Get Articles Daily from StraightStocks - Enter Email Address


  • National Debt Clock


Kiss the “New Bull Market” Theory Good-bye

Posted on Thursday, October 8th, 2009 | In Market Commentary
Contributed by: Graham Summers (http://gainspainscapital.com) -

I’ve also been tracking the S&P 500 in relation to its 88-weekly moving average: THE definitive metric for what establishes a bull vs. bear market. As I said in the last two issues, if the S&P 500 breaks ABOVE the 88-weekly moving average and stays there, then YES, we’re in a new bull market. However, if it’s turned away and falls below the 88-weekly moving average… THEN LOOK OUT BELOW.

As you can see, the S&P 500 was rejected at the 88-weekly moving average. If you’re having trouble seeing this, the below chart shows the recent action more clearly.

It is now literally “do or die” time for the stock market. Either stocks consolidate here and then push above the 88-weekly moving average OR they “kiss” the line one more time and then roll over and collapse.

As I’ve stated time and again, I fully expect the collapse to occur this fall. As the above charts show, it will be sooner rather than later. However, the bearish rising wedge patterns starting in both March 2009 and July 2009 both leave room for a little more potential upside. This is why you should keep all of your current positions small (I’ve recommended establishing only 10% of your full-intended short position, e.g. $100 out of an intended $1,000 position).

This is also why it’s not yet time to go “all in” shorting this market. Time and again, the market has been manipulated higher on weaker and weaker volume courtesy of the Fed’s loose monetary policy. It’s never a good idea to bet heavily against the Fed. And our current Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke, is a bubble-blower extraordinaire (seriously, he’s managed to create yet another mini-bubble in stocks during the worst financial crisis in 80+ years). So you don’t want to go stepping out in front of this bubble-making machine with much capital.

However, blowing bubbles is not an economic policy. It is a road to ruin. And we are now headed there at an accelerated pace.

To date, the US government (I include the Federal Reserve) has spent some $11 trillion+ trying to re-inflate the US economy and stock market, They have failed miserably. Consider:

  1. 27 states in the US now have unemployment rates above 8.5%
  2. 60% of Americans don’t have enough money saved to retire
  3. 2,690 employers performed mass layoffs (firing of 50 or more employees at once) in August (up from 533 in July)
  4. REAL incomes continue to collapse: at an annualized rate of 5% for the three weeks of August 28-September 23
  5. REAL weekly unemployment claims have topped 500,000 since January
  6. US bank loans have been falling at an annual pace of almost 14% since the early summer
  7. Shipments in capital goods fell 1.9% in August, similarly, rail shipments which slowed their rate of decline the last few months, have begun to accelerate downward again
  8. Industrial production has dropped 11%
  9. Fannie Mae’s August data shows a surge in delinquencies from $4.2 billion to $70 billion.

And those are merely the data points I can quickly recall from recent releases. Elsewhere in the world (remember the Stimulus efforts were global) things aren’t any better. The Telegraph recently noted that, “China’s exports were down 23pc in August; Japan’s were down 36pc; industrial production has dropped by 23pc in Japan, 18pc in Italy, 17pc in Germany, 13pc in France and Russia…”

When you consider just how little “bang for your buck” we got out of the unbelievable amount of Stimulus spent… you have to wonder what the heck the point of it was. Remember, the bailouts were sold to us as a massive effort to help Joe America keep his job, his house, and his ability to spend.

How’s that working out?

However, while things are still in “sit tight” mode for stocks, something wholly different is going on in the gold market.

The Flight From Paper

As I noted in an essay several weeks ago:

gold has formed a long-term inverse head and shoulders formation (two smaller collapses book-ending a major collapse). Typically a head and shoulders predicts a massive collapse. However, when the head and shoulders is inverse, as is the case for gold today, this typically predicts a MAJOR leg up.

Indeed, any move above the “neckline” of 1,000 would forecast a MAJOR move up to $1,300 or so…

Well, gold has broken the “neckline”:

This indicates that the next leg up in the gold bull market has begun. The reason here is simple: investors have begun to realize that every central bank on the planet is hell bent on devaluing their currencies.

Everyone and their mother believes the Fed’s actions are hurting the US dollar. But few people have taken noticed that the Europeans don’t want a strong euro, just as the Japanese don’t want a strong yen, just as the Swiss don’t want a strong franc.

Why?

None of these guys want their currencies to appreciate too far against the dollar because most if not ALL of them export to the US. Having a strong currency against a weak dollar means increased production costs against a sales lower price. This means LOWER profitability.

To combat this, countries are either aggressively printing money to stimulate their economies (China, Europe, the UK) or openly manipulating their currencies (Switzerland) in an effort to devalue their money against the dollar. Case in point, this latest breakout in gold happened WITHOUT the dollar falling to a new low:

As you can see, gold broke out dramatically this week. But the dollar failed to fall to a new low. This tells us that investors are fleeing paper money in general, NOT just the dollar. This means that gold mania is now going global as investors flee paper money and pile into the one currency that CANNOT be devalued:

GOLD.

Good Investing!

Graham Summers

****

To that end, I’ve put together a FREE Special Report detailing an unusual means of playing the gold explosion. While most investors blindly pile into the gold ETF or buy gold bullion, this backdoor play allows you to buy the precious metal at an incredible $188 an ounce. If gold breaks above $1,200, the opportunity for triple digits gains is huge.

Swing by www.gainspainscapital.com/gold.html to pick up your FREE copy!!

Last 5 posts by Graham Summers

Tags for this Post:
Market Commentary




About Graham Summers (http://gainspainscapital.com)
Graham is Senior Market Strategist at OmniSans Research. He, along with Brian, is co-editor of Gain, Pains, and Capital, OmniSans Research’s FREE daily e-letter covering the equity, commodity, currency, and real estate markets.

Graham also writes Private Wealth Advisory, a weekly investment advisory focusing on the most lucrative investment opportunities the financial markets have to offer. Graham understands the big picture from both a macro-economic and capital in/outflow perspective. He translates his understanding into finding trends and undervalued investment opportunities months before the markets catch on: the Private Wealth Advisory portfolio has outperformed the S&P 500 three of the last five years, including a 7% return in 2008 vs. a 37% loss for the S&P 500.

Previously, Graham worked as a Senior Financial Analyst covering global markets for several investment firms in the Mid-Atlantic region. He’s lived and worked in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and the United States.

Graham travels extensively in search of investment opportunities. He received his formal education from Oberlin College.

Leave a Reply

Name

Email (kept private)

Website









No recommendations, either expressed or implied, are being made to buy, sell, hold or short any of the mentioned stocks. No legal, tax or accounting advice is expressed or implied. Always contact your attorney, CPA, or tax advisor before acting on any legal or tax issues. StraightStocks.com is not responsible for the content, products, or services of any of the advertisers on this site. StraightStocks.com receives compensation from advertisers on this blog. Services and products referred to herein are trademarks, registered trademarks, servicemarks, and/or registered servicemarks of their respective trademark or servicemark owners.