|

DID
MAY'S SHARP GLOBAL MARKET
SELL-OFF SIGNAL A MAJOR TREND IN
CHANGE IN THE CYCLICAL BULL SINCE OCT 2002?
by
Econotech
June 2, 2006
After the first significant global financial markets correction this
year in May, this article will examine some of the major trends in the
bull market that began in Oct 2002 by looking at key financial and
commodity indexes from a global perspective.
Key Recent Trends in Global Indexes and Economy
With very strong global economic growth in the first quarter of 2006,
led by the U.S. (+5%) and China (+10%), inflationary manifestations in
various asset classes seemed to threaten to spiral out of control in
Mar-Apr, as indicated by the nearly parabolic surge in the price of gold
and other metals; in a further acceleration in the big run up in global
emerging stock markets; and in the decline in the U.S. bond market and
the dollar.
The modest response so far has been rising expectations of continued
very small rate hikes by the three largest central banks (Fed, ECB, BoJ);
the Bank of Japan’s sopping up huge excess liquidity it had provided
this decade; just announced additional measures to curb real estate
speculation in China; and vague promises in late April by the G-7 and
IMF to try to deal with global economic balances.
Since some of these actions were enough to help throw the financial
markets into a tizzy in May, imagine what more significant measures
would do. E.g. those that actually began to deflate the extremely
over-inflated global real estate bubble, beyond the current flattening
out year-to-year of U.S. real estate prices.
Or, conversely, what would happen with the quick renewal of the Mar-Apr
belief by the global hyper-speculators that the central banks and
governments don’t have the incentives and/or guts to take them on, a
usually safe assumption most of the time.
The ECB’s latest “Financial Stability Review” released yesterday
for the first time had a section on hedge funds, according to the
front-page lead in today's FT, which said, "hedge funds have
created a 'major risk' to global financial stability for which there are
no obvious remedies, the European Central Bank warned yesterday ... the
ECB ranked an 'idiosyncratic collapse' of a key hedge fund or a cluster
of smaller funds' in the same category as a possible bird flu pandemic
as the types of shocks that could trigger fresh disruption in financial
markets."
I would replace "idiosyncratic" with "possible
systemic." China officials have also mentioned concern in the past
about hedge funds. In contrast, Bernanke not surprisingly recently
defended them, as has his predecessor, Greenspan.
So Far Key Indexes Support Seems to be Holding, But…
So far, the long-term cyclical bull market up-trends, i.e. since Oct
2002, of key indexes seem to remain intact following the sharp May
correction, indicated by the MSCI world equity index, the strongest
stock indexes, such as MSCI emerging markets and Japan’s Nikkei; the
stock indexes of U.S. broker-dealers, oil services, and small-mid caps;
and the prices of industrial and precious metals commodities.
Despite its recent pullback, the MSCI world equity index still seems to
be in a strong, if still very over-extended, uptrend from Oct 2002, and
until that changes, the global bull market in stocks would seem to reman
intact, if perhaps much more volatile.
These leading stock and commodity indexes seem to be currently holding
at important support levels (e.g. the MSCI emerging market index around
750 and the EEM emerging markets ETF around 92, Japan’s Nikkei around
15,500, the Russell 2000 around 710, etc).
Whether the strongest indexes decisively break down through their
long-term up-trends, or conversely resume their very sharp pre-May
climb, obviously will be an important indicator of whether a major
change has occurred in the global liquidity/credit/economic cycle, or
whether the so-called “Goldilocks” (not too hot or cold) economic
consensus returns..
In the meantime, there is no progress on global economic balances as far
as I can see, when that will cause even further problems for the dollar
above and beyond the ongoing long-term decline is anyone’s guess, but
it always lurks in the background, whether or not acknowledged on Wall
Street.
Emerging Markets Bubble Starting to Pop?
Emerging markets is one of the key potential “bubbles” in the global
economy, although the jury is still out on that issue, both from a
technical (as previously mentioned, the EEM ETF is holding support
around 92) and fundamental/valuation view. Pimco’s McCulley said
emerging markets was an area he was focusing on just as he was cut off
on an interview on Bloomberg tv the other day, and so am I.
According to a May 30 FT article on the World Bank’s latest global
development finance report, “volatility in emerging markets and fears
of a flight of foreign capital have come at a ‘critical’ time for
developing countries’ financial markets.” The report's lead author
was quoted as saying: “Many developing economies are half in, half out
of the global financial system—they’re half open, half closed right
now.”
