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Credit
forces always trump great speculative visions and the world is fast running
out of speculative credit.
"Measured
by the increase in asset values over the past five years, the global housing
boom is the biggest financial bubble in history. The bigger the boom, the
bigger the bust." The Economist, Week of June 23
" Even if
risks are being appropriately priced given the current outlook, financial
market participants have taken on relatively illiquid assets to enhance
yield, possibly giving rise to difficulties in adjusting balance
sheets." Bank of England, Week of June 23
The last
sentences in the above statements from distinguished sources should be
compelling but, after a brief break, speculative convictions in commodities
continue.
No matter whether
the speculation has been in tangible assets, as in 1980 or 1988 or, for that
matter, in 1920, one key to the contraction has been the spike and reversal
in commodity prices. Much the same holds when the mania has been in financial
assets, as in the fateful blowouts of 2000, 1929, and 1873 - to mention only
3 of the 6 great financial bubbles.
We have been
describing this boom as the one that typically arises out of the collapse of
a tech mania. With strong commodities, we have also been describing this as
an "old fashioned" business cycle. More lately, we have been noting
that the crowd has been again showing considerable compulsion to be long the
big visions.
However, our
mission has been, as best as is possible, to anticipate major trend
reversals. Although this phase of speculation has encompassed both financial
and tangible assets, the alerts to the reversal will be the old standards of
credit spreads widening ( since March),
commodities topping ( ditto),
and the yield curve reversing to steepening (not
yet, but soon).
Too much of the
financial world remains convinced that the Chinese expansion is unassailable
and the Fed's compulsion to depreciate the dollar is not to be denied. However,
Mr. Market and Mother Nature are about to reverse most, if not all, of the
games.
Fortunately,
this will likely be done in the typical manner that, beyond the stalling out
of commodities, will include a profound change in the credit markets.
There has been a
wall of worry about massive shortages of base metals, metallurgical coal, and
crude oil.
One recent
example sums it up: "World Reserves of Cheap Oil Have Probably
Peaked".
This prompts a
line for the way Mr. Market and Ms. Nature will deny the mania in
commodities: "World Reserves of Cheap Credit Have Probably
Peaked".
The end of great
manias involves a mighty struggle of speculative passions. These include the
compulsion of the "big story", those who have been prematurely
shorting it and, above all, those who have been providing the credit. The
latter always includes the "easy money" compulsion of borrowing
short and lending long, which drives the yield curve towards inversion.
Since the advent
of the modern senior central bank with the Bank of England in 1694, the
ability of market forces to expand and then contract credit have eventually
and always overwhelmed the attempts of policymakers to continuously expand
credit. All that is needed is to have the mania encompass all of the
available credit and then the mystery of the end of a bubble develops.
It is essential
to fully grasp that it has not been "liquidity" that has been
driving prices up - quite the opposite - as soaring prices permit and foster
the expansion of credit. This is what someone with perspective at the Bank of
England is concerned about in the quotation above.
In looking at U.S.
corporate spreads, there has been a significant reversal to widening in
March. Using the "high-yield", over treasuries, going through 350
bps would extend the widening trend (330 bps this week; the "low"
was 183 bps). This would be one typical warning on the demise of this phase
of a great asset inflation.
Another step
would be the reversal in the U.S.
treasury curve from flattening to steepening. In
reviewing the data since 1858, it is not essential that the curve fully
invert to signal a contraction. All it needs is to reverse to steepening within the context of a market mania.
The U.S. curve is rather flat and the U.K. curve,
which inverted from early March to early June, has set a modest steepening trend.
The CRB, in its
original form, has virtually (in timing and percent gain) replicated the bull
market that blew out in 1980. It will be interesting to see if the increased
weighting in crude oil maintains the replication.
However, this is
academic and it is important to recognize the signposts of speculation and
these are reasonably typical - whether the action is on stocks, bonds,
commodities, or real estate. The details of weighting of
one commodity index is not all that material.
Moreover, the
characteristics of speculation are fungible and can be seen in whatever the
asset play is and in whatever century it occurs.
The warnings
from change in the credit markets are typical and are mounting, in which case
all that is needed is to have prices in the speculative games weaken as
credit spreads extend their widening trend and the U.S. treasury curve
reverses to steepening. At that stage, Mr. Margin
joins forces with Mr. Market and Ms. Nature.
The conclusions
in the above quotation from The Economist are appropriate, but it's
worth adding that, as seen in 1Q 2000, as long as the uptrend is intact the
street will believe the most preposterous stories.
It is possible
that this could be more widely understood by October.
By :
Bob Hoye
Institutional
Advisors
The opinions in this report are solely those of the author. The
information herein was obtained from various sources; however we do not
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Copyright © 2003-2008 Bob Hoye
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