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Home Market Imploding, Japanese Yen Exploding!
December 10, 2007


Monday, December 10, 2007 - Vol. 9, No. 292

Home Market Imploding, Japanese Yen Exploding!

Today's comment is by Jack Crooks, Editor of World Currency Options and President of Black Swan Capital.

Dear A-Letter Reader,

The mainstream media is cheering Washington's new bailout plan for homeowners. But meanwhile bad news keeps pouring out of the U.S. housing markets like the floodwaters of the Chehalis River.

The percentage of home loans in any stage of foreclosure surged 70% this quarter, the worst ever recorded. In fact, the overall mortgage delinquency rate has jumped to the worst level since 1986.

Even the delinquencies on FHA loans, supposedly safe and secure, have jumped.

The total damage: Goldman Sachs recently released a report estimating a whopping US$450 billion before the carnage is over. And the Treasury's latest bailout plan only adds to investor losses, wiping away, with one stroke of the pen, billions in promised interest income.

Inevitable result: Big trouble for the U.S economy and massive opportunities in the currency markets.

It all starts with ...

The Fed Moving in Aggressively
To Avoid a U.S. Recession

The Fed meeting tomorrow could be a watershed event.

Analysts - the very same ones who repeatedly claimed "the worst is over" - are second-guessing themselves left and right. Will all this credit market turmoil lead to a full-blown recession here in the U.S.?

My answer: Probably. And if the Federal Reserve is serious about trying to avoid it, it's going to embark on one of the most massive rate-cutting, money-pumping efforts we've ever seen, and this week could mark a new launching pad in that Herculean effort.

The Fed knows what's happening. They see the huge losses on Wall Street. They see how panicked mortgage investors are, and how pinched consumers are becoming.

They also know that U.S. growth depends on investor faith and consumer confidence. So they're going to do anything and everything in their power to try and keep both in the game. They want investors investing and consumers happily shopping away until at least year-end.

Unfortunately, more money and rate cuts are not going to solve the problem ...

You saw what happened when the dot-com bubble burst. The Fed responded by cutting rates to the bone. Did that stop the U.S. from falling into a recession? No.

And this time, things are far worse. This time, it's not just one sector. It's hundreds of millions of homes, US$13 trillion in mortgages and a massive financial sector that's taking it on the chin.

If banks are more reluctant to loan out money, business activity grinds to a halt. If businesses grind to a halt, you can bet they won't need as many hands on deck. That, in turn, spells disaster for consumer spending.

The risks to the U.S. economy: Huge.

The chance of a recession: Very high.

The irrational exuberance of the Fed in heading it off: Unprecedented!

But that won't come as a giant surprise to investors.

Here's What Will Really Shock the Markets:
A Massive Flow of Money Back to the Japanese Yen

Tremendous pressure is building in the yen carry-trade.

Investors borrowed an estimated US$1 trillion from Japan to invest in riskier assets. Now, as these investors recoil from the rising risk of losses, they're rushing back.

But so far, only a small fraction of that money has returned to Japan, and already the yen has rallied sharply.

Japanese Yen

Using the continuous futures contract as a benchmark, the value of each yen has surged from less than .82 cents in July to nearly .94 cents last month.

Now, it's come back down a bit, to about .90 cents.

But as you can see from this chart, it's holding solidly to a firm and steep upward trend (red lines).

To me, that's a setup for smart investors:

You have a clearly established trend.

You have a convenient entry window.

And you have some of the most powerful forces in history behind you!

JACK CROOKS, Editor of
World Currency Options

EDITOR'S NOTE: Jack will release a special trade to his World Currency Options subscribers later today to capitalize on this clearly established trend. In World Currency Options, Jack recommends strategic currency options to play what's happening in currencies around the world. He tells you when (and what) to buy, when to sell and why you're buying. He even gives you the exact language so you can talk to your broker about your trades. Click Here to find out more.


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Wealth

Bear Markets Be Damned:
You Still Have To Eat and Drink!

Defensive investing and capital preservation has been the name of the investment game over the last five months. Basically invest wisely and hold on to what you have.

Most traditional equity fund managers around the world have been using this as a battle plan since the sub-prime mortgage crisis hit in July.

A recent survey by Financial Express and Thomson Datastream, shows more fund managers are turning to defensive stocks like food and beverages, tobacco and telecommunications since late July.

These stocks enjoy steady earnings growth and predictable cash-flows. For the most part these stocks are also immune from the ongoing credit crunch because their services are widely used every day, regardless of the economic cycle.

One of the most defensive stocks in the previous bear market from 2000 to 2002 was Britain's Diageo plc (NYSE-DEO).

The world's largest alcohol company, Diageo more than doubled from 1999 to 2003. At the time, investors turned cautious and scrambled to companies with predictable revenues and above-average dividends. DEO has been in the The Sovereign Indvidual Portfolio for the last several years and remains a "hold" after more than doubling in value.

Another goliath is Switzerland's Nestle SA (OTC-NSRGY). Nestle is the world's largest food company with bigger GDP revenues than many developing countries!

This massive company is literally on every consumers' menu each day of the week. Nestles produces spring water, Perrier, San Pellegrino, chocolate, baby food and ice cream, to name just a few products.

Since September, Nestle has another claim to fame. This behemoth has received the largest increase in fund manager holdings among food and beverage stocks.

In our special 20-page January issue of The Sovereign Individual, I'll be recommending one of the best defensive mutual funds available in the United States that successfully invests in defensive industries like food, beverages, gambling, tobacco and military manufacturing.

Bull or bear, consumers will always turn to buying necessary products and "sin" stocks that don't require an expanding economy to boost earnings growth.

It's time to get defensive ahead of 2008. And investing in food, beverages and unbreakable habits is a good place to start.

ERIC ROSEMAN, Investment Director

P.S. Don't miss out on our special 20-page edition of our members-only newsletter, The Sovereign Individual. Sign up right now for Sovereign Society membership and receive the next 12 issues - packed with ideas about how to beat the coming recession - for our lowest rate ever. Click here to learn more.




Privacy & Rights

Big Brother Can Now Read
Your Shredded Documents

One of the best ways to protect yourself against identity theft is to shred sensitive documents. You just need to run these documents through a crosscut shredder before you dispose of them.

Such shredding is probably sufficient to protect you against a dumpster-diving identity thief. But, it won't necessarily avoid scrutiny if your own government wants to read them.

Researchers in Germany have developed software that can reassemble shredded documents. They're planning to use the software to reassemble 16,000 bags of documents shredded by the Stasi, the secret police in the former East Germany.

In the United States, law enforcement and intelligence agencies have long sought tools to allow them to reassemble shredded documents. "It's been an area of interest for a very long time," says William Daly, a former FBI investigator. "The government is always trying to keep ahead of the curve."

The lesson is clear. Don't assume that using a shredder is the "final word" in document destruction. If you really want to make sure that a document is unreadable, burn it, then stir the ashes.

That way, you'll avoid being "burned" by having supposedly unreadable shredded documents recovered and possibly used against you.

MARK NESTMANN, Privacy Expert & President
The Nestmann Group
www.nestmann.com



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