According to one i-bank, portfolio inflows to emerging markets between
Oct 2005 and early May 2006 were well ahead of the cumulative total of
the prior decade. Thus, not surprisingly the World Bank report's lead
author said: “If these foreigners withdraw, then local market rates go
up and that’s an area we’re worried about.”
Chart Trends Helpful at Key Inflection Points When Fundamentals
Become Unclear
Chart trend-following can perhaps be helpful for individual and small
institutional investors who can react quickly to major trend changes.
The current obsessive Wall Street “data dependent”debate over
economic "fundamentals" is primarily for large institutional
investors who must find some plausible-sounding reasons to tell their
clients and superiors for making bets that can’t be readily changed
without the risk of significant losses should a major trend change not
be detected.
Especially when there is a lack of clarity regarding fundamental factors
driving financial markets, often during possible key inflection points,
e.g. the ongoing growth vs inflation “data dependent” daily news
obsession (will Bernanke or won’t he) and its impact on various asset
classes, I have found that it is usually helpful just to step back to
try to simply see what key indexes are actually doing from a longer-term
perspective, as I try to do later in this article.
I.e., the purpose of this article is to try to note key asset trends,
not to fundamentally analyze or forecast them. Throughout this cyclical
bull market I have tried to make the ultra-simplistic assumption that
the huge monetary/credit expansion and asset price inflation that have
characterized are intact until and unless the key up-trends are
decisively broken and then reversed.
Then, in a long March 24 article titled “Potential Tipping Points
Could Make Spring Very Interesting” link,
I discussed a large number of potential fundamental risks and expressed
my guess that the stock market might top out in a month or so from then.
But until that is clear on the charts, that’s simply my guess.
Similarly, in follow-up articles, I did long fundamental discussions on
the dollar, etc (e.g. May 1 link,
May 11 link,
May 19 link).
This article instead focuses on the charts to simply try to see what's
actually happening.
Broker-Dealer Stocks, Japan's Nikkei Turned a Little Early
The current leg up of the strongest indexes began in Oct 2005 and then,
especially in the case of industrial and precious metals commodities and
emerging market stocks, accelerated so sharply starting in March as to
force the issue of global credit excess and asset inflation to the fore
of central banker concerns.
The U.S. broker-dealer stocks gave an early indication of both the
upturn in Oct 2005 and the sharp May 2006 downturn, having peaked
earlier on April 19. Since we now have a global hyper-speculative
economy which these stocks directly reflect, this index should also be
watched closely to see if it resumes its huge bull market upturn.
Failure to do so will be red flag.
Japan’s stock market is up about 20% (I round off in this article as
prices are very volatile lately) since Oct 2005, down from over 30% in
early April, leading the way down before the MSCI world equity index and
the U.S. cyclical stock index, which also are up about 20% over this
period (and well above the about 7% gain in the S&P 500), which
peaked on May 10.
Japan, emerging markets and global equity indexes started taking off
around when the U.S. bond market peaked in late June 2005, the latter is
down about 7% since then. The U.S. dollar index peaked in mid-Nov 2005
and is down about -9% since then.
Japan’s Nikkei has tracked gold’s price very closely all during this
cyclical bull market from Oct 2002 (despite its strong recent
performance, the Nikkei has been the weakest since Oct 2002 of the major
indexes discussed later in this article, up about 90%)
Rolling Corrections of Cyclical Stocks, Starting with
Homebuilders
There have been rolling corrections of some cyclical stock indexes.
Whether that continues and gathers steam is another key thing to watch
here.
These rolling cyclical stock corrections started with the U.S.
homebuilder stock index, which peaked at the end of Jul 2005 and is down
more than -20% since then, to its level at the beginning of 2005, at
support of a large triple or head-and-shoulders top.
Given the importance to U.S. consumers of real estate “wealth”
creation and their home equity ATM, this support level bears watching
for signs of further deterioration in the real estate market (which is
indicated by forward-looking economic data).
Semiconductors, another cyclical group that reflects the “real”
economy, after its typical fourth-quarter reflex rally initially peaked
at the end of Jan 2006 and is down about -12% since early March
U.S. Small-Mid vs Large Cap
Btw, for those intrigued by the 2.3% gain yesterday (June 1) in the
Nasdaq 100, re the issue of small/mid-cap vs large growth stocks, the
Nasdaq 100 is up about 80% since Oct 2002, while the Russell 2000 and
S&P 600 small caps (which since mid-2004 perform nearly identically)
are up about 115%, with the S&P 400 mid-cap up about 95%.
