Best of the Week
DEFLATION is Winning! - Watch the Video its FREE
Most Popular of the Week
1.Cap and Trade Bill HR 2454 Will Lead to Capital Flight - Dr_Ron_Paul
2.Goldman Sachs The Fourth Branch of the U.S. Government- Graham_Summers
3.The Coming Economic Apocalypse- Roy_F_Grieder
4.The End of the Recession?- John_Mauldin
5.Bernanke is a Total Failure Unsuited for Role as Fed Chairman- Mike_Shedlock
6.Fed Market Manipulation, Surmounting The Main Threat To Profits And Protection -DeepCaster_LLC
7.China Mega-trend Stocks Stealth Bull Market Update, SSEC Up 47%- Nadeem_Walayat
Weeks Analysis
Current Recession Is a Severe Credit Bust of Depression-Era Magnitude- 4th July 09
"Super Imperialism:" The Economic Strategy of Imperial America- 3rd July 09
The Smart Grid Will Offer Exceptional Investing Opportunities- 3rd July 09
Inflationary Crack-up Boom has Commenced in the G7 Economies!- 3rd July 09
Yen Carry Trade Suggests Global Stock Markets Base Building Underway- 3rd July 09
Silver Stocks and ETF - 3rd July 09
A Message for Armchair Economists- 3rd July 09
The Keynesian System, the Economics of Illusion- 3rd July 09
U.S. Housing Market Recovery Process Outlook- 3rd July 09
Japanese Yen: Resumption of the Bull Market ? - 3rd July 09
What’s Happening in Crude Oil?- 3rd July 09
Temporary Bounce in EUR/GBP Now Possible- 3rd July 09
Silver Response to Inflation and Deflation the United States - 3rd July 09
Economic Recovery Green Shoots Doused with Herbicide- 3rd July 09
U.S. Economy Economic Recovery Achilles Heel- 3rd July 09
U.S. Unemployment Soars Whilst Fed Funnels More Cash to the Banksters- 3rd July 09
Challenges and Enormous Opportunities in Alternative Energy- 3rd July 09
Listen to Citigroup Analysts at Your Own Peril- 3rd July 09
DEFLATION Video Antidote to the Mainstream Inflation Consensus- 3rd July 09
U.S. Economy Heading for Japan of the 1990's or Argentina 2002?- 2nd July 09
Profiting From Stock Market Sector Dead Cat Bounces- 2nd July 09
Basic Financial Markets Analysis Part2- 2nd July 09
U.S. Unemployment Rate Hits 9.5%, Jobs Contract 18th Straight Month- 2nd July 09
In the Future, Interest Rates Will Soar and Consumers Will be Sore Also- 2nd July 09
Preserve Your Wealth with Precious Metals- 2nd July 09
Understanding The Dangers of Leveraged ETFs- 2nd July 09
Stock Market Seasonality What is Going to Happen with the Upcoming July 4th Holiday?- 2nd July 09
China Wants New Global Currency Which is Positive for Gold- 2nd July 09
The DJIA Stock Market Index, Chess and the Idiotic Robots - 2nd July 09
Stock Market and Dollar Upward Wedge Patterns - Signs of the times- 2nd July 09
Stock Markets Jump Out Of The Gate Before Fading- 2nd July 09
Commodities Sector Timing Trading for Gold, Oil, Silver and Natural Gas - 2nd July 09
Asia-Pacific Economies Grow As Developed Economies Wither- 2nd July 09
Million Dollar Question, What's Next for S&P 500 Stock Market Index - 2nd July 09
Will China Lead the World Out of Recession?- 2nd July 09
Make Bernie Madoff the Next Fed Chairman- 2nd July 09
U.S. Treasury Bond Market Update- 2nd July 09
U.S. Housing Market Blast From the Past- 2nd July 09
U.S. Launches Offensive Operations in Cyberspace (CYBERCOM)- 1st July 09
Rising Financial Markets See Brighter Times- 1st July 09
The Magic of the Golden Cross-Over Signal in Gold, Silver and Huey- 1st July 09
Faber & Greenspan: Shills for Fed Snake Oil on Deflation and Hyperinflation- 1st July 09
Walls to Block U.S. Deflation- 1st July 09
Banks Squeeze Credit Card Account Holders- 1st July 09
Is George Soros Long or Wrong on the Global Economic Rebound?- 1st July 09
How to Profit From Japan's Stock Market Shareholder Crisis- 1st July 09
The Case for Economic Depression, Credit Destruction - 1st July 09
Warning of Severe Economic Collapse, Mainstream Media Sustainable Recovery Hype- 1st July 09
Great Banking Confusion - 1st July 09
Stock Market S&P 500 Index Trend Update for July 2009- 1st July 09
