly season", declining prices will begin to deny the Fed's ambition to depreciate the dollar as a chronic policy tool. This is the old "pushing on string" problem. Globally, there could be a surplus of such strings, as well as a surplus of frustrated central bankers. Pity. INTEREST RATES Monday's memo "Bad News in Interest Rates" reviewed the sharp rise in shorter-term rates. Focusing on the two-year, which was at .96% on Thursday, the jump to 1.31% on Friday was impressive, with follow through on Monday to 1.44%. This eased on Monday to 1.30%, and today it's at 1.32%. Too many participants had pushed the steepening trend to an unstable condition, and some news on unemployment touched off panic covering. In this case, it was long the two-year and short the long end. There were few traders to take them off and it was another discovery of illiquidity, when there should be liquidity. Some think it is adjusting for a stronger economy. But, as the chart showed, short rates seem to be following their path in May 1931, when at twenty months from the stock market high the decline ended and rates for most classes and maturities began a serious increase. The initial part of the increase seemed to anticipate that discovery of global banking problems. It is appropriate to be aware of the possible turn to distress. Base Metal Prices: We got long in the crash, which was also the seasonal low for metals and mining stocks. We like the seasonals in this sector, and looked for a good high somewhere around May. Mining stocks (SPTMN) have been an outstanding performer in rallying from 178 in November to 609 in early May, when we thought the best of the play was accomplished. The 'overboughts" were rather good. The gain of 242% was very good, considering that the set back in February was modest. The SPTMN sold off to 493 when it joined the "silly season" crowd in soaring to 667 today. Within this, Teck has taken flight from the death-like realization that buying all that coal with all the debt was one of the stupidest decisions in Canadian mining history. From a high of 53 the low was 3.35 in early March and now it"s at 21, and the move is becoming rather compulsive. Another week of this and one could say that there is life in outer space. Base metals continue to rise as our index has rallied from 706 in early December to 1166 this week. Copper, at 2.25, registered the best Upside Exhaustion since the cyclical high two years ago. This would likely correct and then test the high. The test continues to 2.36 and this is still within the time window when seasonal highs have been set. Early in this edition we noted that a number of items are at momentum levels usually found at turning points. This includes grains at an Upside Exhaustion and the Canadian Dollar in a pattern that concludes a rally. This mania in commodities is close to ending. Link to Friday, June 12 "Bob and Phil Show" on Howestreet.com: http://www.howestreet.com/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1242
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Bob Hoye The opinions in this report are solely those of the author. The information herein was obtained from various sources; however we do not guarantee its accuracy or completeness. This research report is prepared for general circulation and is circulated for general information only. It does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and the particular needs of any specific person who may receive this report. Investors should seek financial advice regarding the appropriateness of investing in any securities or investment strategies discussed or recommended in this report and should understand that statements regarding future prospects may not be realized. Investors should note that income from such securities, if any, may fluctuate and that each securitys price or value may rise or fall. Accordingly, investors may receive back less than originally invested. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed constitutes an offer to buy or sell any securities or options or futures contracts. Foreign currency rates of exchange may adversely affect the value, price or income of any security or related investment mentioned in this report. In addition, investors in securities such as ADRs, whose values are influenced by the currency of the underlying security, effectively assume currency risk. Moreover, from time to time, members of the Institutional Advisors team may be long or short positions discussed in our publications. Copyright © 2003-2009 Bob Hoye Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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