Tuesday 30 November 2010

How Does War Affect Stock Markets?


There were 2 major wars in the last 20 years. The first Gulf War started on 2 Aug 1990. The Dow was in a midst of an 18 year bull cycle that started from 1983 - 2000.

The second Gulf War started on 20 Mar 2003. That was again the start of the last bull run that began from 2003 and ended late 2007.

So war actually boosts stock markets world wide. It boosts defence spending, infrastructure spending and liquidity to calm markets.

Friday 26 November 2010

This Correction May Last A Bit Longer Till Early to Mid December

Since last week, credit spreads have been creeping up. Although the level is not as high as in May 2010, it is still a cause for concern. There is a danger that the Irish debt and potential war in the Korean Peninsular have caused investors to shun risk assets recently.

On the plus side, money supply indicators are sideways, not deteriorating.

All these point towards a correction to the tune of 10 - 20%. So far, most markets have already corrected 7 - 8%. There could be another 3 - 12% more to go. Volume is down even when markets are down, which is good.

What should you do? Maintain an asset allocation of 60% equities and 40% others/alternatives. Trim off some unwanted equity positions (e.g. if the stock isn't performing even in good times, or is finally turning a profit). Add some volatility funds / short some indices to hedge partially.

Next week, you should start to nibble some stocks very soon. If you're unsure, think about the QE that's happening now. The money's gotta go somewhere.

Tuesday 23 November 2010

The Probable Demise of European Union

20 years ago, the EU members had the chance to resolve the issue, but they skirted around it. They joined a union where labour is free-flowing. They gave up their own currencies, and gave up their domestic monetary policy. But the elephant in the room was fiscal policy. It was the last thing that gave each country its sovereignty. Hence they chose to give broad guidelines to fiscal deficits and relied on "trust".

Today, the skeletons are out. Certain countries haven't been naughty nor nice. They had huge deficits that the more conservative members had to pay.

Is this fair? It depends on how much they want the EU to work. To survive, the EU will need to become a political union, with the ECB or an EU government deciding on how much each country can spend, and taxes to be centrally pooled. However, such an integration will mean giving up the last bastion of sovereignty. Hence, I believe the EU may disintegrate or at least cease to have a single currency. It will merely be a group of countries with free trade agreements.

Sunday 21 November 2010

Leveraged Long/Short Portfolio

It is possible to achieve Alpha by having a leveraged portfolio. There are several ways: Maintain 1.5x leverage throughout, maintain 2x leverage and having a dynamic allocation. I've even included brokerage charges of 1% to buy and another 1% to sell. I've included borrowing costs of 5% for leveraging.

There are certain points where shorting is implemented. This is necessary because a leveraged portfolio can turn to zero in a bear market.

The results are above. The dynamic method works best. The devil is in the details. Another Eureka moment.

What's Really Behind QE2?

What’s Really Behind QE2?


by: Ellen Brown November 19, 2010 Font Size: PrintEmail Recommend 4 Share this page

The deficit hawks are circling, hovering over QE2, calling it just another inflationary bank bailout. But unlike QE1, QE2 is not about saving the banks. It’s about funding the federal deficit without increasing the interest tab, something that may be necessary in this gridlocked political climate just to keep the government functioning.

On November 15, the Wall Street Journal published an open letter to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke from 23 noted economists, professors and fund managers, urging him to abandon his new “quantitative easing” policy called QE2. The letter said:

We believe the Federal Reserve’s large-scale asset purchase plan (so-called “quantitative easing”) should be reconsidered and discontinued. . . . The planned asset purchases risk currency debasement and inflation, and we do not think they will achieve the Fed’s objective of promoting employment.

The Pragmatic Capitalist (Cullen Roche) remarked:

Many of the people on this list have been warning about bond vigilantes while also comparing the USA to Greece for several years now. Of course, they’ve been terribly wrong and it is entirely due to the fact that they do not understand how the US monetary system works. . . . What’s unfortunate is that these are many of our best minds. These are the people driving the economic bus.

The deficit hawks say QE is massively inflationary; that it is responsible for soaring commodity prices here and abroad; that QE2 won’t work any better than an earlier scheme called QE1, which was less about stimulating the economy than about saving the banks; and that QE has caused the devaluation of the dollar, which is hurting foreign currencies and driving up prices abroad.