Stock Market Ends Second Quarter With a Whimper- 1st July 09
Investment Grade Bonds Return 9.2%, Junk Returns 29%- 1st July 09
The Great Bank Robbery: How the Federal Reserve is destroying Americ- 1st July 09
Is Inflation a Fact… Or Just An Opinion? Part1- 1st July 09
Is America Broke- 1st July 09
U.S. Housing Market Deteriorates as Foreclosures Soar- 1st July 09
Lawrence Roulston: Every Reason in the World to Believe Gold Will Go Higher- 1st July 09
Is the U.S. Fed Juicing the Stock Market?- 30th June 09
Gold Breakout Above $1,000 Only a Question of Time- 30th June 09
U.S. House Prices Have Bottomed - 30th June 09
How to Improve Your FICO Credit Rating Score- 30th June 09
The Case Against Hyper Inflation- 30th June 09
Which Tek Stock is a Better Investment, Apple vs. RIMM - 30th June 09
Obama: Wrong on the Economy, Wrong on Healthcare (Part 1)- 30th June 09
What Happened to the Stock Market New Goldilocks Era?- 30th June 09
Inflationary Pressures and the MAE Faber Investment Strategy- 30th June 09
Goldman Sachs The Fourth Branch of the U.S. Government- 30th June 09
OECD Joins the UK Double Dip Recession Forecast Club- 30th June 09
Summer Sun Shines on Rising UK House Prices in June- 30th June 09
The Real Crisis is Beginning to Unfold… and It’s Not Financial Part2- 30th June 09
A 20-Year Stocks Bear Market?- 30th June 09
Objective Analysis of the Increase in the Fed's Balance Sheet - 29th June 09
Green Shoots Recovery Forex Markets Fatigue & Intermarket Setup- 29th June 09
Government Regulations to Force Agricultural Food Prices Higher- 29th June 09
Power Shortage at the U.S. Fed?- 29th June 09
Crude Oil and Natural Gas Trading- 29th June 09
Stock Market Summer Crash Forecast- 29th June 09
This Summer May Prove Hot for Gold Prices Despite the Weak Seasonal Tendencies- 29th June 09
U.S. Jump in Savings Rates Means Debt Deflation in America- 29th June 09
CNBC Admits to Manipulated Market that Continues To Be Propped Up By Government Intervention - 29th June 09
Important Week Ahead For Economic Data- 29th June 09
Where to Find Jobs in a Jobless Economic Recovery- 29th June 09
Bernanke is a Total Failure Unsuited for Role as Fed Chairman- 29th June 09
Stock Index Trading Signals Update- 29th June 09
Public Sector Pensions Deficit of £1.2 trillion Adds to Britains Debt Crisis- 29th June 09
Energy Fields in Gold and How to Trade Them- 29th June 09
GLD, SLV, USO & UNG ETF Commodity Trading Update- 29th June 09
Manipulated Financial Markets and Mainstream Media- 28th June 09
Ben Bernanke on the Great Depression- 28th June 09
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report - Market Wrap W/E 26th July- 28th June 09
What PIMCO's Bill Gross Doesn’t Want You to Know (Part 2)- 28th June 09
The Coming Economic Apocalypse- 28th June 09
SHEPHERD’S of Financial Markets ILLUSION- 28th June 09
Global Stock Market Performance and P/E Ratio Valuations- 28th June 09
Global Business Sentiment Improves Inline with Stock Market Trends- 28th June 09
The Possibility of Credit Collapse Deflation - 28th June 09
The Inflation Deflation Debate and Myth of the Kondratieff Wave- 28th June 09
China Mega-trend Stocks Stealth Bull Market Update, SSEC Up 47%- 28th June 09
Embrace Deflation - It's The Cure, Not The Problem- 27th June 09
The Stock Markets Repeating Weekly Pattern- 27th June 09
Dow Jones INDU On-Balance-Volume Stock Market Sell Signal - 27th June 09
The End of the Recession?- 27th June 09
Has the Stock Market Peaked for 2009? - 27th June 09
Stock Market Trading Range Continues...Bullish Pattern Holds Potential- 27th June 09
What PIMCO's Bill Gross Doesn’t Want You to Know (Part 1) - 27th June 09
Why Higher Gold Prices Will Come- 27th June 09
A Case For U.S. Treasury Bonds!- 27th June 09
Fed Market Manipulation, Surmounting The Main Threat To Profits And Protection- 27th June 09
How the Media Uses Buffett to Make Money- 27th June 09

