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Wednesday, July 30, 2008 - Vol. 10, No. 180
Today's comment is by Eric Roseman, Investment Director and editor of Commodity Trend Alert.
On any given day the stock market posts a big triple-digit gain it's almost natural to want to jump aboard and buy fresh positions. That's how I felt going into this morning's trading after yesterday's 260-point gain for the Dow.
But I'm going to resist the urge to buy.
Even with yesterday's gains, stocks are still miserable right now. That's why my portfolios are now sitting with their lowest equity exposure since 2001. Instead, I'm stocking up on cash, reverse index funds, gold and gold stocks, and a host of other investments that zig when the market zags. That strategy has worked all along this year - until earlier this month.
A major trend reversal happened this month. Some of the biggest losses are impacting hedge funds. They're now suffering their worst month in eight years with an average loss of 3.5% heading into this week's trading.
Bearish Portfolios Take Another Hit -
This Time in Commodities
The macro hedge funds or managers that take big directional bets with leverage have been riding commodities this year and shorting financials. Once again, that was a superb trading strategy until this month.
Bank stocks have been rallying this month while everything commodity-related, including coal, potash, and energy has been getting massacred. Spot gold prices have remained virtually unchanged in July from June's closing price. However, the mining shares are down over 10%. That's causing some serious damage to all bearish portfolios.
The XAU Index or Philadelphia Gold & Silver Index is down about 13% this month and now trades well below its important 50-day and 200-day moving averages. This tells me that more selling could lie ahead.
Coincidentally, the pathetic U.S. dollar is actually holding its own this month. The dollar firmed up despite more bad economic news, including housing foreclosures, massive budget deficits, consumer confidence at 17-year lows and deflation destroying portfolio wealth since mid-2007.
As goes the dollar, so goes the commodities markets. This historical relationship is negatively correlated. As the dollar rallies, commodities tend to decline, and vice versa. I do believe most of the dollar's decline is behind us, but I believe we have one more leg south.
The market is wrong assuming the Fed will tighten anytime soon. There's just no way Bernanke will hike rates while unemployment is rising, credit is contracting, and housing is still hemorrhaging.
What $122 Oil Is Doing to the Markets
Oil is triggering a major trend reversal this month.
The price of crude oil is now correcting heavily. Oil has fallen from its July 11th all-time high of US$147 per barrel and now fetches "just" US$122 per barrel. Since oil and the rest of the energy complex is the largest constituent of commodity benchmarks, the CRB Index, and other raw materials indices are down more than 10% in July.
Needless to say, it's pretty ugly if you're long commodities right now.
Oil Drags Down the Rest of Commodities
But let's put this somber mood for the bears in perspective...
The U.S. economy is not bottoming. I expect the economy to get worse as the year progresses with a bottom forming sometime in mid-2009, possibly sooner. Since stocks tend to discount a recovery in advance, it's still too early to buy stocks.
More bad news is coming - and not just in the United States. Earnings in Europe and Asia, excluding Japan, are still too optimistic and will be revised lower.
A Bearish Crystal Ball:
The Index That Predicted the Bear Market Has Not Peaked Yet
Lowry's Index measures buying and selling volume trends. And so far, this index has not peaked. This index was correct in identifying weak buy-side volume as early as last August and warned a bear market was in the cards.
On days the stock market posts a big advance, like yesterday, investors are not aggressively accumulating equities. In fact, they are still selling. Lowry's tells me that the point of maximum selling has not arrived.
Finally, and most importantly, the state of the credit markets is not improving.
Some segments are rallying, including the LBO market or leveraged loans. But most deals are not clearing and banks still have a massive back-log of paper they can't sell.
Furthermore, banks are reluctant to lend. Their battle-scarred balance-sheets are committed to rebuilding equity. Banks are struggling. Capital is scarce. Lending volume has fallen off a cliff since last fall and it's not improving. LIBOR rates remain elevated, junk bonds are still declining in value as default rates rise and most credit indexes are at all-time lows, meaning stress is at extreme levels.
What It Will Take To Get Me Excited about Stocks Again
The only bullish component supporting the stock market now is lower oil prices. I'd have to see oil trade south of US$100 a barrel to get really excited about stocks again. In the absence of an economic crash in China, I doubt we'll see US$75 or US$80 oil again.
Also, a federal bailout or nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is a short-term bullish development after this bill passed in the Senate.
I assume investors love this arrangement because this arrangement will thwart systemic risk in the short-term. But what a disaster in the end! This bailout will result in much higher inflation as the government prints money like crazy to nationalize half of the housing market. Taxpayers, naturally, will pay for this mess.
The bears are right. The U.S. economy and the dollar have not bottomed yet. If you're a bear, then stay the course because stocks don't make historical bear market lows during the summer. Market lows usually arrive in the fall.
The bear is still alive and kicking and just wants to sucker more investors into believing the worst is behind us. It's not.
ERIC ROSEMAN, Investment Director
P.S. It may be difficult to remain long and strong in commodities this month, but I still say it will pay off in the long-run. That's why I'm continuing to recommend my long-term gold-bugs portfolio to my Commodity Trend Alert subscribers. This portfolio is packed with my favorite gold and gold-mining plays. I continue to expect the biggest gains over the next 12 months in gold as more banking problems loom, inflation continues to rise, and the dollar breaks to new lows. You can get an insider's look at my gold portfolio here.
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The IRS Got What They Wanted Before...
Now They Want More!
As I said yesterday, the IRS has forced financial institutions abroad into the unwelcome role of IRS informants, a.k.a. "qualified intermediaries" (QI) since 2001.
As usual, the IRS is obsessed with crushing possible offshore tax evasion. So the IRS went outside their jurisdiction and actually extraterritorial tax enforcement burdens on foreign nations and their banks. Banks were forced to meet IRS established anti-money laundering and "know your customer" standards in order to get the "QI" stamp of approval.
Stop and think for a moment how American banks (and the IRS) would react if a foreign nation ordered them to follow their own strict rules. I'm guessing they'd laugh in their face.
Now IRS officials say foreign banks are required to determine whether their clients are United States persons. Foreign banks also must determine possible U.S. beneficial ownership of foreign corporations and trusts with bank accounts. If they are U.S. clients, then the bank must let the IRS know about the client and withhold taxes on dividends in the account at rates of up to 30%.
The IRS says it will soon allow foreign banks in the QI program to use third-party databases, such as those from credit reporting firms, to determine who their clients really are and what taxes they should pay.
It remains to be seen how any new QI rules can be made to square with strict laws guaranteeing financial and banking secrecy in many nations, such as Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Andorra, Monaco, Singapore, Belize, or Panama. Typically those laws make it a criminal act to reveal any information about bank account holders, foreign or domestic, unless a court orders them to do so.
Offshore banks may be forced to choose between obedience to their home country laws, or to the grasping long arm laws of the IRS.
Let me suggest that it is the duty of the American government to investigate and indict anyone suspected of violating laws - on an individual case basis. It is not the government's duty or right to coerce offshore bankers to act as IRS agents.
But since they continue to stretch their reach, I advise anyone with an offshore account to pay your necessary taxes - and stay out of their grasp.
BOB BAUMAN, Legal Counsel
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