None of these contentions is true, as will be shown. They arise from a failure either to understand modern monetary mechanics (see links at The Pragmatic Capitalist and here) or to understand QE2, which is a different animal from QE1. QE2 is not about saving the banks, or devaluing the dollar, or saving the housing market. It is about saving the government from having to raise taxes or cut programs, and saving Americans from the austerity measures crippling the Irish and the Greeks; and for that, it may well be the most effective tool currently available. QE2 promotes employment by keeping the government in business. The government can then work on adding jobs.

The Looming Threat of a Crippling Debt Service

The federal debt has increased by more than 50% since 2006, due to a collapsed economy and the highly controversial decision to bail out the banks. By the end of 2009, the debt was up to $12.3 trillion; but the interest paid on it ($383 billion) was actually less than in 2006 ($406 billion), because interest rates had been pushed to extremely low levels. Interest now eats up nearly half the government’s income tax receipts, which are estimated at $899 billion for FY 2010. Of this, $414 billion will go to interest on the federal debt. If interest rates were to rise just a couple of percentage points, servicing the federal debt would consume over 100% of current income tax receipts, and taxes might have to be doubled.

As for the surging commodity and currency prices abroad, they are not the result of QE. They are largely the result of the U.S. dollar carry trade, which is the result of pressure to keep interest rates artificially low. Banks that can borrow at the very low fed funds rate (now 0.2%) can turn around and speculate abroad, reaping much higher returns.

Interest rates cannot be raised again to reasonable levels until the cost of servicing the federal debt is reduced; and today that can be done most expeditiously through QE2 -- “monetizing” the debt through the Federal Reserve, essentially interest-free. Alone among the government’s creditors, the Fed rebates the interest to the government after deducting its costs. In 2008, the Fed reported that it rebated 85% of its profits to the government. The interest rate on the 10-year government bonds the Fed is planning to buy is now 2.66%. Fifteen percent of 2.66% is the equivalent of a 0.4% interest rate, the best deal in town on long-term bonds.

A Reluctant Fed Steps Up to the Plate

The Fed was strong-armed into rebating its profits to the government in the 1960s, when Wright Patman, Chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, pushed to have the Fed nationalized. According to Congressman Jerry Voorhis in The Strange Case of Richard Milhous Nixon (1973):

As a direct result of logical and relentless agitation by members of Congress, led by Congressman Wright Patman as well as by other competent monetary experts, the Federal Reserve began to pay to the U.S. Treasury a considerable part of its earnings from interest on government securities. This was done without public notice and few people, even today, know that it is being done. It was done, quite obviously, as acknowledgment that the Federal Reserve Banks were acting on the one hand as a national bank of issue, creating the nation’s money, but on the other hand charging the nation interest on its own credit – which no true national bank of issue could conceivably, or with any show of justice, dare to do.

Voorhis went on, “But this is only part of the story. And the less discouraging part, at that. For where the commercial banks are concerned, there is no such repayment of the people’s money.” Commercial banks do not rebate the interest, said Voorhis, although they also “‘buy’ the bonds with newly created demand deposit entries on their books – nothing more.”

After the 1960s, the policy was to fund government bonds through commercial banks (which could collect interest) rather than through the central bank (which could not). This was true not just in the U.S. but in other countries, after a quadrupling of oil prices combined with abandonment of the gold standard produced “stagflation” that was erroneously blamed on governments “printing money.”

Consistent with that longstanding policy, Chairman Bernanke initially resisted funding the federal deficit. In January 2010, he admonished Congress:

We're not going to monetize the debt. It is very, very important for Congress and administration to come to some kind of program, some kind of plan that will credibly show how the United States government is going to bring itself back to a sustainable position.

His concern, according to The Washington Times, was that “the impasse in Congress over tough spending cuts and tax increases needed to bring down deficits will eventually force the Fed to accommodate deficits by printing money and buying Treasury bonds.”

That impasse crystallized on November 3, 2010, when Republicans swept the House. There would be no raising of taxes on the rich, and the gridlock in Congress meant there would be no budget cuts either. Compounding the problem was that over the last six months, China has stopped buying U.S. debt, reducing inflows by about $50 billion per month.

QE2 Is Not QE1

In QE1, the Fed bought $1.2 trillion in toxic mortgage-backed securities off the books of the banks. QE1 mirrored TARP, the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, except that TARP was funded by the government with $700 billion in taxpayer money. QE1 was funded by the Federal Reserve with computer keystrokes, simply by crediting the banks’ reserve accounts at the Fed.