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Most Popular 2009
1. Depression 2009 The Largest Train Wreck in Economic History - Darryl_R_Schoon (41,747)
2.UK Housing Market Crash and Depression Forecast 2007 to 2012 - Nadeem_Walayat (34,233)
3. Emerging Giants Russia, China, Brazil and India Looming Collapse 2009 - Martin Weiss (29,977)
4. Baby Boomers- Your Generation's Crisis Has Arrived - James Quinn (26,442)
5. Ten Major Threats Facing the U.S. Dollar in 2009 - Eric_deCarbonnel (26,023)
6. Nouriel Roubini 2009 U.S. GDP Forecasting 40% Home Mortgage Failures? - Andrew_Butter (24,711)
7. Stock Market Crash 2009: Fine Tuning DJIA Target To 5,800 - Eric_Chevrette (23,492)
8. US, UK, Eurozone Banks Face Collapse: Global Banking System Insolvent - Mike_Shedlock (21,114)
9. UK CPI Inflation, RPI Deflation Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (20,821)
10.Gold Price Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (20,317)
11. Stock Market Crash Red Alert: Meltdown Imminent! - Martin Weiss (19,648)
12.Fed Manipulating Market Prices, Gold, Oil and Bonds - Rob_Kirby (19,219)
13. The Great Depression has Arrived- Collapsing American Dreams - David_Vaughn (19,054)
14. Stock Market to Fall AT LEAST Another 40%! - Martin Weiss (18,963)
15. Hyperinflation Begining in China and Will Destroy the U.S. Dollar - Eric_deCarbonnel (18,651)
Most Popular 2008
1. The Great Depression 2008 - It can't happen to us....can it?”
2. The Battle for America Has Begun- Strategic Forecasts
3. UK House Prices Plunge Over the Cliff
4. US Banking System Teetering on the Brink of Collapse
5. US Economy Forecast 2008 - First Recession then Recovery
6. How Safe is My FDIC-Insured Bank Account?
7. Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:The 12 Steps to Financial Disaster By Nouriel Roubini
Most Popular 2007
1. US Housing Market Crash to result in the Second Great Depression
2. Operation FALCON - The USA is turning into a Police State
3. UK Housing Market Crash of 2007 - 2008 and Steps to Protect Your Wealth
4. US Housing Bubble Meltdown: "Is it too late to get out"?
5. Global Liquidity Crisis when the Credit Boom comes to an End
Most Popular 2006
1. Last Warning! Three-Pronged Collapse ... Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate
2. UK Interest Rate forecast for 2007 - Bank of England to do battle with inflation
3. UK Interest Rates Forecast to rise much higher due to rising Inflation and high Money Supply Growth
4. Emerging Markets outlook for 2007 - India, China, Russia, Eastern Europe and Brazil

