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BUBBLE
MORPHOLOGY:
WELCOME TO THE 2007 SUMMER RALLY
by Michael A. Nystrom
BullNotBull.com
July 13, 2007
Disclaimer:
The following should be read for entertainment purposes only, and should
not be construed as investment advice.
Back in
2001, when I started the website depression2.tv,
I was convinced that we were headed for a repeat of 1929, and a second
great depression. By the way things look now, I was either
completely wrong or just half a decade early. But in Y2.001K,
after the dot.com implosion and terrorist attacks, the economy looked to
be on shaky ground, and prospects for growth appeared grim indeed.
The end was nigh, or so I thought.
That was
prior to my intensive course of study in the subject of Bubble
Morphology, School of Hard Knocks (2001-2005). Ever since the
start of the Iraq War in March 2003, the stock market has been on a
plodding, steady upward path powered in part by the war industry and
military-industrial complex. I’ve written about this
elsewhere in “Bullish
on War.” To date, the war sector remains a stellar performer and
market leader, showing no signs of slowing.
How does
war stimulate the economy? A recent
documentary revealed (among other things) that the government has
been paying Haliburton/KBR $100 for each bag of laundry it washes for
our troops in the field. (According to interviews, troops are not
allowed to wash their own laundry.) Let’s just work that out
with some quick math: 130,000 troops in Iraq times $100 per bag of
laundry works out to … let’s see … $13 million dollars paid to
Cheney’s ex-company Haliburton/KBR each week. That’s
$676 million per year -- just for laundry. No wonder this war
is so expensive. But as for the laundryman, it’s not a bad gig,
if you know who – er, how to get it.
Of course,
under the trickle down theory, that money eventually works its way back
into the economy and down to the little people like us. Corporate
executives get their multi-million dollar bonuses that they use to
invest in hedge funds, buy expensive houses, jet planes, fancy cars,
jewelry, etc. That in turn creates more demand throughout the
economy not only for gardeners, maids, car washers, and chauffeurs, but
also for more executives, investment bankers, analysts, clerks,
receptionists, and cab drivers, too.
At least,
that is the general theory that seems to be driving this new era of corporatism,
which looks to have replaced free market capitalism as the operative
economic system in 21st century America.
A
different form of corporatism also helped the stock market and economy
to hold up so well over the past five years: The House-as-ATM
phenomenon, spurred by the housing boom, and intertwined with the
sub-prime phenomenon, but ultimately funded by the fire-sale rates on
money charged by the Federal Reserve.
Except for
the ultra-wealthy, who have seen their incomes rise dramatically, wages
for most Americans have stagnated across the board. With
real interest rates lowered below the rate of inflation, it made
rational sense for everyone to borrow. So naturally, cash-strapped
people borrowed money to try to get ahead. Renters borrowed to buy
homes they ultimately couldn’t afford, and middle-class owners
borrowed against their homes to continue funding lifestyles that they
were used to, but that inflation was making impossible to maintain.
Now that
the housing boom seems to have run its course, and interest rates are
– gasp! – rising, it's starting to look like the jig is finally up.
Housing – what many believe to be the final bubble – has at last
popped, and the Fed appears to be left holding a gun without any
bullets. Economic news is looking as dire as it ever has. Talk
of a second great depression is even making its way into mainstream
newspapers (albeit so far only in Britain). And here’s a sample of
some of the grim news I’ve posted on the homepage of my site in the
past few weeks:
Things
look grim indeed. Furthermore, people have been coming out of the
woodwork – the equivalent of the famous shoe shine boys with stock
tips – emailing me at my website that now is the time! The market is
going to CRASH!
And yet
the market parties on.
“This
time is really It!”
Over the
years, I’ve had a variation on the same conversation - though with a
variety of different people – that I have come to call the “This
time is really It!” conversation. Back in Seattle, I used to
have this conversation with a friend of mine every few months.
After a day or week in which the Dow had dropped a few hundred points,
he would inevitably call up and say, “You know, I really think this
time is really It!” referring to the Big Crash we’d both been
waiting for. Shortly after such conversations – after he’d
loaded up on some more Rydex inverse funds – the market would rally 2
or 3 percent, flushing him and the rest of the bears out.
Now I’ve
got a new friend out here in Boston that I have the exact same
conversation with every few months. After the big 160 point drop
on Tuesday, he called me up with the same story – “This time,” he
said, “I really think this is It!”
Mind you,
however, this is a guy who has been waiting for the crash and the second
great depression since 1987.
Perspective
Meeting people even more bearish than myself has done wonders for my
studies in Bubble Morphology. A few years ago, I don’t think it
was possible to meet anyone more bearish than me. In 2001, I was
convinced that there was no way of avoiding a second great depression.
I didn’t foresee the housing boom, the equity extraction, nor the
simulative effects of the massive war spending and tax cuts.
Neither did either of my bearish friends above. In our most recent
conversation, I asked my friend, “What other tricks could the Powers
that Be (PTB) possibly pull out of their hats to keep the market humming
along?”
“I
can’t think of any,” he said. “I think they’re done. This
is It!” he told me.