Pundits were predicting that QE2 would be more of the same, but it turned out to be something quite different. Immediately after the election, Bernanke announced that the Fed would be using its power to purchase assets to buy federal securities on the secondary market -- from banks, bond investors and hedge funds. (In the EU, the European Central Bank began a similar policy when it bought Greek bonds on the secondary market.) The bond dealers would then be likely to use the money to buy more Treasuries, increasing overall Treasury sales.

The bankers who applauded QE1 were generally critical of QE2, probably because they would get nothing out of it. They would have to give up their interest-bearing bonds for additional cash reserves, something they already have more of than they can use. Unlike QE1, QE2 was designed, not to help the banks, but to relieve the pressure on the federal budget.

Bernanke said the Fed would buy $600 billion in long-term government bonds at the rate of $75 billion per month, filling the hole left by China. An estimated $275 billion would also be rolled over into Treasuries from the mortgage-backed securities the Fed bought during QE1, which are now reaching maturity. More QE was possible, he said, if unemployment stayed high and inflation stayed low (measured by the core Consumer Price Index).

Addison Wiggin noted in his November 4 Five Minute Forecast that this essentially meant the Fed planned to monetize the whole deficit for the next eight months. He quoted Agora Financial’s Bill Bonner:

If this were Greece or Ireland, the government would be forced to cut back. With quantitative easing ready, there is no need to face the music.

That was meant as a criticism, but you could also see it as a very good deal. Why pay interest to foreign central banks when you can get the money nearly interest-free from your own central bank? In eight months, the Fed will own more Treasuries than China and Japan combined, making it the largest holder of government securities outside the government itself.

The Overrated Hazard of Inflation

The objection of the deficit hawks, of course, is that this will be massively inflationary, diluting the value of the dollar; but a close look at the data indicates that these fears are unfounded.

Adding money to the money supply is obviously not hazardous when the money supply is shrinking, and it is shrinking now. Financial commentator Charles Hugh Smith estimates that the economy faces $15 trillion in writedowns in collateral and credit, based on projections from the latest Fed Flow of Funds. The Fed's $2 trillion in new credit/liquidity is therefore insufficient to trigger either inflation or another speculative bubble.

In any case, Chairman Bernanke maintains that QE involves no printing of new money. It is just an asset swap on the balance sheets of the bondholders. The bondholders are no richer than before and have no more money to spend than before.

Professor Warren Mosler explains that the bondholders hold the bonds in accounts at the Fed. He says, “U.S. Treasury securities are accounted much like savings accounts at a normal commercial bank.” They pay interest and are considered part of the federal debt. When the debt is “paid” by repurchasing the bonds, all that happens is that the sums are moved from the bondholder’s savings account into its checking account at the Fed, where the entries are no longer considered part of the national debt. The chief difference is that one account bears interest and the other doesn’t.

What About the Inflation in Commodities?

Despite surging commodity prices, the overall inflation rate remains very low, because housing has to be factored in. The housing market is recovering in some areas, but housing prices overall have dropped 28% from their peak. Main Street hasn’t been flooded with money; the money has just shifted around. Businesses are still having trouble getting reasonable loans, and so are prospective homeowners.

As for the obvious price inflation in commodities -- notably gold, silver, oil and food -- what is driving these prices up cannot be an inflated U.S. money supply, since the money supply is actually shrinking. Rather, it is a combination of factors including (a) heavy competition for these scarce goods from developing countries, whose economies are growing much faster than ours; (b) the flight of “hot money” from the real estate market, which has nowhere else to go; (c) in the case of soaring food prices, disastrous weather patterns; and (d) speculation, which is fanning the flames.

Feeding it all are the extremely low interest rates maintained by the Fed, allowing banks and their investor clients to borrow very cheaply and invest where they can get a much better return than on risky domestic loans. This carry trade will continue until something is done about the interest tab on the federal debt.

The ideal alternative would be for a transparent and accountable government to issue the money it needs outright, a function the Constitution reserves to Congress; but an interest-free loan from the Federal Reserve rolled over indefinitely is the next best thing.

A Bold Precedent

QE2 is not a “helicopter drop” of money on the banks or on Main Street. It is the Fed funding the government virtually interest-free, allowing the government to do what it needs to do without driving up the interest bill on the federal debt – an interest bill that need not have existed in the first place. As Thomas Edison said, “If our nation can issue a dollar bond, it can issue a dollar bill. The element that makes the bond good, makes the bill good, also.”