News Feeds
RSS Feeds
Links

Money Forums
Certz
TradingTheCharts
Housing Market Forecasts
Local Issues


Deflation IS WINNING - Are You?

Financial Markets Outlook 2009: Angling for a Recovery

Stock-Markets / Investing 2009 Jan 06, 2009 - 03:21 PM

By: Brady_Willett

Stock-Markets Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleGive a man to fish and you feed him for a day. Teach him how to print money and you feed him for a lifetime?  Juxtaposed against this seemingly outlandish re-write of the popular Chinese proverb is the image of the U.S. trying to inflate away the ills of asset and debt deflation. To be sure, with zero-bound interest rates unable to revive the lending/borrowing/asset bubbling dynamic that has helped support U.S. economic growth for the better part of the last two decades, policy makers have resorted to directly buying toxic/illiquid assets, lending to unqualified borrowers, and investing in insolvent entities.  And thanks to the power of the printing press (not to mention the continued kindness of foreigners), these activities are largely being funded out of thin air. 


A good example of what the supposed bailout masters have hauled out of their tackle box can be seen in the story of Citigroup: The downfall of the World's largest financial services company serves not only to remind us of the accounting insanity FASB and the SEC have allowed companies to get away with for decades, but also of how pervasive the accumulation of engineered financial assets was during the boom years. With these ‘assets' now increasingly going bust, the bailouts have multiplied in kind, and this has led to questions aplenty.  Does the socialization of losses augur for a sustainable recovery?  Will the U.S. be able to print/cheaply borrow enough money to fund its bailout plans?  Engrossed in trying to rig the markets from falling further, will the much needed and promised regulatory changes ever arrive to increase investor transparency?

2009 may not bring definitive answers to these and other questions, yet as policy makers increasingly take on the role of hedge fund manager and as hedge fund managers increasingly become unemployed or imprisoned, they are questions unlikely to materially change anytime soon.

The Big One That Got Away (from bankruptcy)


Citigroup's ‘Consolidated Variable Entity Assets' (VIEs) declined by 32% from $122 billion to $82 billion for the 9-months ending September 30, 2008, while during the same time Citigroup's ‘Significant Unconsolidated VIE assets' declined by only 8.9% from $356 billion to $324 billion, and ‘Qualified Special Purpose Entity' Assets (QSPEs) increased by 6.9% (from 765 billion to $812 billion). All told Citigroup reported a stunning $1.225 trillion in off-balance sheet interests at the end of September 2008.

It doesn't take much imagination to conclude that Citigroup, with only $62 billion in tangible equity, would not have been able to absorb the additional $380 billion hit that would have arrived if the company's unconsolidated interests had fallen by the same percentage amount as its consolidated interests.  On the other hand it takes a great deal of imagination to conclude that with nearly every consolidated asset on Citigroup's books getting slaughtered its unconsolidated interests seemed to be doing just fine.

But whether or not Citigroup was/is hiding some losses off of its balance sheet or in Level 3 land is really immaterial.  To be sure, given the widespread destruction in the financial markets in October and November it was obvious that already lame Citigroup would not be able to conceal insolvency for much longer.  Faced with the prospect of another Lehman Brothers debacle, the bailout masters entered:

“As part of this agreement, Treasury and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation will provide protection against the possibility of unusually large losses on an asset pool of approximately $306 billion of loans and securities backed by residential and commercial real estate and other such assets, which will remain on Citigroup's balance sheet…In addition, Treasury will invest $20 billion in Citigroup from the Troubled Asset Relief Program in exchange for preferred stock with an 8% dividend to the Treasury.”   Fed

Following news of the bailout, Citigroup shares quickly doubled – disaster had apparently been averted.  Pleased that their efforts had helped forestall certain collapse the Treasury updated the language of its Asset Guarantee Program last week, offering added justification for its bailout of Citigroup (weeks after the fact):

“This program provides guarantees for assets held by systemically significant financial institutions that face a high risk of losing market confidence due in large part to a portfolio of distressed or illiquid assets. This program will be applied with extreme discretion in order to improve market confidence in the systemically significant institution and in financial markets broadly. It is not anticipated that the program will be made widely available.” Treasury

After having allowing the reckless borrowing/lending/asset bubbling dynamic to proliferate, and failing miserably to grasp the severity of the housing bust, U.S. policy makers are now assuring us that its most stunning bailout initiative to date will be ‘applied with extreme discretion' and that ‘it is not anticipated' that many other Citigroup-style bailouts remain.  Talk about a good fish story…

Suffice to say, Citigroup represents the final final line in the sand by U.S. policy makers; the line that says anything deemed ‘systemically significant' will not be allowed to fail.  Period. There will not be anymore stress-filled weekends with policy makers covertly trying to orchestrate takeovers and conjure up new ingenious lending schemes, there is not going to be another lengthy and confusing TARP saga, and there will most definitely not be any more Lehman Bros. breakdowns. Rather, if, and more likely when, someone important is in trouble the Fed, Treasury, and FDIC will backstop losses, provide loans, and/or directly invest using taxpayer funds. This is the really big story of 2008 – one that engenders both confidence that that the worst is over and fear that the worst is yet to come.  

