Global Market Comments
February 1, 2010
Featured Trades: (PIIGS), (EURO), (GREECE), (GOLD), (DOW/GOLD RATIO), (PRESIDENTIAL STOCK RETURNS)
1) Beware of Greeks bearing bonds. That is the message the markets
screamed at us this week, when yields on the sovereign debt issued by
the home of Plato and Socrates rose a gut-wrenching 400 basis points
against German bunds. The move is welcome news to the big hedge funds
that piled into the Piigs trade over the New Year in expectation of the
worsening of the credit worthiness of Europe’s weakest members. To the
uninitiated, this is where you go long the debt of German government
agencies, a country that has passed a constitutional amendment to
balance the budget by 2016. (Hellooooooo! Is anyone in Washington
listening?). You then short in equal value amounts the debt of
Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain. This trade already
delivered a home run in a matter of weeks, and could have more to go. I
managed to catch this indirectly in my January 4 Annual Asset
Allocation Review by warning that the dollar haters had become too
numerous and were about to get a severe spanking, getting whacked
mercilessly by a greenback punching through to the $1.30’s initially,
and eventually to the $1.20’s. This was predictable because the dire
straights of the EC’s weakest members are certain to prolong the
European Central Bank’s zero interest rate regime far longer than ours.
The debt levels in some of these countries make America look like a
paragon of fiscal integrity. Some analysts are predicting that the Euro
itself might not even survive the crisis. How long can a sober,
conservative German grandfather be expected to indulge the disgraceful
habits of its party animal, thrill seeking, drug addicted
grandchildren? I fear not long.
2)Whenever I am confronted with non believers in gold, I love to pull
out the chart below, showing the Dow Jones priced in the barbaric relic
and smack them across the face with it. A 20 year bull market in the
yellow metal took the stock index from 1.4 ounces in 1980 to a 40 ounce
peak at the top of the dotcom bubble in 2000. It has been falling ever
since, dropping to a mere 8 ounces by the end of last year. Today it is
hovering at 9.2 ounces, but is definitely looking very heavy. When was
the prior stock peak? In 1971, when massive deficit spending, spawned
by the Vietnam War, forced the Nixon Shock, which freed gold to float
from $34/ounce, sending the Dow fleeing from a 30 ounce valuation. Do
you see any parallels with today? Iraq and Afghanistan maybe? If we
return to the 1980 ratio, the Dow Jones has to either fall 85% to
1,540, or gold has to rocket 6.6 times to $7,300/ounce. With the
printing presses in Washington running so loudly that my teeth are
starting to chatter, I vote for the latter. The most likely outcome is
some combination of the two, where we see stagnant or falling stock
prices and rising gold. Do I hear $5,000/ounce anyone? My own $2,300
forecast, the old inflation adjusted all time high, is looking more
conservative by the day. Me, conservative? Perish the thought!
3) Hail to the Stock-Promoter-in-Chief! Given the spectacular
performance of the stock market since Obama’s inauguration, you might
be forgiven for thinking that this was the best record in history. But
you would be wrong by a big margin. A bounce back from the 1929 crash
delivered an unbelievable 96.5% jump for Franklin Delano Roosevelt in
the year leading up to March 4, 1933. He is followed by a postwar boom
induced 30.9% appreciation that Harry S. Truman ushered in to January,
1946, the first time the Dow index recovered the 200 level in 17 years.
Obama only comes in third with a relatively modest 29.5% pop since his
inauguration a year ago. Who brought in the worst return? Jimmy Carter
suffered a 19.6% fall during the chronic stagflation of the late
seventies. The Vietnam War did likewise to Richard Nixon, with a 17%
decline in 1969. Warning to Obama: after FDR’s fabulous first year
gains, the market struggled for eight more years, until an expected
WWII win sent it on a long term upward trajectory. If this president
thing doesn’t work out for Obama, I guess he can always pursue a career
as a Wall Street lawyer.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“By 2014, the GDP of emerging economies will surpass that of developed
economies….The most attractive place in the world to invest right now
is China” said David Rubenstein, CEO of the Carlyle Group.
This is not a solicitation to buy or sell securities
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