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PAPER
PROMISES POISED ON PRECARIOUS PERCH
by Captain Hook
www.treasurechests.info
December 17, 2007
Whether
it be due to a global
currency crisis, it’s effects,
or because worse is yet
to come, no matter, the ever-growing hyperinflationary mountain
of paper promises is precariously perched on the edge of a
precipice ready to fall, and in doing so; such an event would accelerate
the end of the US Dollar ($) empire, along with its dominance
in world
affairs and trade. And no amount of fairy
tales or interventions
will be able to halt the $’s slide from prominence – nothing. This
is becoming more evident in the fact the credit crisis is now spreading
to Asia,
where the stock markets have become destabilized.
How
bad could this get? Answer: If what we are witnessing is at a minimum a Grand
Super-Cycle Degree event, then a total collapse of stock,
bond, and currency markets world-wide could be in store as the globe
reverts back to more regionalized economies, and localized
currencies. So, one should be increasingly careful in terms
of exposures to stocks, brokerage firms, and banks, because a collapse
in equities will come at some point, and when it does, it could be a Duesy.
The plunge in Novagold (NG:AMEX & TSX) yesterday is a good example
of such an occurrence – out of the blue. (More below on NG.)
And
there are developments in a number of variables we follow to suggest
while a layover (respite) in the journey might well be at hand
presently, ultimately all round trips return home. Within this group at
present we find the Baltic
Freight Index (BDI), Canadian
Dollar (C$), and Chinese
stocks, all three seen as key barometers of a healthy global
economy, and all having turned down from extremes recently. In terms of
US centric factors obviously the story cannot be any better since it’s
the bust in the credit
boom that’s causing a chain reaction globally.
Add to
this deteriorating
internals in stocks, the prospects of rising price
inflation (hitting the tape soon as a result of the falling
$), interest
rates (bottoming now), and a yield
curve that’s just biding time before it steepens yet again;
accompanied by a rising $
in turn naturally then, and there is good reason to remain pessimistic
with respect to equities longer term. Short-term however, it appears we
are destined to see a bounce at present, although I don’t know how
long it will last once the $ starts to rally for real. (See Figure 1)
Figure
1

Have
you heard the latest spin on the whole carry trade thingy? Price
managers are expecting us to believe speculators are switching from one
country to another in financing leveraged bets based on fluctuations in
the currencies like they know what they will be. Correspondingly, right
now everybody is suppose to be taking on new debt in $’s then, giving
us the $
carry trade. Somehow I don’t think this concept will be
going far, not with the prognosis for bank
stocks to continue sliding down the slippery slope post a
near-term bounce, along with margin
debt set to implode as per historical patterning.
This
is why after a short-term bounce into December, I expect stocks to keep
falling, where again, if tight historical comparisons are repeated,
stocks could fall by 50-percent into spring of 2008. Here is a chart of
the anticipated count and patterning unfolding in the S&P 500 (SPX)
as I see it, where as prognosticated last week, we are now experiencing
what should prove to be a relatively shallow grind higher in the SPX to
1480ish (200-day moving average) as a product of accelerating
monetary inflation set against increased short
selling along with rising open interest put
/ call ratios on US stock indices. A short squeeze into
seasonal strength and a month end paint job as it were. (See Figure 2)
Figure
2

In
this respect traders are buying the dip off the expectation that not
only will the Fed pick up monetary growth rates with the Presidential
Election next year (and a rate cut on December 11th), but
also off the expectation (by the bearish) that if this is a repeat to
the year 2000 pattern, stocks should rally into March at a minimum. Of
course if this is what traders expect, causing short selling and put /
call ratios to continue recent declining trends, the hypothesis we will
witness a repeat of the post 1937 calendar day top in US stocks (see Figures
1 to 3) could very well become a reality. This is why one
should be careful about making sure long exposures to equities (even
precious metals) past this bounce into December do not exceed risk
tolerances.
But
hey, what’s to worry – right? The Arabs are coming to bail US
banks out once again. We have negative real
rates. US banks are being institutionalized
right into the government, meaning the taxpayer will be footing the bill
for the subprime mess. Was there ever any doubt? So the question then
begs, ‘what else could possibly go wrong now?’ Well, for one thing
the swings in the markets are enough to curl one’s spine these days,
so speculator exhaustion could play a role in curbing interest in
speculation. This is a natural considering the aging
western populations at this point and will play a big role in
curbing the demand for financial assets moving forward as retirees
attempt to spend their savings.
In the
meantime however, and as mentioned above, speculators are returning to
the fold, where what is happening is hedge funds are taking an improving
risk profile with respect to the financials to lever up their portfolios
once again. This is why index related put / call ratios are rising,
where protective puts are being accumulated to offset leveraged cash
exposures. So, with positive seasonal considerations on their side,
along with a record high supply of retail
short sellers positioned to squeeze, expect stocks to head
higher soon, where who knows, perhaps prices overshot the 200-day moving
average on the SPX. This is a wave 2 affair so up to a 99-percent
retrace back up into the mid 1500 is possible, but not probable. Again,
in this respect a move back to test the break of the 200-day moving
average at 1480 (with possible overshoot to the large round number at
1500) is most probable, where we will be scrutinizing short and put /
call ratios at the time to ensure this perspective is maintained.
All
this means we should also expect a bounce in precious metals prices
moving forward as well, but again, if the $ begins a multi-month rally
soon, one does need wonder just how strong this move will be. In this
respect I do expect both gold and silver (with silver
leading while stocks remain buoyant) to begin rising more
aggressively across an expanding array of fiat currencies about now due
to the growing urge for competitive devaluations a global currency /
economic crisis will foster, with the best gains seen while the yen
pulls back at present. The yen is now short-term overbought and in need
of a multi-week correction that should do precious metals a great deal
of good into a seasonal high in December even though this could involve
a somewhat stronger $. Of course I could just be imagining things
because this picture of the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX:AMEX)
sure looks toppy. (See Figure 3)
Figure
3

And in
putting paper against paper, where it appears all varieties are in need
of accelerating inflation to lift prices these days, it should be noted
the GDX / streetTRACKS Gold Shares Trust (GLD) Ratio is also looking
quite toppy, with values currently well contained below both structural
Fibonacci resonance related resistance along with key moving averages,
seen below. Structurally, prices have traced out what looks like a head
and shoulders pattern. Of course if enough energy is spun-off from
improving liquidity conditions in December, this pattern would likely be
negated. (See Figure 4)
Figure
4

Good
investing all.
Captain
Hook

© 2007 Captain Hook
Editorial Archive
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