Hidden within Citigroup's VIEs and QSPEs are billions of dollars that are ‘invested' in CDOs, SIVs, ABCPs, MBSs, CDSs, and other financial instruments. The Fed and Treasury, by their own admission, do not know how to effectively value these investments, and with many engineered financial products threatening to become endangered species it is unclear if any ‘value' will soon be observable. There is, by contrast, the viewpoint that current market prices, or lack thereof, do not represent a fair value given the amount of cash some of these products may continue to throw off. As 2009 begins it is this speculation that leads to a particle of optimism insofar as the bailouts are concerned:

* Perhaps U.S. policy makers are not recklessly expanding the taxpayers involvement in the largest financial calamity since the Great Depression but simply investing in distressed assets to generate positive returns in the future?

With investors watching the economy wade into deeper recessionary waters their lifejackets have been stuffed with variants of the above.  Will investors really be gullible enough to buy into this belief hook, line, and sinker? 

Needless to say, the correct policy response to the financial crisis and recession that picked-up speed in 2008 would have been to do nothing; to allow bad debts to be written off and to allow free market capitalism to work. Under these conditions the fallout would have indeed been swift and deep, but it would have also brought with it much needed doses of certainty and closure. As per the band aid analogy, it is better to quickly rip it right off. 

Oblivious to the need for a dramatic change in the way regulators interact with the markets, the exact opposite tact has been taken, with dozens of band-aids being haphazardly applied.  Moreover, with his rod and reel in hand President Obama – whose very platform centered on the word ‘CHANGE' – has emerged from the murky waters and is angling for even more bailouts, a massive government stimulus package, and tax cuts.  Apparently change can wait…

Suffice to say, straddling the already saddled U.S. taxpayer with more debt obligations threatens to exasperate the current crisis rather than cure it, because the U.S. is ill-prepared for the day when foreign appetite for U.S. debt wanes.  As for Citigroup, the entire financial apparatus may well have fallen down if it had been allowed to fail, but from this rubble a new attitude might have also emerged. It is this ‘attitude' that the U.S. has sorely lacked for a very long-time.  In other words, as was the case with LTCM – a point we highlighted years ago – Citigroup should have been allowed to fail.

Fishing For Returns In 2009

We highlighted 8 prophecies in this space last year, and with the possible exception of gold not seeing a historic bust (the verdict is still out), all 8 came true. Given that in all probability we will never replicate the uncanny accuracy of last year's prophecies, please allow us to indulge for a moment before conjuring up the spirits of 2009:

2008 prophecies (abbreviated from Jan 7, 2008 )
1) As the U.S. economy enters recession the rest of the world will feel the consequences.
2) As ‘decoupling' proves itself fiction and U.S. investors check their confidence in foreign stocks, U.S. equities will outperform many world markets in 2008.
3) The U.S. dollar will tread water for much of 2008 rather than drown…don't be surprised by a stable greenback in 2008. Despite models and rap-stars flashing their admiration for Euros in 2007, it is still in the best interest of most of the financial world to support rather than run away from the dollar.
4) Gold is headed for a historic bust akin to that of 1980.  This bust will arrive once the U.S. economic slowdown starts to deeply erode strength in emerging markets and/or once investors recognize that central banks are unable to quickly reflate the financial markets. With nearly everyone growing deeply enamored with the idea of ‘stagflation', our gold bust theory is based upon the yet unseen threat of deflation.
5) China will burn out but will not fade away…Like the U.S. based internet mania, no one can be exactly sure when, but a great Chinese stock market bust is coming. When it starts everyone will claim it was obvious, although only a handful of analysts are bearish on Chinese stocks today.
6) Commodity prices will decline in 2008. Going against the grain with this call (not to mention the surging price of ‘grains')…As the global economy ‘recouples' demand for many commodities will flatten and commodity super-cyclists will spin their wheels as no new driver powers the commodities train forward. We see base metals as leading this softening commodities price trend by mid-late 2008.
7) Crystal ball grabag: The Federal Funds rate will end the year at or below 2%. Long-term U.S. interest rates will end 2008 flat or lower. U.S. equities will end 2008 lower, although they will not be down as much as many world markets. The contrarian dream of Japanese equities will remain exactly that.
8) Greenspan is already receiving his share of bad press, but by the end of 2008 his image will be fully transformed from that of miracle worker to wacko alchemist.  No one will remember the ‘good times' Greenspan supposedly helped create as times turn increasingly bad.