The Nasdaq 100 got a stronger start out the starting blocks back in Oct
2002 then the small-mid cap stocks, the out-performance in favor of the
latter has been much stronger since Mar-Apr 2003 invasion of Iraq, at
its peak in May nearly 2 to 1 in favor of the S&P 600 small caps.
The same holds true from another bottom in Aug 2004 and even more so
since the Oct 2005 bottom, since then small-mid caps are up about 15%,
three times that of the Nasdaq 100.
I.e., it would take much more than one strong up day to break the Nasdaq
100 long-term downtrend relative to the small-mid cap indexes, but hope
always springs eternal, I suppose.
Digression on the Mainstream Inflation Watch
A brief digression on inflation before getting back to the charts, since
it is much in the news nowadays.
I tend to look at inflation as excess monetary/credit growth. Due to
“globalization,” that growth is mainly manifest in asset prices (a
critical point that the ECB's retiring Issing and the BIS' White realize
unlike their U.S. counterparts at the Fed), not in the goods
(particularly tradeable) and especially labor markets, as was the case
in the good “old days” when the Fed would tight to head off
inflationary pressures in those markets.
E.g., Citibank’s chief global equity strategist was on Bloomberg tv
the other day seemingly very pleased in saying that unit labor costs in
the world’s four largest economies, the U.S., Japan, Germany and
China, were all simultaneously declining (presumably his
“compensation” wasn’t, given last year's huge Wall Street
bonuses).
As long as key asset classes are in very strong up-trends, then
inflation is still very much intact, imho, whether or not it ever
“spills” into the goods and labor markets, regardless of the
theoretical, practical or even political implications, which I won’t
examine in this article.
The financial markets, officials and mainstream media are obsessed with
each little squiggle, literally each tenth of a percent in a low
single-digit number in various official price indexes, which aren’t
measured accurately anyway.
Yet they choose to generally ignore the larger inflation picture in
various key asset classes, which quickly change by literally tens of
percentage points, that is plainly the most dominant feature of the
global financial landscape.
Key Index Trends During Cyclical Bull since Oct 2002
From Oct 2002 to present, the strongest key index is the Hang Seng China
Enterprise Index, the “H” shares, which had been up 320% from Oct
2002 until its recent pullback to around 270%. Its strength is perhaps
not surprising given that the annual growth of China’s economy of
around 9-10% has been a key feature of the global economy in recent
years, not to mention of enormous historical significance.
The second strongest key index over this period is industrial metals,
which was up over 270% from Oct 2002 until its recent pullback to around
240%. Again, this is not surprising, as this asset class story is
intricately linked to the strong growth in China and other emerging
markets. E.g. re the ongoing negotiations over iron ore price increases,
China produced 38 m tons of steel last month, compared with 10 million
tons from U.S. mills.
The third strongest key index over this period is the U.S. broker-dealer
index, up about 260% from Oct 2002, until pulling back to around 220%.
As I dubbed it in my 5/1 article link,
this is the “Golden Age of Goldman Sachs” (which firm has just
supplied a second Treasury Secretary, one for each mainstream party, and
is third top choice of graduates from leading MBA programs, according to
a recent Fortune magazine poll).
Of course, I am simply using Goldman, now highly dependent on its
speculative trading side (as essentially a huge unregulated hedge fund)
from which its new CEO is expected to come, as a symbol of the current
hyper speculative version of globalization.
Throughout this cyclical bull market I have focused heavily on the
broker-dealer index because the economic health of the global
hyper-speculators is so closely tied to that of the global financial
markets and the underlying real economy
This perhaps can be viewed as a parasite-host relationship, since the
ECB used the bird flu analogy in the report mentioned above (if so, then
very well-fed parasites, the 26 top hedge fund mangers averaged $363
million in “compensation” last year, according to an article in the
May 26 FT).
The fourth strongest key index has been the MSCI emerging markets index,
which peaked around up 250% from Oct 2002 before its sharp recent
pullback to around 190%.
Finally, the fifth strongest key index is oil service stocks, which
peaked around 220% before declining to around 180%.
