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Volume 5 - Issue 5 December 1, 2008 The Six Lessons from Last Week's Action
by David Rosenberg
This week we look at a short but excellent summary of the
state of the current economic crisis. I always enjoy reading David Rosenberg,
the North American economist of Merrill Lynch. He has a no-nonsense style that
is refreshing from most mainstream economists. The reality is that things
continue to deteriorate. Today's stock market action shows that we are not of
the bear market woods just yet. Rosenberg gives us a few reasons why.
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
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The Six Lessons from Last Week's Action By David Rosenberg, North American Economist, Merrill Lynch
1) Expect the worst recession in the post-WWII era
First, this is going to be the worst recession
in the post-World War II era, in our view. The ECRI leading indicator hit a record low for
the fifth week in a row down to - 29.2 as of the November 21st week versus -28.2
the week before. This index, which leads real GDP by two quarters with a 70%
historical correlation, is getting further and further away from the prior all-time
low of -19.8 that defined the worst recession of the post-WWII era and saw a
six-quarter consumer recession coincide with a 45% peak-to-trough decline in the stock
market. Perhaps the fact that this bear market is proving to be even more severe is
symptomatic of an economic downturn that will also prove to be deeper and
more prolonged. After the flurry of data released just before Thanksgiving, we are
now tracking close to a 4.5% QoQ annualized fall in real GDP in 4Q. This would be
the largest pullback since the 1982 recession, and we see a similar contraction in
the first quarter of 2009.
2) Capex is in a steep decline
Second, capex is in a very steep decline right
now. Durable goods orders dropped 6.2% in October, the third decline in a row.
Over that time frame, orders have plunged at a 39% annual rate, which is
unprecedented. The retrenchment has spread to the tech sector, where order books
were expanding at a 7% annualized rate over the three months to June. Currently,
that same three-month trend has swung to a negative 13% annualized rate.
3) Consumer spending down sharply;
savings rate is soaring
Third, consumer spending fell 1% in October,
which was a near-record decline. This, in fact, was the fourth straight monthly
decline, which is unprecedented. The savings rate is soaring; it leapt to 2.4%
from 1.0% in September, in a sign of heightened risk aversion and cash preservation,
and is a shift that we believe should be seen as secular, not merely cyclical.
This was a conclusion that came through loud and
clear in the Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index, principally
in the spending intention components of the survey. Auto buying plans
dropped for the third month in a row to a record low in October while home-buying
plans fell to their lowest level since the 1982 recession. Consumer plans to buy a
major appliance fell to a 14-year low as well down for three months in a row. During this four-month period of unprecedented
consumer retrenchment from July to October, spending on discretionary items
collapsed at an average annual rate of 18%. Even spending on groceries has declined 6%,
toiletries are off by 6% and utilities
are down 3%. So, even some of the classic staples are being curtailed.
The only areas that have posted increases in
spending over this unprecedented four-month decline in spending have been
pharmaceuticals (+7%), telecom services (+3%), medical care services (+5%) and
mass transit (+26%) all other forms of transportation, from rail to bus to air
fell at a 19% annual rate.
4) Obama planning a $700 billion
fiscal package
Fourth, we learned this week that
President-elect Obama's economics team is planning a fiscal package as big as $700 billion
over the next two years. We are going to wait for the details to see how this is
going to impact our base case macro forecast. Suffice it to say that the
cornerstone of the stimulus this time around will likely be infrastructure, not tax
rebates. The key for investors is where these outlays will be concentrated, which, in
turn, means identifying the areas of the capital stock that have been the most
underinvested in recent years. After sifting through the data, we believe that the
prime candidates will be hospitals, waste management services and passenger transit.
5) Housing market is not close to
bottoming out
Fifth, we learned that the housing market is
nowhere close to bottoming out. New home sales dropped 5.3% in November to a 433k
annualized rate the worst since the 1982 recession. Even though sales are now
down 69% from the July 2005 bubble peak of 1.39 million units, we believe
builders have not been aggressive enough in curbing production because the most
critical variable of all, the unsold inventory backlog, rose to 11.1 months' supply
from 10.9 in September.