The Fed failed to revive the economy with QE1, but it could redeem itself with QE2, a bold precedent that might inspire other countries to break the chains of debt peonage in the same way. QE2 is the functional equivalent of what many countries did very successfully before the 1970s, when they funded their governments with interest-free loans from their own central banks.

Countries everywhere are now suffering from debt deflation. They could all use a good dose of their own interest-free national credit, beginning with Ireland and Greece.

Thursday 18 November 2010

Will Europe's Financial Crisis Finish the Euro and the EU?

by: Michael T. Snyder November 17, 2010
The Irish banking system is melting down right in front of our eyes. Ireland, Portugal, Greece and Spain are all drowning in debt. It is becoming extremely expensive for all of those nations to issue new debt. Officials all over Europe are begging Ireland to accept a bailout. Portugal has already indicated that they will probably be next in line. Most economists are now acknowledging that without a new round of bailouts the dominoes could start to fall and we could see a wave of debt defaults by European governments. All of this is pushing the monetary union in Europe to its limits. In fact, some of Europe's top politicians are now publicly warning that this crisis may not only mean the end of the euro, but also the end of the European Union itself.

Yes, things really are that serious in Europe right now. In order for the euro and the European Union to hold together, two things have got to happen. Number one, Germany and the other European nations that are in good financial condition have got to agree to keep bailing out nations such as Ireland, Portugal and Greece that are complete economic basket cases. Number two, the European nations receiving these bailouts have got to convince their citizens to comply with the very harsh austerity measures being imposed upon them by the EU and the IMF.

Those two things should not be taken for granted. In Germany, many taxpayers are already sick and tired of pouring hundreds of billions of euros into a black hole. The truth is that the Germans are not going to accept carrying weak sisters like Greece and Portugal on their backs indefinitely.

In addition, we have already seen the kinds of riots that have erupted in Greece over the austerity measures being implemented there. If there is an overwhelming backlash against austerity in some parts of Europe will some nations actually attempt to leave the EU?

Right now the focus is on Ireland. The Irish banking system is a basket case at the moment and the Irish government is drowning in red ink. European Union officials are urging Ireland to request a bailout, but so far Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen is not taking the bait. The Irish government does not seem too keen on having even more austerity measures imposed upon it by the EU and the IMF.

According to Nadeem Walayat, the harsh austerity measures that Ireland has endured during this past year have only made Ireland's financial problems even worse....

The people of Ireland having endured over a year of austerity on the promise that it was all necessary to suffer pain today by cutting public spending so as to reduce the annual budget deficit to sustainable level for economic gains tomorrow. Instead the exact opposite is taking place as the Irish economy contracts due to economic austerity whilst its bankrupt banks are sending the countries debt and liabilities soaring, thus resulting in a far worse budgetary position than where Ireland was before the austerity measures were implemented as the bond markets are waking up to evitable debt default which is sending interest rates demanded to hold Irish debt soaring to new credit crisis highs.

But the big Irish banks are bleeding cash fast. For example, the Bank of Ireland recently reported "a 10 billion euro outflow of deposits from early August until the end of September." Irish banks and the Irish government need help whether they are willing to admit it or not.

But Ireland is not the only one in trouble. Portugal became the latest European nation to push the panic button when Portuguese Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Santos announced that his country was in such bad financial shape that it might have to seek a bailout package.

Things are so bleak in Portugal right now that Foreign Affairs Minister Luis Amado says that his nation "faces a scenario of exit from the euro zone" if a solution is not found for this financial mess.

On top of all this, word is coming out that Greece is in even worse financial condition than initially believed. The statistics agency for the EU, Eurostat, revealed on Tuesday that Greece's deficit for 2009 was actually 15.4% of GDP rather than 13.6% of GDP as originally thought.

The Greek national debt is now well over 120 percent of GDP. It seems inevitable at this point that Greece will need more bailouts if they are to remain part of the EU.

Spain is also starting to feel the heat. Spain's short-term debt financing costs jumped sharply on Tuesday, and officials in Spain are begging the Irish government to accept the bailout they are being offered so that the "contagion" does not spread.

But could a few mid-size countries in Europe really cause the next great global financial crisis?

Yes.

In the UK, veteran Conservative MP Peter Tapsell is warning that a total collapse in Ireland "could pose as great a threat to the world economy as did Lehman Brothers, AIG and Goldman Sachs in September 2008".

