Can This Rally Last?
By John Browne, Senior Market Strategist
Euro Pacific Capital
As the markets closed on
Friday, March 14th, the $50 billion hedge fund, Carlyle Group, had
collapsed, and questions were being asked about the viability of Bear Stearns. Having realized that Bear was close to
insolvency, the Treasury and Fed worked overtime during the ensuing weekend to
cobble together a bail out scheme that has since calmed the markets and
encouraged a tepid rally. The salient
question now is whether the rally can last.
With a counter-party
involvement in a significant amount of the $43 trillion derivatives market, the
collapse of Bear Stearns would have been the financial equivalent of an atom
bomb. Its failure threatened not only the
U.S. financial system, but also sophisticated financial markets in most of the
world.
On March 17th, the
Fed’s emergency action to rescue Bear Stearns took most people by surprise. It gave rise to a sigh of relief from Wall
Street and other financial markets, which expected a full one-percentage point
drop in Fed rates the next day. Apparently,
the foundations of a market rally were laid. The Fed cut its rates by 75 basis points to
2.25 percent and announced massive new financing arrangements. Although the measures were temporary, they
nonetheless placated shattered nerves. But
was that any justification for a real rally?
The feeling of relief
extended to mild euphoria. For example,
three major Wall Street investment banks reported earnings falls of between 42
and 57 percent…and the news was greeted as positive! The falls, after all, were less than fanciful
Wall Street “estimates”. Since then,
possibly led by the mythical “Plunge Protection Team”, stock markets around the
world began to rise in thin trading. But
the underlying issues remain extremely troubling.
It is true that markets had
fallen significantly and under normal conditions a rally should be expected. The S&P 500 put in what appeared to be a
convincing technical bottom. However, technical
analysts forecast a volatile sideways trading band for the S&P 500, between
1,270 and 1,400, with a downward breakout being a cause for alarm.
Some two weeks into the
rally, a series of statistics are emerging that point to increasing signs of economic
recession in the United States.
On Monday, March 24th,
the market welcomed the news that sales of existing homes had risen by 2.9
percent in February, on an annualized (forecast?) basis, which was the first
gain since July. Given lesser play was that
the factual year-on-year figure, which showed a drop in existing home sales of
some 24 percent. House prices also fell.
But it appeared that Wall Street was
unwilling to focus on the truth, apparently preferring to cling to straws of
seemingly bullish information, even if grossly misleading.
The next day, The Wall Street Journal reported on how
dependant the housing market is on jobs. It highlighted the Case-Shiller findings that
U.S. housing prices had risen by 74 percent between
2000 and 2006. Over that time, “median
household income rose just 15 percent,” a discrepancy that “made housing
unaffordable for many Americans.”
That same day, it was
reported that American consumer confidence was far weaker than expected,
falling to the lowest levels since 1973, adding yet more fuel to the forces of
recession.
Perhaps the worst set of
recent statistics is the little discussed size of total residential housing
debt, which is in the midst of a massive financial ‘deleveraging’. Management of this process debt will easily
overwhelm the relatively modest financial resources of the U.S. government. Unless this enormous disparity is appreciated,
investors are vulnerable to being suckered into ‘dead cat’ bounce rallies.
Professor Robert Shiller has
determined that house prices rose in line with inflation, between 1900 and
1995, at 3.3 percent per annum. Beginning in 1996, the Greenspan property
bubble drove average house prices to a position where, by 2007, they were some
40 percent above their aggregate century-long ‘trend’ value.
To “deleverage”, as Treasury
Secretary Paulson so soothingly describes it, will require the squeezing out of
this 40 percent of price inflation; or some $12 trillion! This figure, which excludes the deleveraging
of other debt-ridden areas such as commercial real estate, credit cards and
auto loans, is just $2 trillion short of our entire annual GDP! It is a gigantic figure, of which there is
understandably little or no mention.
When note also is taken of
the $436 billion the Fed has recently injected into our economy and the fact
that it represents some 50 percent of the Fed’s balance sheet, a massive
problem of relative size is manifest. It
begs the question of whether the Fed has the resources to do anything but make
a dent in the crisis.
Faced with these realities,
it is unlikely that the Fed has much chance of averting a serious recession. If Congress fails to act soon, depression will
threaten. The earnings of many
corporations can then be expected to plummet, leading to a serious erosion of
stock prices.
Congress now needs to find a
‘cause’, that is politically attractive, in order to stall a depression, by
boosting it into a recovery bubble. Green
alternative energy, for example, would provide an attractive political cause,
justifying the authorization of massive government spending on an unprecedented
scale.
The Fed will have to reduce
interest rates still further and stand ready to fund many troubled banks to
justify even a nominal rally in U.S. stock markets.
In short, if we are to stall
a depression, we must necessarily experience both far greater inflation and
lower interest rates. The result will be
renewed downward pressure on the U.S. dollar and the unseen erosion of U.S.
dollar based wealth.
Many dollar assets can be
expected to fall in price, even in depreciating dollars. Investors should be
skeptical of any intermediate dollar-based market rallies. Instead they should arm themselves with advice
as to how to avert the serious dollar erosion of their portfolios.
For a more in depth analysis
of our financial problems and the inherent dangers they pose for the U.S.
economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read Peter Schiff’s book
“Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.” Click here to order a
copy today.
More importantly, don’t wait for reality to set
in. Protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before it’s
too late. Discover the best way to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com , download our
free research report on the powerful case for investing in foreign equities
available at www.researchreportone.com
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