The cyclical/secular bull case for this stock group has remained intact
so far, despite the fact that energy price increases have been less
robut since the beginning of September 2005. Oil prices are currently up
about 13% since then, with geopolitical issues such as Iraq, Iran,
Nigeria, Venezuela being a major factor, while the energy commodity
index is down about 7% from that peak.
Btw, another much smaller energy asset play, uranium, has been extremely
strong throughout this period.
There are two key indexes that are up about 135-145% since Oct 2002.
These are oil and U.S. housing stocks. They got there in much different
paths, which I describe below in the two sections on inflection points.
There are five key indexes clumped together up around 105-115% since Oct
2002. These are MSCI global stocks, U.S.cyclical stocks, Russell 2000
U.S. small caps, gold, and U.S. semiconductors.
Given the recent strength of gold and weakness in semiconductors, this
perhaps might be surprising to many. These two got to this point in
widely divergent ways, also as described below.
Finally, the Nikkei and U.S. bank stock indexes are up 80-90%, the
latter has been in an uptrend since Oct 2005 after being flat since Jan
2004.
Major Inflection Point, Nov 2003, Energy Begins Major
Outperformance
In the first year of the bull market from Oct 2002, most of the indexes
mentioned above rallied strongly, the strongest being China’s H shares
and semiconductors, up more than 200% and 125% by Jan 2004,
respectively, with the tech crowd typically trying to relive its past
glory from the late 1990s TMT equity bubble.
The H shares have added to its gains recently after being flat through
the end of 2005, while the semiconductor have gone after their strong
first year, this being a different cycle for hard-core tech-oriented
investors.
The most conspicuous exception to strong gains in the first year of the
cyclical bull market was the price of oil and the performance of the oil
services stock index. Through late Nov 2003, the former was flat and the
latter up less than 10%.
Then something changed in Nov 2003, that being the perception that China
and other emerging markets seemingly had almost overnight (increasingly
since China’s accession to the WTO in late 2001) developed a strong
new thirst for oil, at the same time that excess oil producing and/or
refining capacity was much more limited in this cycle than previous ones
(which may be related to the “peak oil” hypothesis, but separating
out oil’s cyclical supply/demand balance from that secular trend is
still not clear).
The price of oil bottomed in mid-Sept 2003, with the oil services stock
index following in late-Nov 2003. From that point on, until just
recently, these two have been by far the best performing indexes
discussed in this article, with industrial metals commodities belatedly
catching up with oil services stocks and closing the gap and now
slightly passing in their huge run up in Mar-Apr 2006, with both up over
150% since late-Nov 2003.
Oil prices, which had moved in lock-step with oil services stocks from
late 2003, have cooled a bit from their earlier torrid pace, as
previously mentioned. There has been some divergence with oil sevices
stocks starting in Oct 2005, with the oil services stocks zigging
straight up while oil prices continued to zag down and then meander
until Iran and other geopolitical issues got everyone’s attention,
ending up 125% since late 2003.
The two next best performing asset classes over this period since Nov
2003 has been China H shares and the MSCI emerging markets, both up
about 85%. Broker-dealers and gold are next around 65-75%; Russell 2000
and homebuilders around 30-35%; and bringing up the rear,
semiconductors, down -5-10%.
Major Inflection Point, July 2005, Hot Money Looks Elsewhere as
Homebuilders Top
The next key inflection point began in late July 2005, when the
homebuilder stock index peaked. It has fallen more than 20% since then.
By Nov 2005, it was becoming increasingly clear that homebuilding stocks
were no longer a favored asset class, and speculative hot money started
chasing in earnest after something else
This turned out to be industrial and precious metals commodities,
emerging markets equities, two closely linked stories, and Japan. The
metals, especially industrial, have been by far the best performing
asset classes ever since, with industrial metal gains of about 85% since
Sep outstripping gold gains of 45%, followed by China H shares, oil
services, brokers and emerging markets, all up 20-30% after their recent
pullbacks.
Finally, to wrap this up, a brief word on the gold price and the gold
stock indexes. Since Oct 2002 the gold price is up a little over 100%.
The XAU is up about 140%, and the HUI is up about 200%. Since sharply
turning up in mid-May 2005, the performance is over 50%, about 75%, and
about 95%, respectively.
(I perhaps will save for another time a June 1 Bloomberg story titled,
"China Should Buy Gold With Reserves, Central Bank Adviser
Says," plus more on emerging markets.)

© 2006 Econotech
Editorial
Archive | Econotech
Blogspot
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Econotech
USA
Email l Website
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense.
|