Shepherd’s Of Illusion
By Joseph Russo
ElliottWaveTechnology.com
6/28/2009
Sadly, history will
continue to show that those in positions of great power, elected by various
means as prudential stewards of peoples and their economies, continue to prove
themselves nothing more than shepherd’s of illusion.
One of the spoils of war
enjoyed by victors is the tendency toward rewriting history to better suit their
prevailing views. In similar context,
once ruling parties secure conquest, when backed up against the wall, the few
in control of the many often go to extraordinary measures to quickly modify or rewrite
the rule of law in order to preserve the monopoly of dominance over those under
their rule.
To illustrate a very
small example of such tampering, we share a side note of John Hussman’s weekly
market commentary surrounding the proposed regulatory changes in the financial
markets. We were particularly drawn to
one of his observations, which in our view, correctly characterizes the Fed and
Treasury as prone to using public funds for private benefit, and their tendency
to hop into bed with bank executives more eagerly than five-dollar gigolo’s:
-Side note quoted from John P. Hussman,
Ph.D. of the Hussman Funds-
“In observing the proposals for changing the regulatory
structure of the financial markets, it strikes me that the idea that some banks
are “too big to fail” is a dangerous and misguided premise. The best way to defend ourselves from further
crises like those that we have observed over the past year is to - a.) Give regulatory authorities with a clear and
unbiased stake in customer protection
– ideally the FDIC – authority to force the government receivership of
insolvent bank holding companies and non-bank financial institutions, with no
option to perform bailouts at public expense.
This receivership authority should emphatically not be under the discretion
of officials at the Treasury or the Fed, who are prone to instead use public
funds for private benefit, and who hop into bed with bank executives more
eagerly than a five-dollar gigolo; b.)
eliminate the use of “cross-covenants” that allow the default of
subordinated debt to trigger the default of senior debt – this would allow the
receivership of an institution to properly wipe out both the equity and a
portion of the subordinated debt, without resulting in a blanket default of all
of the institution's other debt obligations; c.) Similarly, restrict the use of credit default
swaps to senior debt, and then only for bona-fide hedging purposes. The upshot of these changes would be to make
equity and subordinated debt work in practice as they ought to work – as
capital buffers that are truly capable of absorbing extraordinary losses of a
financial institution without provoking endless domino effects in the event
that an institution goes into receivership.”
Another recent
illustrative quote comes from credit analyst Doug Noland, and exemplifies the
cunning illusory deceit and subsequent denial routinely imparted by central
bankers and politicians relative to their past and ongoing stewardships of social
obligation. In our view, his quotes clearly
illustrate the ease and complexity in which denial-based justification of
actions on part of the powerful-few come to be routinely lauded despite the
long-term practical effects that those actions will most assuredly impart on
the many in due course.
-Doug
Noland on the flawed but powerful influence that politics and
central banking impose upon the long-term health of our nation’s economy-
“The Greenspan/Bernanke Fed championed the
disastrous doctrine that our central bank should ignore expanding Bubbles,
choosing instead a course of aggressive intervention ("mopping up")
once they had burst. This analysis
failed to consider myriad financial, economic and political realities,
including that massive fiscal stimulus would be required - and generally
welcomed - in the post-Bubble crisis environment. Today's political and inflationary landscapes
are very much an outgrowth of Greenspan's terribly flawed monetary management.”
“Greenspan
can claim it is a political problem and warn against increased statism. Yet the
real dilemma today and going forward is the maladjusted "Bubble
Economy" structure that fends off systemic breakdown only through $2.0
TN-plus annual Credit growth. Of course,
our politicians have not sat idly as the Credit system buckled and the economy
lurched downward. And, indeed, it was
Greenspan more than any other individual that was responsible for the public's
blind faith in Washington policymakers' capacity to resolve any and
all financial and economic problems. As
always, politicians have a propensity to try to inflate their way out of jams. That is why it is critical to maintain a
disciplined financial system, a stable and balanced economy, and a tough and
independent central bank.”
