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EQUITY MARKETS FLYING WITHOUT
INSTRUMENTS
INTO A NON-LINEAR STORM?
by
Econotech
June 8, 2007
At
the risk of writing too frequently, I think the current investment
environment merits more rapid updates than I usually do.
Two Potentially Critical Blind Spots
For Global Equity Investors--They Call It "Private" Equity
for a Reason
I would like to make two key points that I think are not as widely
understood as need to be right now.
First, at certain critical inflection points, there is not a linear,
one-to-one relationship between rising interest rates and rising
market risk. Rather at some point, rising interest rates might more
rapidly move global markets downward, I used the analogy of cracked
ice (investor psychology) giving way in my June 4 article link.
I.e., if interest rates continue to rise, especially with the 10-year
bond yield now over 5%, things may get rather more risky rather more
quickly than overly complacent global financial markets still
currently expect, again especially due to the fact that global markets
are so highly dependent in the 2002-07 cycle on very leveraged m&a
and lbo deals and emerging market debt, and because of the weak state
of the mortgage market, especially with upcoming ARMs upward resets.
(See section on "volatility shock" in my April 13 "When
Leading Fund Mgr Talks, Do People Listen," link,
one of three "heads-up" articles with similar titles that
started with my April 4, "When Citibank Chief Exec Talks, Do
People Listen," link.)
Second, another critical point that I would like to re-emphasize is
the lack of transparency for American equity investors, including
professional, of both the leveraged debt markets and debt and equity
emerging markets.
Again using the analogy of subsurface cracks in the ice, almost all
equity investors, professionals and gurus included, simply are not
well-equipped to see leveraged debt and emerging market cracks in the
ice of global investor and business psychology, that’s one of the
key things that makes the 2002-07 investment cycle so different.
To put it as bluntly as possible, most professional equity investors,
even very incredibly successful ones, have very little actual,
real-time working knowledge of what is really happening in these two
critical markets, leveraged debt and emerging markets, and may be very
surprised by events in them.
Despite Market Uptrend, Alpha
Weakening for Key Sectors
I’ve previously noted that alpha, risk-adjusted excess return, of
EEM, the MSCI emerging markets etf, has been coming down to near zero,
and how this might trigger a flight of momentum money should the
bullish psychology on/off switch suddenly flip. (See my May 24
"When Greenspan Talks, Do People Still Listen?" link)
Similarly, here is 4-year weekly chart of another critical sector, $XBD,
U.S. broker-dealer stocks, courtesy of prophet.net (left click once to
enlarge for better viewing).
Note that its alpha, bottom panel, is negative. Since the global
economy now often seems to be run by and for the benefit of the
Goldman Sachs’ of the world, this negative alpha wouldn't seem to
bode too well, and rising interest rates usually doesn't help the
record-setting deal flow that drives this sector.

If Current Uptrend Might Be in
Jeopardy, Which Timeframe Are We Talking About?
Whenever Wall Street, the mainsream media, experts, etc talk about
uptrends, they almost always fail to make clear which timeframe they
are talking about.
Right now there are at least three, nested "current uptrends,"
from most to least important: the long-term, from the Oct 2002/Mar
2003 lows; the intermediate-term, from the Jun-Jul 2006 lows; and the
short-term, from the Feb 27 2007 lows.
The practical investment/trading problem is that no one knows, of
course, if the short-term uptrend ends, whether it will stop there,
and that the intermediate and longer-term ones will not in turn
subsequently end.
For the past month or so, my concern is that, on the charts I use, key
markets have been at the top or even above their regression channels
in several different timeframes, e.g., as I've previously shown with
XLB, the materials sector etf, a key beneficiary of the huge growth in
emerging markets. (See my May 31 "Brief Update," link)
That overextended, increasingly risky situation needs to be taken into
account right now, though I consistently have given the benefit of the
doubt to the current uptrends staying intact until clearly broken, and
even though global liquidity and a record-setting global m&a deal
binge have been propping up global markets.

© 2007 Econotech
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article is intended solely for information purposes. The opinions are
those of the author only. Please conduct further research and consult
your financial advisor before making any investment/trading decision. No
responsibility can be accepted for losses that may result as a
consequence of trading on the basis of this analysis.
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