Based upon the above, our intentions leading in 2008 were to “lower our precious metals position as the gold price rises and slowly add to our equities position as stock prices decline”. And while we basically followed this outlook via a reduction in precious metals in early 2008 and the addition of a couple of stocks throughout the year, what we did not envision is that stocks would decline so rapidly and policy makers would attempt to reflate so desperately. In other words, there are valid reasons to believe that the record gold high seen in 2008 was not the start of a historic bust but ground zero for the next launch.  

Before getting to 2009, it is worth pointing out that we are generally conservative investors and the speculations below are undertaken in an attempt to flush out some basic macro ideas. They are not, in any way, a method by which to generate profits.  We believe that owning companies you understand at attractive market prices and being aware of longer-term advantages of owning gold instead of the liabilities of a government are useful.  We have held firm to this stance since 1999.  Without further adieu, here are the prophecies:

1) The global recession will deepen to begin 2009, unemployment will not bottom until mid/late 2009, and a sustainable recovery is years away.  But this does not mean we are in another Great Depression. The key difference between the Great Depression and today is that policy makers have taken away many of the panic-pathways previously available to frightened investors.  In other words, with systemically important bad debts being backed by government and Fed, with post-depression efforts insuring bank deposits, and with much of the money in ‘the markets' either passively controlled or restricted from being removed, the risk of a complete meltdown is remote.

Caveat : If more and more investors continue to move into gold out of a fear that paper assets will continue to be destroyed all bets are off.

2) The great U.S. dollar bust will draw closer but will not come to pass in 2009. Those that believed that the financial crisis in the U.S. would spell the end of USD hegemony were patently wrong. Instead of a global panic out of dollars in the latter half of 2008 there was a global panic into dollars.  We would speculate that the U.S. dollar now has room to fall without sparking a panic, and that no real alternative to USD hegemony is coming into view.  As for the contention that precious metals are a major contender to USD hegemony, we agree that longer term this may be the case although the parties that are funding the U.S.'s borrowing extravagance (i.e. central banks) have not shown the same penchant for gold as private investors.

To get a better understanding of why the U.S. dollar will remain ultra-important in 2009 consider that as recently as June 2008 the IMF was giving serious consideration to the possibility of the Russian Ruble becoming a major reserve currency. Only months later, with Russia devaluing the ruble, fears of outright collapse have surfaced.  Also consider that the bloom has come off of the Euro's rose, the Chinese Yuan is showing no sign of revaluing higher, and the Yen is rising for reasons wholly unrelated to reserve currency considerations.  In short, the question that those calling for the destruction of USD (or the ‘hyperinflation' crowd) need to ask is: when people run out of U.S. dollars what do (or more appropriately ‘can') they run into? 

3) U.S. stocks will end the year flat or higher and will continue to outperform on a relative basis. The Fed has done its best to induce risk taking and there is a lot of ‘cash' that could move back into equities.  These two points alone augur for a rebound in stocks, even if such a rebound proves unsustainable.

For the record, we do not think that U.S. stocks are as ‘cheap' as many value orientated investors believe.  Rather, from a book value perspective we would argue that stocks are down right expensive! In the case of the Dow, it ended 2008 at 2.01 times book value and if you back out intangibles the Dow would be trading at 4.13 times book (against 1982's tangible P/B reading of 1.03 - Excel ). As for the easily manipulated headline earnings numbers, given the earnings and economic uncertainty leading into 2009, single digit P/E multiples would seem to be called for. Instead the S&P 500 trades at 18-times trailing earnings and more than 20-times forward earnings (“ Operating Earnings” - S&P 500 )

4) Long-term U.S. interest rates will defy extreme expectations and end the year flat or only moderately higher. The mad rush into U.S. Treasuries is likely over, but this doesn't necessarily foreshadow a mad rush out of Treasuries. Many supposedly intelligent investors are contending that U.S. Treasuries represent another ‘bubble' while at the same time arguing that a prolonged and painful global recession is directly ahead. We would argue that unless a viable alternative to USD hegemony suddenly jumps out of the water, these two viewpoints contradict each other.

The Fed has promised that if required to so it will buy Treasuries to try and stimulate the economy. The Fed may do exactly that in 2009. The Treasury ‘bubble' does not go pop in 2009.