Already we are seeing world financial markets getting rattled by all this news.

Fears regarding what is happening in Ireland, Greece, Spain and Portugal helped push the Dow Jones industrial average down nearly 200 points on Tuesday.

But the real story is that this financial crisis in Europe could potentially cause the break up of the euro and of the European Union.

The truth is that the euro and the European Union are inseparably linked at this point. In fact, EU President Herman Van Rompuy is warning that if some of the weaker countries in Europe are forced to abandon the euro it will likely cause the total destruction of the European Union....

"We’re in a survival crisis. We all have to work together in order to survive with the euro zone, because if we don’t survive with the euro zone we will not survive with the European Union."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is also warning that a failure of the euro could bring down the entire European Union....

"If the euro fails, then Europe fails."

But officials in Europe are not going to let the dream of a united Europe slip away easily. Right now they are working really hard to keep Europe together, and that means some "tough love" has to be imposed on the "weak sisters". As these weaker European economies collapse, they are being forced to accept harsh EU mandates in exchange for bailouts. As Ambrose Evans Pritchard recently pointed out, "forced austerity" is quite similar to serfdom....

Greece is now under an EU protectorate, or the “Memorandum” as they call it. This has prompted pin-prick terrorist attacks against anybody associated with EU rule. Ireland and Portugal are further behind on this road to serfdom, but they are already facing policy dictates from Brussels, but will soon be under formal protectorates as well in any case. Spain has more or less been forced to cut public wages by 5pc to comply with EU demands made in May. All are having to knuckle down to Europe’s agenda of austerity, without the offsetting relief of devaluation and looser monetary policy.

In the end, Europe is going to move in one of two directions. Either this financial crisis will finally be the thing that breaks up the euro and the European Union, or it will result in a Europe that is ruled even more strongly by EU bureaucrats.

As this crisis unfolds over the next couple of years, the EU is going to try to grab more power and more control. They are going to ask national governments to give up substantial amounts of power and sovereignty in exchange for bailouts. So far it is working.

But at some point will one nation say that enough is enough?

Perhaps that one nation could be Ireland. The citizens of Ireland actually voted "no" on the EU Constitution, but then the EU forced them to vote a second time so that they could "get it right".

Wouldn't it be ironic if it is Ireland that ends up lighting the fuse that breaks up the euro and the European Union? The Irish are a fiercely independent people, and they have a history of resisting tyranny.

In any event, this is going to be an extremely interesting winter across the EU. If things go badly, the entire global financial system could be plunged into mayhem. Let us hope that does not happen.

Wednesday 17 November 2010

Fundamentals Drive the Market... But Make Lousy TV

ToddSullivan November 16th, 2010


CNBC, for example, and other media outlets rely on fast-paced staccato-like actionable recommendations by guests in 15sec-30sec spots. Fundamentals do not act in this fashion.

It is difficult not to be aware of the daily pronouncements in the media that one trend or another is the dominant driver of markets. It seems that every moment becomes a clarion call to “Do something!” till it suddenly is not! Then, you no longer hear much about it. Most prognosticators use the markets as their prime investment input. This is based on the belief that markets provide one with ultimate forecasting insight. There is a long held belief that market tends carry hidden meanings, Eugene Fama’s “Efficient Market Theory”. This belief has been incorporated into the term “The Invisible Hand” which has been a cultural myth for several centuries. But, the trends that most CNBC types focus intently upon often evaporate within short periods leaving regular investors wondering what all the fuss was about.

Nonetheless, there is so much media commentary that it is hard to avoid the impact of so many being so convinced that their particular trend requires our immediate attention.

Being prudent investors in my experience involves a far simpler but deeper view of economic patterns which evolve slowly over months and years rather than the peripatetic 30sec actionable event. My commentary directs your focus to economic fundamentals which are shown to correlate with markets over time using various charts. The chart I recently sent regarding Auto & Light Vehicle Sales vs. Household Employment Survey I thought was particularly revealing. Most focus on the 10mil-12mil of unemployed when there remain 139mil employed and consuming individuals who are responsible for the underpinnings of economic recovery. The chart below of Retail & Food Service Sales vs. Household Employment Survey is equally revealing.