Yet we
bears have consistently underestimated the ability of TPB to morph one
bubble near seamlessly into newer and bigger ones. TPB most
certainly never run out of tricks (whether the tricks work or not is
another story entirely), so it is incumbent upon us to sniff those
tricks out. A good bubble morphologist, after studying what’s
going on, should be able to at least give some kind of scenario
(plausible or not) for how the bubbles will continue to blow.
So
here’s my crack at it. Two articles from venerable publications
crystallized the following for me this week: It’s the hedge
funds, stupid! Last week the NY Times, in true
this-time-its-different fashion, wrote that the difference between the
hedge funds and the dot.coms of yore is that “Hedge
funds make money.”
Yeah,
right. Smells like the bubble is morphing, and the MSM
is being put to use once again as head corporate cheerleader.
Another case in point, this week’s Barron’s led with a story by
Michael Santili titled, “Abolutely, Positively, No One’s Safe.”
The article talks about how even a company like FedEx, with a market cap
of $34 billion, could be taken private in an LBO – at a 20%
premium! The money is out there. Forget the “fact” that liquidity is
drying up. FedEx has 700 planes and 44,000 trucks that could be
used as collateral against which to issue debt. At the
moment, it is undeniable that the hedge funds, or LBO-firms – whatever
you want to call them – are the current force lifting all market
boats.
Given that
last week’s offer by Blackstone to take Hilton Hotels private at a 40%
premium resulted in a rally of hotel stocks across the board, it is hard
to miss the impact that private equity / hedge funds are having.
Traders want to make quick profits, so they will increase the intensity
in the search for the next potential buyout target, like kids looking
for the golden certificates in Willy Wonka bars. Who doesn’t
want to hit a jackpot like Hilton? Stocks will fly along with
buyouts and rumors of buyouts. The old Wall Street adage “Even turkeys
can fly in a hurricane” will be seen in full force.
Like an
expert tai-chi move, bulls continue to use the bears own energy and
momentum against them, forcing them to cover their shorts and causing
the exact opposite of their intended results: big market gains.
At 3:45pm ET, the Dow is up 271 points - an even 2% - to a new all time
high! With today’s rally, I can hear the little bulls across the
country starting to lick their chops: “Hey Martha! This article here
in the Times says hedge funds make money! Do you think we
should buy some?”
Maybe
little bull, but go in with your eyes open. Hedge funds make money
the same way vampires stay alive: by sucking the lifeblood from another
living entity. But more important is this: the Dow is up
around 10% so far this year, but according to both Richard Russell and
James Stack, the small investors are so far staying away.
They’re skeptical, and rightfully so. To the man on the street, the
economy looks weak, it is hard to make ends meet, and every day prices
seem to go up a little bit more. Things do not seem to be getting
better.
Until
today, the market has been no place for the small investor to play.
But after today, or certainly after the Dow smashes through 14,000, the
timid little bulls that were afraid to get into the market for fear of a
meltdown will suddenly be clamoring to get in for fear of a melt up!
Forget the fundamentals and the abundant bad news - prices are going up!
Summer rally here we come!
So this is
how this bubble will likely roll on – at least for a little while.
Private equity can still borrow big to buy big, profitable companies
(e.g. FedEx), extract a lot of fat banking & consulting fees from
the company’s wealth, pay the fund managers’ and consultants’
salaries, slash jobs, cut services and squeeze even more booty out of
the company, then turn around and sell the whole thing out in an IPO.
Ca-ching! The fat cat hedge fund managers will cash out into the
world of billionaire-ism by selling their shares to the billionaire-wanna-be’s
known as the general public, who get their investment tips from the New
York Times (newsstand price, $1). Shares thus pass from
strong hands to weak as the market quietly tops amidst jubilation and
cheer.
Later,
after all the money is banked, and the managers have moved on, and the
hedge-fund shares are in the toilet, we’ll find that the service at
FedEx (or whoever the lucky target companies may be) has mysteriously
deteriorated and earnings are down. Not so mysterious, really,
when outside managers come in to butcher the company and kill morale.
Profits decline and assets – those 700 planes and 44,000 trucks –
start getting sold off at pennies on the dollar. Eventually all
that remains of the company is a pathetic shell of its former self, the
corporate vamps having sucked it dry of its vitality and life, just like
the subprime borrowers who today find themselves both homeless and
penniless, walking away from their payments on a mortgage under water.
That, friends, is when the second great depression begins.
In the
mean time, this is the housing bubble strategy all over again, just in a
new form: Lend, borrow, buy, extract, sell, repeat. Through
the alchemy of finance, the day of reckoning has once again been
postponed, though who knows for how long? When things start
looking grim again, PTB will have a new strategy to keep things rolling
along that keen bubble morphologists will be required to sniff out.
But for now, enjoy the summer rally. Take a dip - the water is
fine. Just make sure you don’t get yourself in too deep.
The sharks are circling in the distance, and they are getting hungry.

© 2007
Michael A. Nystrom
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Michael A. Nystrom
Cambridge, MA
www.bullnotbull.com
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