Navarro's
Big Economic Picture
Downshifting
Into Neutral

I
left for China on July 11 for an extended trip to tie up some loose
research ends on my forthcoming book The
Coming China Wars. Before I left, I threw on a QQQQ
short just as a hedge on my long positions. Today, almost a month
later, that QQQQ short is within pennies of the price I put it on –
market gyrations aside. And that’s precisely why before I left,
dear reader, I urged you all to go flat and go to the beach as this
summer the market is sorting out a number of conflicting forces.
Today,
however, the picture is becoming much clearer. The ECRI Weekly
Leading Index now projects an economy that is close to the flat line –
an anemic 0.1% annualized U.S. growth rate. That’s a recession
in anybody’s playbook – through technically not such – and it
certainly justifies the flat and inverted yield curves that have been
yo-yoing us for months.
The
Fed’s current conundrum, of course, has to do with why inflationary
pressures continue to build. Wage pressures are rising because
most American corporate executives are too stupid to see the slowing
economy ahead and they keep hiring at premium wages – and see my book The
Well-Timed Strategy for lots of evidence of this stupidity.
As
for commodity prices – oil, steel, cement, etc. – that gets us back
to the China beast. While Europe and the U.S. economies are
flat-lining, China is growing 11% a year and it’s been maintaining
this double digit pace for over a decade. Besides all of the
obvious manufacturing activity been moved to the PRC, Beijing is
building for the 2008 Olympics and Shanghai is readying for the 2010
World’s Fair. Not surprisingly, the PRC booming. And while
I won’t bore you with the details of a trip that went from Hong Kong
and Guangzhou in the South to Beijing, Tianjin, Dalian, and Shanghai in
the Northern area, I will say that the scariest site I saw was the mouth
of the Yangtze River in Shanghai stuffed with more cargo ships than even
the most fertile imagination could envision. This is a country
that is kicking the world’s butt and, as I document in my new book,
China is doing so by bending or breaking many of the rules of the free
and fair trade road.
This
Week's Market Movers - Ironies
Abound
On
Tuesday, the Fed will meet to parse this conundrum. The bond
market crowd – led by Pimco’s Bill Gross – is trying to get out in
front of the Fed and bend it to its “halt the rate hikes” will.
Given that chorus and the obvious signs of economic stagnation building,
I’m not interested in taking the opposite side of the bet. On
the other hand, it’s pretty damn clear there is plenty of inflation
left in the economy. That’s why it would be really ironic if on
Tuesday the Fed declares a halt and the Q2 productivity numbers come out
with productivity way down and labor costs way up signaling lots of
inflation.
As
for the other potential market movers, the trade report always has the
potential of roiling the dollar, then bonds, and by extension the stock
market. There’s little evidence of course that that report will
do anything other than document another whopping deficit – dollar
down, gold up, no?
Portfolio
Shorts and Longs
As
this remains a difficult market to make money in, I don’t have a lot
of inspiration for you. That said, I really like my long position
in the Vaino biotech pick EPIX – but I cut my holdings in another bio
penny VITA after some bad news pushing its technicals into Bearland.
Last
week, I also opened two new positions. I’m long EWZ, which is
the Brazilian ETF. Brazil is benefiting greatly from its China
trade and is a nice international hedge.
I
also dipped my toe in the water on ABAX. Here’s what Yahoo
Finance says about it: Abaxis, Inc. engages in the development,
manufacture, and marketing of portable blood analysis systems for use in
veterinary or human patient-care setting to provide clinicians with
blood constituent measurements. Its primary product is blood analysis
system, consisting of a 6.9 kilogram analyzer and a series of single-use
plastic discs, called reagent discs that contain chemicals required to
perform a panel of up to 13 tests on veterinary patients and 14 tests on
human patients.
It’s
earnings are up, the stock is on fire, and I had a really hard time
trying to find an entry point as there hasn’t been any dips lately.
Maybe I being sucked into a momentum play that is going to collapse, but
its sales are robust and the company seems to have a bright future.
Plus, it’s a non-cyclical play in a world where cyclicals will soon be
taking a beating. Stay tuned.

Vaino's
Biotech Corner
Hewers of wood,
haulers of water, and makers of drugs?
Canadian
biotech stocks don’t get the attention of their American counterparts:
there simply isn’t a critical mass north of the border. So,
while escaping the heat on the shores of the picturesque Bay of Fundy in
Digby, Nova Scotia, (home of the world’s largest scallop fishing
fleet), I went looking for underappreciated Canadian biotechs.
Axcan
Pharma (NASDAQ: AXCA) is a Montreal-based company that’s been around
since 1982. Their business model, acquiring and developing drugs
to treat gastro-intestinal ailments is sound, and they’re profitable.
AXCA took a dive in February when a Phase 3 clinical trial of ITAX, a
drug to treat functional dyspepsia, failed to meet its endpoint.
Functional dyspepsia is a poorly understood disease that accounts for up
to 5% of all visits to primary care physicians in North America.
ITAX
is a dopamine agonist that is currently in use in Japan.
Results of a clinical study, published in May in The
New England Journal of Medicine, showed the drug to be
effective at reducing gastric pain in patients. Gastric pain
isn’t as dire as many other diseases, but, if you suffer from it you
want to get rid of it.
AXCA’s
financials are strong and they are profitable, though not spectacularly
so. Despite the failure to meet its clinical endpoint, ITAX is a
useful treatment. I expect Axcan will submit a New drug
Application in the near future to permit it to sell this drug in North
America. If they are successful it will be the only drug on the
market to treat functional dyspepsia. There’s nothing like being
the only product on the market to sooth an upset investor.
Aside
from ITAX, Axcan has three other drugs in late stage clinical trials.
Their clinical trial on Viokase, a pancrease enzyme replacement therapy,
is on a drug currently being sold by Axcan: the clinical trial is
the result of an FDA rule that all pancreas enzyme replacement drugs
(they help to breakdown lipids) must have passed clinical trials by 2008
to remain on the market.
Axcan
is safe financially and, if an NDA for ITAX is filed, the stock will
jump. AXCA is stochastically overbought right now. My play
will be to wait for a pullback and scale in over the next few weeks.
Matt
Davio’s Hedging Your Bets: Matt is On Vacation

“Any
trader or investor who ignores the power of macroeconomics over the
world’s
financial markets will, sooner or later, lose more than they
should—and if they are
trading on margin, perhaps more than they
have.”
-- If It's Raining in Brazil, Buy Starbucks
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Peter
Navarro is a business professor at the University of California
and the author of the best-selling investment book
If It's
Raining
in Brazil, Buy Starbucks. His latest book is
The
Well-Timed Strategy |
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|
Matt
Davio is a managing partner at the hedge fund,
Red Rock Capital Fund.
Catch
his Daily
Blog as PeterNavarro.com
|
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Andrew
Vaino is a Ph.D. chemist who spent two years at
The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA, working in the
laboratories of Nobel-Laureate Barry Sharpless and Kim Janda. He
currently teaches at The University of Maine, where his research
group is focused on exploring the interface between enzymology,
organic chemistry, and nanotechnology. |
© 2006
Peter Navarro, Matt Davio and Andrew Vaino
www.peternavarro.com
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Peter Navarro
Irvine, California USA
Email
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