Although individual consumption slows during recessions, what is evident is that consumption trends resume fairly rapidly. In the 2002-2003 recession, the consumption slowdown was barely noticeable while the recent recession was coupled with a sharp consumption pull-back. But, as in the Auto & Light Vehicle Sales chart, consumption resumed as a sign of economic recovery well before there was a significant recovery in employment. To understand this, it is helpful to recognize that ~145mil employed individuals support the consumption of ~310mil individuals in the total US population or in other words about 46%-47% of the US population is employed. The fact that recession has caused some to lose their employment does not take away from the 139mil individuals still employed. It is these individuals who once gaining confidence that they will not enter the ranks of the unemployed, resume normal consumption. Higher consumption results in higher employment in the months ahead.

Increases in Consumption = Higher Employment


Business Cycle Time

The likely reason for most missing the economic patterns on which I focus is based on my business cycle time perspective. Being focused on “Business Cycle Time” trains my focus to those basic inputs that evolve slowly and carry in my opinion the greatest long term influences for market prices. Economic fundamentals evolve at a snails pace relative to what is discussed as “actionable” on CNBC. It just does not get much attention, but I think it is the most important.

I think that for this cycle the majority of employment gains are yet ahead of us. The chart of Retail & Food Service Sales support this expectation. For investors this has always spelled opportunity.

This Correction Shouldn't Last for More Than One Week

There are a pletoria of indicators to look at when we wish to know if the correction is just profit taking (< 5%), a real correction (6 - 19%), or a bear market (> 20%). So far, they all point towards a correction that will not last beyond 2 weeks. We are in the 2nd week of the correction so I think it's buy on dips.

If you look at the AUDUSD, it is at 0.9757 from 1. The trend line is still in tact.

I usually don't just look at technicals. 5 out of 5 people who indulge purely on technical analysis gave me dates of the next big correction. One told me it is 23 Nov 2010. Another told me not yet. None of them told me correction would start last week.

Ultimately, it is an art, not a science. You have to look at fundamental factors, then look at technicals. QE2 is still going on. Generally, QE is associated with stock market rising. Economic indicators from the US is improving. Yes, the Chinese are raising rates to curb overheating. But between 2005 - 2007, interest rates and stock markets were rising too. It's the economy stupid.

Monday 15 November 2010

Las Vegas Sands

The mystery of LVS is partly solved. I have several theories for it.

First, the technical trend is still up, so if you're a trend follower, you don't exit now.

Second, LVS' top shareholder, Adelson owns 52% of the company. There is an element of a lack of free float, which makes it easy for bulls to overwhelm the bears.

Third, LVS has transformed itself from an American leisure company to an Asian growth story because 80% of their EBITDA will be from Macau / Singapore from now.

Forth, in terms of price to book, LVS has traded way above its current level. If you look at the chart below, it is still trading below its average. This argument is not very sound, as I note because an investor shouldn't blindly follow the historical valuation band.


Last, the ROE which is a measure of the quality of its earnings, has fallen from 2007's high but is rebounding again. This could be the reason LVS is still worth a buy at this stage and could be possible for it to reach its USD150 high within a year or two!


Sunday 14 November 2010

Some Basic Questions to Address

I've seen far too many retail investors asking this question, "the stock markets / funds have reached 2007 levels, is it too high?" Yet the same investor somehow does not ask the same question for property prices, always expecting property prices to reach new highs. Stocks, properties and the GDP always reach a new high over time. Property hit a high in 1996 that was not broken until 2010! It took 14 years to break the last high! Yet the STI was 1800 in 1997, falling to 900 in 1998 before shooting up to 2500 in 1999. It fell to 1250 when the internet bubble burst but recovered to 3830 in 2007, before falling to 1450. It is 3300 today. So do stocks always break a new high? The answer is a resounding yes.

Below is a chart of S&P500 from 1950 to present. Even though US stocks have been stuck in a consolidation trend since 2000, it has come a long way since 1950!

Saturday 6 November 2010

Dollar is Going Down, Stocks Up, Bonds' Bubble to Burst, We Enjoy the Ride




QE is going to last for a while, at least 6 months. But I suspect Japan and the EU at some point will commence their QE because their inflation is around 1 - 1.5% and if the USD devalues, the EUR and Yen will appreciate, causing their exporters to lose out. Watch this space.

Friday 5 November 2010

Mobius Says World Bull Market Faces No Risks "Any Time Soon"

Mobius Says World Bull Market Faces No Risks `Any Time Soon'


By Bloomberg News - Nov 5, 2010 10:44 AM GMT+0800

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s bond purchase plan will further drive the rally for global stocks and push commodity prices “higher and higher,” said Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius.

