Global Market Comments
July 13, 2009
Featured Trades: (SPX), (NATURAL GAS), (IRAQ), (MO)
1)Every once in a while I stumble across a chart which is so clear, so
vivid, so unequivocal in its implications, that it lifts the investment
fog. This is that chart. Drawn up by stockchart.com’s Arthur Hill, it
shows that we are going to spend the rest of our summer probing for the
bottom right hand shoulder in a screamingly obvious “head and
shoulders” pattern. It gives a range of possible bottoms from 850 all
the way down to 666 by the end of August. The chart fits my own
fundamental scenario like a hand in Michael Jackson’s glove (see “The Worm Has Finally Turned”
. Soaring unemployment, terrible earnings reports, collapsing commodity
prices, a catatonic consumer, real estate of every flavor in free fall,
and tidal waves of government spending are not what bull markets are
made of. Did I mention the weather is terrible? Every feeble, half
hearted, low volume rally we saw this week pushed us closer to the
cliff. The charts of every stock and commodity market in the world
rolling over in lockstep, like a thirties Busby Berkeley musical, gives
you all the smoking gun confirmation you need. Hold on to those shorts
as if your life depended on it.
2) When I put out my sell recommendation on natural gas at $4.30,
the virtual trucks backed up to dump abuse on me from technical
analysts, day traders, and wannabe pundits who were convinced that CH4
was the buy of the century. I also received a ton of e-mails from
geologists, wildcaters, and gas men from all over the country with
stories of even more, vast, unreported, shale discoveries. One in
British Columbia I didn’t even know about. When it comes on betting my
own money, I much prefer listening to engineers who spend countless
hours driving pickups down dusty, potholed, washboard roads to get
their data, than the online diletants, any day of the week. Best to
watch the pain and suffering in the natural gas space from afar.
3) OK, I’m going to have to come down hard on this one. The
administration is proposing banning smoking in the military. About
time! The Pentagon spends $846 million a year on cigarettes, and
another $6 billion treating smoking related diseases. I became a
cigarette addict myself when the military gave me all the free “coffin
nails” I wanted in Southeast Asia 35 years ago, and it took me ten
years to kick the nasty habit. Some 59,000 men died in Vietnam, and I’m
sure many more than that died from the lung cancer that followed. Few
people know that the Bureau of Prisons banned smoking three years ago,
precisely to reduce spiraling health care costs. The riots that
followed went unreported. The military in fact banned obesity 30 years
ago. If a soldier is over his benchmark weight, his pay gets docked,
and if he doesn’t go on a diet, he gets kicked out on a medical. While
they’re at it, they should stop giving combat soldiers and pilots
amphetamines. Is it any coincidence that the meth disaster that is
unfolding in the Midwest coincided with the return from Iraq of
thousands of troops? Not good for Altria (MO).
4) I have not been called a war criminal for at least 35 years. But
that’s what was screamed at me when I muscled my way through a crowd of
chanting anti war protesters on my way to a briefing from General David
Petraeus, Commander of the US Central command. Every senior military
officer in the San Francisco Bay Area could be found in the packed,
steamy hall, including at least 20 generals and admirals. Petraeus, a
four star with a PhD in international affairs from Princeton’s Woodrow
Wilson School, ran through a thoroughly researched PowerPoint
presentation that laid out how he was going to get our 130,000 troops
out of Iraq by 2011. Only a caretaking force providing close air
support from remote bases will be left behind to back a large civilian
presence. A dramatic change in counterinsurgency strategies has brought
the daily number of attacks from 160 down to 10, and monthly suicide
bombings from 130 to 10. The goal is to “Iraqrotize” the country so it
can stand on its own feet, both politically and militarily. Iraq now
has a reliable military of 550,000 men, but last year’s collapse in oil
prices is creating budgetary problems. Afghanistan will be a much
harder nut to crack, requiring more troops, money, and time. Priority
one is to wipe out the poppy fields in the South from which the Taliban
derives its financing and local support. Rising wheat prices will help
this effort. Some 70% of the violence is in 10% of the country in the
mountains that border Pakistan. The good news is that Pakistan is
fighting its own war, not our war, for its own interests. Their nukes
are secure and safe. Petraeus is bringing to bear incredibly
sophisticated technology, including sensors mounted on the ground, in
towers, balloons, drones, aircraft, and satellites, many of which are
controlled remotely in the US and Europe. Bandwidth is his most
valuable weapon. I follow the war in Iraq closely, not only because of
the family I have in harm’s way, but also because of the $1 trillion in
immediate costs and $2 trillion in long term costs we have already run
up, on top of the 4,200 American and 100,000 plus Iraqi lives lost. I
hope Petraeus is able to achieve his ambitious goals.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
Seen on a Marine commanding officer’s door in Baghdad: “In my absence,
figure out what your orders should have been, and then go out and
execute them,” according to General David Petraeus.
This is not a solicitation to buy or sell securities