Q: How do you get your broker out of a tree?
A: Cut the rope.
—Common joke from October 1987
It was 31 years ago, on Oct. 19, that I watched a $300,000 stock portfolio
begin to vaporize, with a Monday loss of 35% morphing into a 93% amputation
by the end of the week, the remaining cash balance totaling slightly over
$16,000.
The $125,000 margin debt had to be cleared when the highly diversified
portfolio of gold and silver stocks ignored the $80/ounce advance in gold
prices that week and decided instead to behave as "stocks" rather
than "gold," proceeding to plunge in a wave of pure panic the likes
of which had not been experienced since fifty-eight years prior. I recall
staying at the office most of the evening talking to my devastated clients,
trying my utmost to calm them, to reassure them, to convince them that stocks
were far superior to real estate or bonds or money-in-the-bank, but with the
23% loss in the Dow Industrials, it was all in vain. They wanted out and they
wanted a check and they never wanted to hear any of it. It was the most
emotionally draining moment of my life, with a close second being 10 years
later, when the now-infamous Bre-X Fraud was revealed, resulting in a similar
crash in Canadian stocks the very next morning.
I bring up the topic of the Crash of '87 only because of the incredible
impact it had on the psyches of millions of investors around the world.
Forgotten is the fact that, a little over two years later, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average broke out to all-time highs as the baby boom generation
finally forgot about love beads and VW vans and fell wildly in love with
capitalism—and, of course, stocks.
What followed was the era of the disinflationary '90s and the
revolutionary arrival of the Internet, led by market darling America Online,
whose January 2000 merger with Time Warner marked the pricking of the biggest
market bubble in history. Then, eight years later, after a half-decade of
uproarious lending policies had driven the banks to bubble territory, another
Crash arrived—only this time greeted with a massive rescue effort by the
central banks and treasury departments of almost every nation on the planet.
Ten wondrous market years (and some $14 trillion of credit creation)
later, here we are in the autumn of 2018, with stocks ahead over tenfold from
the lofty peak of the Summer of '87, when the Dow hit 2,722. While the chart
below would suggest it was a relatively minor event, the Crash of '87 will be
indelibly etched into my personal memories in the same way as the Kennedy
assassination and the lunar landing—we all know where we were when it
happened.
There has been a great deal of discussion in the financial blogosphere
about the future course of the stock markets around the world, and while it
is pretty obvious that the technical picture is clouded at best, it is
important everyone remembers what constitutes the glue that is keeping the
market from shattering into a thousand molecules. It is faith.
Faith in the Fed that "has our backs"; faith that the economy is
"incredibly strong"; faith in our leaders who are friendly to the
stock markets; faith in the fact that long-term ownership of common stocks
has been a reliable strategy (see chart). It is faith in the certainty of
"favorable outcomes" that has so many people forging through life
anchored to the notion that the two main assets that "always
recover" are housing and stocks.
It was Ronald Reagan who decided to create an entity called "The
Working Group on Capital Markets" through Executive Order 12631 in March
1988, a mere six months after the '87 Crash. As omnipotent as that may have
appeared at the time, the group was nonetheless powerless to stop the Asian
Crisis of 1998, and the two crashes mentioned earlier. So when I see
stick-save recoveries like we saw last week, first in the U.S. and on Friday
in Beijing, the reality is political leaders realize stock markets are now
bellwethers for legacy control, and no leader, whether it is Trump, or Putin,
or Xi Jinping, wants to go down in history as the leader who ruled while his
country's stock market collapsed.
It is also a morale issue. It is a known fact that during WWII, the
Japanese and German stock exchanges were without a trace of volatility
because of government intervention. It is also true that the day before 9/11,
massive put option volumes were recorded in airline stocks and in the
S&P. The level of financial market sophistication in both government and
terrorist camps is now without argument, so to think that you or I are able
to use conventional means to time the market or accurately handicap the risk
(or lack thereof) in any asset or asset class is simply without foundation.
And that is precisely why the "Thirty-Somethings" are able to use
the current stock market environment as a quasi-ATM, by simply adhering to
the government-sponsored meme that "stocks are good" while
"gold is bad."
So when I am asked if one should "Buy the Dip" currently seen in
the vast majority of global merket averages, I say "Yes," only
because those that have adhered to the notion have prospered far more than
the fear-mongers that peddle mayhem.
The COT
This COT represented a return to normalcy as the totally insane
"pile-on" shorting by the algobots since July was totally rebuffed
by the big rally earlier in October. The volume on the $34 Thursday pop was
about 10 times normal volume, which completely explains the massive swing
that occurred between the Large Specs ("algos") and the Commercials
("bullion bank behemoths"), whereby the (Large Spec) software
ordered the position be covered only because it was moving against it. No
rhyme; no reason; no reality.
Now, and this is important, if the Commercials have been successful
in turning the Large Specs into "pile-on" buyers after being serial
sellers since June, chances are they are now serial "pile-on"
buyers until the positions once again revert to the extremes of late 2016,
where Commercials were massively short against the Large (algo) Specs'
massive longs. While I warned of a short squeeze a few weeks ago, we actually
got it Oct. 11, but the exciting part is that it might just be a "long
hissing fuse" type of squeeze that takes until February to unwind, all
in favor of those that are long.
As I have opined for most of 2018, I believe gold stands a realistic shot
at a close north of $1,400 before New Year's Day, but we want to see the
Commercials get out of the way and let the velocity of the short covering
frenzy accelerate, which they certainly did not allow in COT week ended
Tuesday, Oct. 16. Mind you, they were moving from an historically bullish
position, one not seen since the dark days of 2002, when gold resided under
$300. By moving back to their normalized net short position, they simply
covered all of the sub-$1,200 per ounce acquisitions and by doing so,
cemented the $1,167 bottom from Aug. 16.
On a final note, vanadium ticked up to $29.90 per lb. on Friday, making it
a 900% increase since 2016. In discussion with Western
Uranium & Vanadium Corp. (WUC:CSE; WSTRF:OTCQX) CEO George Glasier, I
learned that it is his intention to embark shortly on an aggressive drill
program at two of the five mines that are part of the Sunday Mine Complex,
with the purpose of increasing his vanadium resource to in excess of
50,000,000 lbs. from the current 35,000,000. At current prices, that would
value the vanadium just under US$1.5 billion. Adding the uranium value, you
get a resource worth $3.7 billion for a company capitalized at $62.6 million,
which means that WUC has a substantial amount of blue sky ahead of it given
the outlook for these two energy-related metals. I have a six-month target
price of US$3.40/share, which will be under review once drilling begins.
I eagerly await the arrival of trading this week, as we are headed into
both tax-loss season and the best two weeks of the year for buying stocks
beaten down by October's weakness. Despite the technical damage caused by the
global selloffs, the rich and powerful like markets that appease the masses,
and therein lies my bullish bias and my cynicism.
[NLINSERT]
Charts courtesy of Michael Ballanger.
Michael Ballanger Disclaimer:
This letter makes no guarantee or warranty on the accuracy or completeness of
the data provided. Nothing contained herein is intended or shall be deemed to
be investment advice, implied or otherwise. This letter represents my views
and replicates trades that I am making but nothing more than that. Always
consult your registered advisor to assist you with your investments. I accept
no liability for any loss arising from the use of the data contained on this
letter. Options and junior mining stocks contain a high level of risk that
may result in the loss of part or all invested capital and therefore are
suitable for experienced and professional investors and traders only. One
should be familiar with the risks involved in junior mining and options
trading and we recommend consulting a financial adviser if you feel you do
not understand the risks involved.