“I
know better than to try to predict the timing of problems developing in the
Treasury and currency markets. But I do
see all the makings for the next problematic leg of this financial crisis. As I have written before, our nation's
predicament becomes much more problematic when perceptions turn against the
Treasury/agency marketplace.”
In summarizing our viewpoints,
the potency and effect of distortive interventionist political and monetary policies
together with participants herding tendencies to “stampede” are in fact
what determines that authorities’ success or failure in maintaining their
monopoly and status quo preferences, all of which are vital to their ongoing
supreme and elite existence of full spectrum dominance and rule.
Regimes successful in the
management and chosen direction of desired policy-induced stampedes, will likely
fulfill their prime directives and remain effectively dominant and in vital control
of the masses.
In theory, leadership regimes
that fail must stand down and give way to a new regime, one that is likely quite
different from theirs, and hopefully part of a new leadership regime whose
intent is more disciplined, impartial, prudential, enduring, and steward-like. In our present reality however, such a regime
change cannot take place without an outright revolution or total systemic
collapse.
In the aftermath of
inevitable revolution or collapse, such a new regime might then be trusted to
perform as expected rather than deceptively shepherding the masses with innovative
and false incentive traps far too complex for the mass of mere mortals to
unravel and comprehend.
The jury remains out as
to whether the current maturing regimes faltering paradigms will ultimately
prevail in this latest quest to preserve its historic monopoly power. With that, we close our views on the authorities
at large, also known by this author as our trusted shepherds of illusion.
On a tangential matter of Performance and
Transparency
We wish to share with
readers a rather astounding equity curve chart.
The graph below reflects Elliott Wave Technology’s year-to-date
Level-III performance returns vs. the Dow Jones Industrial average. The performance results are not an illusion.

Bear in mind that our
medium-term Level-III
strategy is just one small “start-of-day” segment residing amid our full
spectrum advisory service. At Level-III,
we lay out explicit guidance for index traders who lack a successful
disciplined strategy of their own, and who may simply not have the time or
inclination to sit in front of a computer all day long searching for trade set-ups.
The
equity curve’s year-to-date performance result graphically illustrates that while
the Dow continues to languish in negative territory for the year, that Level-III
single contract futures traders have secured an incredible 160% return on 20K
model accounts during the first six months of 2009.
In
addition, it shows that those trading non-levered ETF’s
with a 20K account size have enjoyed a fantastic 40% return in just six months
time. Note how the non-levered ETF
performs in direct opposition to the Dow as the Industrials fell by nearly 40%
in early March. Also, note that since
the Dow’s miraculous recovery from its encounter with the abyss in March that
in contrast, our non-levered ETF strategy maintains the lion’s share of profits
amassed as a direct result of that encounter.
In
terms of hard-earned money, ETF traders have booked over $6,000 in profits
averaging more than $1,000 per month on the modeled 20K account size. Obviously
larger account sizes or the use of levered ETF products will have yielded
dollar returns proportionately higher.
Astoundingly,
their futures trading counterparts have booked nearly $30,000 in profits per
single contract traded, which translates to nearly $5,000 per month. Once again, dollar and yield returns would be
double this amount if one traded two contracts instead of one, and triple this
amount if three contracts employed.
Relative
to the extremely modest cost of this easy to use Level-III advisory, patient
and disciplined users have prudently grown their account balances rather
dramatically, all while the Dow struggles to break even on the year.
On
balance, the consistent actionable value derived from our full spectrum Five-Level
trading advisory and charting services dwarf the present service fee, which is due
for adjustment.
If such
extraordinary levels of performance endure, it is likely that at some point it will
become necessary to limit the number of users by adjusting fees to represent
more accurately the value of such superior and user-friendly returns.
With that, we shall close with an update on last week’s charts and be
on our way…