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From last week’s opening segment:
“Another way to look at it is that
the market’s fate appears to rest with the jawbone of the man about to
speak at Jackson Hole on Friday.”
From last week’s closing
‘Wrap Up’ segment:
“I think the theme now is that if
you are a trader and if you have profits it is a logical time to take some or
all of them.”
We know that the decelerating economic
backdrop (with inflation measures in check) is supportive of a Fed going
unconventionally dovish in unleashing QE style policy if it so chooses. We
also know that the political backdrop is not supportive, with Republicans
sounding off about a gold standard and a soon to be former Fed chief.
Ben Bernanke walked a middle ground on
Friday, giving the market – especially the precious metals segment of
it – enough of what it wanted to hear without actually having to
announce a policy move. The implication is that bullish price activity can
continue and if it doesn’t – especially if markets decline along side a more acutely decelerating economy, the Fed
stands ready, willing and able to attempt to inflate the system.
The Fed chief is stuck between a rock
(poor economy and thus, a poor jobs picture) and a hard place (Republicans
ready to lynch him if an announcement of unconventional and market-moving
policy is made). He chose to remain consistent as the Fed is on guard to do
what it has always defaulted to; print money if needed to attempt to devalue
the currency in the name of economic growth.
Election Cycle
We are only two months from the election
so it is time to start looking past it and that maybe what Bernanke is doing.
Though the doomsayer websites (and emailers) would
have us squatting in our homes with shotguns out the front windows at the
ready for attacks by everyone from dispossessed former McMansion
owners to government death squads, the market – and the world –
not only refused to end this summer, they have been grinding onward and are
well-intact.
Two months sounds like child’s
play after what we have been through since the Euro crisis first exploded
well over a year ago. Still, this newsletter continues to highlight the
rising risk profile, although Bernanke’s skillful walk of the fine line
and the market’s reaction on Friday force me to wonder if that was it;
if that was the correction prior to the 1460 target on the
S&P 500.
The US Presidential election year cycle
highlights three potentials. Once again we review the chart courtesy of Ned
Davis Research.
 
Friday’s post-Bernanke action
implies the market seems to think that Barrack Obama will hold the White
House. When the incumbent party is to win, there is an August rise into an accelerated
rise (top example). We have been operating under the middle example, which is
the average of all election years, to be on the safe side. In that scenario,
we prepare for the routine yet notable correction of the middle example as
well as the severe correction and potential bear market that could follow the
bottom example, when the incumbent party loses the Presidency.
To review where we have been, the blue
box highlights the time period when market risk was low – as pervasive
bearishness gripped most casino patrons market players – and a bullish
risk vs. reward stance was appropriate. A bottom was ground out into June and
per the three examples (green box), it has been all bull all the time during
a process of sucking the frightened players back in. We are evidently still
in that process, judging by the immediate market reaction after the nimble
Fed chief spoke on Friday.
However, the green box can carry a few
days into September. Since the US market will not open until the 4th, we are
basically there. This week could be the pivot to an interim correction per
the average cycle, a harsh correction or worse, or in the event of an
incumbent victory, a continuation and upward acceleration. This paints the
coming one or two weeks as very important, don’t you think?
Of course this is just election cycle
analysis, which by no means has to continue working well with the
current market situation. I am not a gambler, but don’t they have a
saying about riding a hot hand? The Presidential cycle has been taken seriously
by this letter writer since May and that helped keep the analysis on the
right side over a very difficult summer. What more can you ask from an
indicator? We’ll continue to respect it.
Back on Fed Watch
One continues to wonder if QE will even
be necessary any time soon. Sure, the current US financial system –
along with those of so many other nations – is technically insolvent
and is locked into a regimen of periodic and officially sponsored
inflationary policy in order to service a massive debt load and continue to
function normally; with “normally” defined as “kicking
the can down the road as long as possible, but doomed to an ugly demise at
the hands of a real and undeniable deflationary unwinding or an increasingly
intense inflationary panic.”
So never mind the talk about the Fed
standing ready to aid the economy as if it just needs another boost to
finally get the sucker humming again. The economy is broken because it has
been locked into a recurring nightmare of inflation onDemand
ever since Alan Greenspan began using such policy in an ever more intense
manner against the bear market of 2000-2002. He initiated a massive credit
bubble that is still being dealt with today, only with government debt having
replaced free market debt as the major driver.
The full text of Bernanke’s
Jackson Hole speech is available at MarketWatch:
http://goo.gl/WJokU, but here are some pertinent snippets that betray a
massive ego on the part of intellectual monetarists:
“One mechanism through which such
purchases are believed to affect the economy is the so-called portfolio
balance channel, which is based on the ideas of a number of well-known
monetary economists, including James Tobin [http://goo.gl/Am4Ib], Milton
Friedman [http://goo.gl/cbir], Franco
Modigliani [http://goo.gl/b9ZPi], Karl Brunner [http://goo.gl/OoThu],
and Allan Meltzer [http://goo.gl/EZBia]. The key premise underlying
this channel is that, for a variety of reasons, different classes of
financial assets are not perfect substitutes in investors’
portfolios.”
These names are trotted out as gods
instead of as economists. They are trotted out like the great social,
cultural and scientific thinkers who have actually changed the quality of
peoples’ lives as opposed to simply learned and taught about how to
manipulate paper money. Our dear Fed leader is reverential toward these men
and cut from the same cloth.
It is all about mechanisms, theories and
formulas to them. Gold – the barbarous anchor to stability and one-for-one
value retention – on the other hand, is much too simple. Why have
simple when you can have overly complex and fraught with risk?
“Large-scale asset purchases can
influence financial conditions and the broader economy through other channels
as well. For instance, they can signal that the central bank intends to
pursue a persistently more accommodative policy stance than previously
thought, thereby lowering investors’ expectations for the future path
of the federal funds rate and putting additional downward pressure on
long-term interest rates, particularly in real terms. Such signaling can also
increase household and business confidence by helping to diminish concerns
about “tail” risks such as deflation. During stressful periods,
asset purchases may also improve the functioning of financial markets,
thereby easing credit conditions in some sectors.”
What he does not mention is that the
need for such measures is the direct result of decades of manipulation of
credit conditions and thereby, paper money. He does not mention that “tail
risks such as deflation” only come to things that have first been
inflated by being printed not only to excess, but right off any sane macro
balance sheet and into the sublime. He does not mention that the use of ever
more powerful monetary tools toward new inflation will bring ever more
powerful corrective forces into play down the road, just as current problems
were brought into existence by previous inflationary monetary policy.
These people – and here we include
the likes of today’s “brilliant” thinkers like Paul Krugman, Larry Summers and the monetary rock star
himself, Nouriel Roubini
– actually believe their own bullshit, and that is dangerous because
they are setting our policy.
This segment could go on and on, but
I’ve got a newsletter to write. They make the rules and we play by
them. So let’s get to it.
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