“We could have an optimistic scenario for quite some time,” Mobius, who oversees about $34 billion, said in a telephone interview from Beijing yesterday. “Commodities are the big area for us. We are great believers in higher commodity prices and therefore are investing in commodity companies.”

The MSCI World Index yesterday surged to a two-year high, gold surged to a record and crude oil advanced to a seven-month high after the Fed announced Nov. 3 plans for $600 billion in bond purchases through next June. Asian stocks rose today, pushing a benchmark gauge to its best weekly advance this year, on speculation the Fed will succeed in stoking growth in the world’s biggest economy.

The liquidity flooding the global economy from the Fed’s quantitative easing will extend record gains for commodities and dollar depreciation cannot be avoided, said Mobius, 74, who is also the chairman of Templeton’s emerging markets group.

The U.S. economy is growing and that will have a positive effect on Europe and spread to other countries, Mobius said. The “bright spot” is the emerging markets where demand continues to grow, he said. Rising incomes in developing nations are especially good for consumer stocks, he said.

Mobius joins Goldman Sachs Asset Management’s Jim O’Neill in saying the Fed’s measures to boost the U.S. economy will spur further gains for global equities. O’Neill, creator of the BRICs acronym to describe the large emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China, said this week that while a new “bull market” in global equities probably started in the past 15 months, current valuations are far from a “bubble.”

China Bull

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index has jumped 17 percent this year, compared with an 8.4 percent advance for a measure of developed markets.

Mobius said he’s “very bullish” on China as the country has “no big problems.” Even though stock valuations are not as attractive as last year they are “not out of sight” and Templeton funds are buying companies that are expanding in the nation’s less developed regions, particularly consumer companies.

“It’s not as easy as it was but we’re still buying and finding opportunities,” he said.

The Shanghai Composite Index has rebounded 31 percent since reaching this year’s low on July 5 on expectations central banks around the world will inject more cash into their economies to boost growth. It remains down 5.8 percent this year after the government raised bank reserve requirements and curbed lending growth to cool the economy.

‘Wouldn’t Touch’

Demand is so strong in China that Mobius is now looking at airline stocks, an industry that he said he normally “wouldn’t touch” because of low profit margins.

Emerging markets may faces inflationary pressure from the capital inflows spurred by the Fed’s measures, he said.


Inflows into emerging-market stock funds have surpassed $60 billion and exceeded $46 billion in bond funds, both poised for their best year since Cambridge, Massachusetts-based EPFR Global started tracking them in 1995.

Central banks in emerging markets will buy dollars to prevent their currencies from rising too fast and as their foreign exchange reserves increase in size so they will appear increasingly safe to investors looking for markets with higher economic growth and yields, Mobius said.

“It’s a vicious cycle,” he said. “The consequences could be not too good going forward. It’s something we have to watch carefully.”

Stock Sales

For now, capital inflows in emerging markets are being counterbalanced by “hundreds of billions” of funds being raised by new stock sales and secondary fund raisings, Mobius said.

If funds keep pouring in and companies that have raised cash begin using the cash to buy assets, prices will be pushed up in a “snowball effect,” Mobius said.

The worst-case outcome is a bubble that bursts after prices rise too fast, with “people getting hurt” because they were too optimistic, Mobius said.

None of these outcomes is likely in the short term and Mobius said his funds are fully invested. “I’m pretty optimistic,” he said. “I don’t see any risks any time soon. These things can last for years and years.”

To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing on khamlin@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net

Thursday 4 November 2010

Shock and Awe from Fed... or a Whimper?

Those of you that I need to speak to, I've already done it. If you are on my distribution list, my advice is very clear to you. Quantitative Easing II is going to rock the stock markets. It's a currency war out there. The western countries want Asians to strengthen their currencies. But the Asian countries won't. So there is one last weapon western countries have now. Their CPI is close to 1%. The US, EU and Japan. All of them can afford a QE program with the official excuse to keep interest rates low and stimulate their economies. But a very useful by-product is to devalue their currencies so that their homegrown companies can export more.

The Asian countries more or less don't have this option because their inflation rates are hitting 4 - 5%. They are in rate hiking mode.

This is how the game is going to be played.

So enjoy the ride. Be happy. Smell the roses.

If you haven't received my advice, call me, email me... whatever. Advice can't be given free in a blog.... haha..