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END
OF THE BOOM - DJIA 3000
by Paul Lamont
April 23, 2007
“In a bull market and
particularly in booms the public at first makes money which it later
loses simply by overstaying the bull market…The
big money in booms is always made first by the public-on paper. And it
remains on paper.” – Edwin Lefčvre,
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. 1923.
To the investment
community the sell-off in February came as a complete surprise. Readers
of our report understand what is happening. In our article on October 17th
of last year, titled Credit
Extreme Emotion;
“As a result,
financial institutions will come under severe strains as the credit
bubble bursts. The rise of
mortgage defaults will signal the beginning
of this deflationary spiral. Unfortunately, interest rate
markets are setting up
homeowners for this exact scenario.”
Also in 7
Reasons To Sell,
“In addition, all
14 “Strategists” at the largest Wall Street Firms are calling for a
higher market in 2007. The last time this bullish consensus occurred
was at the start of 2001. The DJIA subsequently fell ~40% over the next
2 years.”
Promoters of the boom
(Wall Street Firms) cannot be relied upon for independent investment
advice. They profit by selling investments that are in demand. When
demand is high for any investment, so is price and therefore these are
not wise investments.
The
Chart Wall Street Doesn’t Want You to See

The
chart above from Steven Williams at CyclePro.com shows the Dow Jones
Industrial Average adjusted for inflation since 1800. As you can see,
when the effects of inflation have been extracted, the DJIA is much more
cyclical than Wall Street promoters would care to admit. In optimistic
peaks of 1834, 1906, 1929, and 1966 the DJIA subsequently moved to the
bottom of the long term trend channel. These bear markets were either
inflationary, such as the 1966-1982 bear market or deflationary such as
in 1929-1932. We have also noticed that inflationary/deflationary
crashes tend to alternate. We suppose this is because Mr. Market likes
to fool even the bears. Today we are again at the top of the trend
channel. How will we fall? Most bears remember and fear the stagflation
of the 1970s. However with debt levels currently high, inflation cannot
be maintained for an extended length of time. Debtors would merely file
for bankruptcy or foreclosure (as they have begun recently). Instead a
deflationary spiral similar to 1929-1933 or 1834-1842 is likely. It
appears the rule of alternation will continue.
This
chart also shows possible future levels for the Dow Jones Industrial
Average. According to the trend lines followed since 1800, the DJIA
could reasonably fall to 3000 by 2012. This is our target.
What’s
Happening Now?
Astute
chart watchers have recognized that markets follow elliptical curves.
Currently, we are finishing up an ellipse that started in October of
2005. Notice the chart of the DJIA below, price is riding up the side of
the ellipse. This is similar to price action in late 2003. (Another
example of the elliptical curve is the 5yr chart of the Shanghai Index.)
When price snaps out of this ellipse, the DJIA will be pursuing a new
direction: down or sideways. Of course, readers know our bias is down.
We believe the decline will be swifter than February’s sell off.

Institutions
on a Bubble
Bank
failures in the Great Depression were caused by savings lost in the
stock market bubble. Today our banks are prevented from investing in the
stock market, instead restricted to a “safer” asset class: real
estate. To see the illiquid bubble that some of our financial
institutions are now dependent on, see the chart below of U.S. home
prices adjusted for inflation back to 1890.

Speculativebubble.com
has created a rollercoaster
video of this chart, which we recommend because it reflects the
emotional aspect of markets. Financial institutions that are based on
the real estate market will face serious problems as the boom unwinds. Mortgage
lenders are already going bust. As home prices continue to fall,
aided by regulatory and market restrictions on credit, baby boomers will
put investment properties, in which they hold little equity, on the
auction block. Alt-A mortgages which fueled these properties will fall
in value. Current ‘thinking’ is that financial institutions have
passed on much of the mortgage risk to hedge funds. However when hedge
funds fail, ‘prime brokers’ historically have been forced to accept
the hedge fund’s losing positions. Illiquid arrangements (for instance
credit derivatives) will then be the responsibility of the prime
brokers. They will be forced to sell at any price as they try to prevent
losses on their own books. As the editor of The
Commercial and Financial Chronicle in November of 1929 reported on
the Great Crash, ‘the crowd didn’t sell, they got sold out.’ The
trading desks of the Wall Street Firms will cash out as the panic
develops, the lady in Omaha will be stuck on the phone with a busy
signal.
The
LTA Treasury Bill Account
To
avoid this, investors should be moving now to financially healthy
institutions and buying U.S. Treasury Bills. Access to funds will be
critical when it is time to buy. Waiting on funds from financial
institutions in bankruptcy receivership, cash redemptions of fund
companies, or for FDIC payouts will be real headaches in a credit
crunch. Instead a Treasury bill, a direct loan to the U.S. Federal
Government, is available in the most extreme circumstances. According to
the FDIC;
“Customers
who hold Treasury securities purchased through a bank that later fails
can request a document from the acquiring bank (or from the FDIC if
there is no acquirer) showing proof of ownership and redeem the security
at the nearest Federal Reserve Bank. Or, customers can wait for the
security to reach its maturity date and receive a check from the
acquiring institution, which may automatically become the new custodian
of the failed bank's T-bill customer list (or from the FDIC acting as
receiver for the failed bank when there is no acquirer).”

©
2007 Paul J. Lamont
Editorial
Archive
Contact
Information
Paul
J. Lamont
Lamont Trading Advisors, Inc.
502 Bank Street
Decatur, AL 35601
Tel/Fax: (256) 850-4161
Email
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