5) While last year's ‘historic bust' in gold may prove to be shorter-lived
and not as deep as we previously believed, gold will, on a relative basis, underperform most asset classes in 2009. With attempts to reflate the global economy proving only mildly effective, no serious threat of inflation will take root (at least not in the government statistics). Furthermore, with policy makers potentially backstopping further destruction in the financial markets, the risks of a complete financial collapse are remote. Gold is, first and foremost, an inflation hedge and, secondly, a financial crisis hedge.  With the worst of the ‘crisis' potentially over, extreme inflation/deflation expectations may be required to get gold moving above record highs.

Disclosure :
We remain long-term gold bugs and see no reason to reduce exposure to precious metals completely.  We envision ourselves as potential buyers of precious metals at some point in 2009/10.

6) A historic opportunity to purchase crude oil and other commodities will arrive in 2009. The great, and long anticipated commodities bust arrived in full force in 2008, and with it speculative activity has been dealt a serious blow. From a contrarian perspective the meltdown in commodities represents a potential opportunity. Furthermore, unlike common stocks, which can go to zero, many commodities are near levels that are nearing the cost of production and cannot fall significantly further for very long.

As mentioned in our 2009 report, we envision an opportunity to purchase a specific and optionable commodities ETF in 2009 that could produce excellent returns over a 20-year period, even if little or no returns are generated over the next 5-10 years.  In other words, we think that those hoping for a dramatic turnaround in commodity prices in 2009 may have to wait, but it will be worth the wait.

7) China's painful slowdown may well intensify over the short term, but after being punished in 2008 Chinese stocks have the potential to do better than most stock indices going forward. We would be remiss when mentioning China not to note that this is a unique period in its growth phase that could carry with it lots of surprises. One such surprise we envision in 2009 is a weaker yuan.  

8) A very short run of the data suggests that those Dow components
that produce the fewest words in 10Qs and 10Ks outperform those that produce the most.  With some of the shadiest Dow components producing 10Ks in 2009 that may breach 1,000 pages, an investment theory similar to the ‘Dogs of the Dow' may be born.

9)
The Wish List will outperform the markets (again). Not quick to tout short-term performance, we nonetheless believe that the companies we own offer the potential for superior returns going forward.  During the 2000-2002 bear market we favored REITs and gold stocks, while today we like select smaller cap situations and solid dividend/distribution companies.  Entering year 9 this is the second bear market the Wish List has been involved in, and for the first time since 2003 we are growing eager to discover more undervalued opportunities.

Conclusion

Unwilling to let the free market work, U.S. policymakers have adopted the audacious goal of trying to kick-start a deeply flawed financial system; a system grounded upon unsustainable increases in asset prices and debt. Not unlike the 2003 ‘recovery' that was backed by cheap money and regulatory neglect, these policies are destined to fail. However, there are degrees of failure that are more enviable than others.  One potentially amiable outcome would be to string out the losses over many years, thus avoiding the jarring consequences that would otherwise result from Wall Street (and its global counterparties) imploding inside of a few weeks. That said, we will never know if the hands-off approach to dealing with downturns is preferable to the interventionist path adopted last year. 

Amidst this ongoing period of painful write-downs and much needed U.S. consumer frugalness, investment opportunities are unlikely to be found by throwing a dart at the next hot asset class or stock market sector.  Rather, the theme leading into 2009 is that of being selective; of patiently dropping your line into the water and waiting for a nibble.  Contrast this tranquil activity with that of policy makers frantically casting a wide-net and bottom trawling the lake. While the consequences of overfishing vary, the basic story is that by fishing too much today you reduce the stock of fish available for consumption tomorrow.

Faced with the prospect of his country's banking system melting down, Iceland Prime Minister, Geir Haarde argued that “We are too small a country to sustain such a big banking system” and “We will be fine. We can eat what we can fish.”  While the solution for the US may not lurk in the bounty of the sea, it most definitely does not lie in further financial machinations and delusions. 

By Brady Willett and Dr. Todd Alway
FallStreet.com

FallStreet.com was launched in January of 2000 with the mandate of providing an alternative opinion on the U.S. equity markets.  In the context of an uncritical herd euphoria that characterizes the mainstream media, Fallstreet strives to provide investors with the information they need to make informed investment decisions. To that end, we provide a clearinghouse for bearish and value-oriented investment information, independent research, and an investment newsletter containing specific company selections.

Brady Willett Archive


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




(Note: If on Submitting you are returned to the Main Index Page then due to caching your comment has not been accepted, Press refresh and try again)

Free Credit Crisis Survival Toolkit