Need to see inventory backlog drop to
8 months' supply
The reality is that even though single-family
starts have dropped to 26-year lows of 531,000, they are still running 23% above the
prevailing level of new home sales. The worst the inventory-sales ratio ever
got in the early 1990s real estate meltdown was 9.4 months' supply. We are
currently 18% above that level and almost 40% higher than the 8 months' supply we
would need to see before calling an end to the housing deflation phase.
Another 15-20% decline in home prices
likely from here
As we saw last week, the Case-Shiller index fell
1.85% MoM or at a 20% annual rate. All 20 cities were down both sequentially
and YoY. Home prices are now down a remarkable 22% from the 2007 peaks. With
the unsold inventory sitting at the third highest level of the past three
decades and mortgage approvals for new home purchases falling to their lowest level in
nine years, we believe the laws of supply and demand point to a further 15-20%
decline from here. So, of all the things that happened last week in
the market, retailing stocks up 17%, the bank stocks up 26%, tech up 9%, the one
development that probably has the greatest chance of being reversed is the
60% surge we saw in the homebuilding group.
6) Fed has switched December meeting
to a two-day affair
Sixth, we learned that the Fed is going to make
the December FOMC meeting a two-day affair instead of one (December 15-16).
The market is already sniffing out a 50 basis point rate cut. However, now that
the Fed has de facto embarked on the process of quantitative easing, perhaps
the need for a two day meeting is to iron out a more aggressive plan to revive the
credit markets and the economy. The only areas that have posted increases in
spending over this unprecedented four-month decline in spending have been
pharmaceuticals (+7%), telecom services (+3%), medical care services (+5%) and
mass transit (+26%) all other forms of transportation, from rail to bus to air
fell at a 19% annual rate.
As Chairman Bernanke suggested in several
speeches he gave back in 2002 and 2003, one of the deflation-fighting strategies
would likely involve Fed action to nurture lower rates at the longer end of the
yield curve. Perhaps this prospect is behind the rally in the 10-year note yield and
long bond to cycle lows. This would fit in very well with our ongoing strategy of
focusing on equity sectors that have income-generating characteristics like
utilities, health care and telecom services; these sectors also screen very well in a
negative nominal GDP growth environment.
John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an FINRA
registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a
Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered
with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave
Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments
cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings
with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return
Partners, LLP; Pro-Hedge Funds; and Plexus Asset Management.
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reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy.
Investment recommendations may change and
readers are urged to check with their
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investment decisions.
Opinions expressed in these reports may change
without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the
staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC and
InvestorsInsight Publishing, Inc.
("InvestorsInsight") may or may not have
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Tuesday's sell signals were great for the first 30 minutes, then it was "fill the gap's " and head to new highs for the week. Unfortunately, we got the big down open and market drop of -160 points right, but it refused to stay down and rallied for the +283 DJ-30 close. This was an error on my part by not looking at a 2 day chart study during, and after, a holiday, since the volume is 2/3 rds to one half of typical trading volume.
Our two day chart called for an up market for Wednesday.
The markets always tell us where they are going, before they do their move, in my opinion. Learning to read what charts and when is part of the learning process. Our accuracy to date is unmatched, bar none. And I work constantly to translate the market's language of technicals since the language is consistent, with the exceptions of the low volume holidays. I compensate by using do day chart technical language of the markets.
"This is the time for a holiday rally and our monthly patterns suggest we have some relief coming here over the next 30 days. Hard to believe well the markets will show us soon enough ! " Posted in Friday's November 20 email.
My bias for the markets is still up from last week's lows, until I see something calling for a bigger long term reversal.
Today, Friday November 28th is a ½ trading day. I am looking for a choppy market with lows being more opportunities to buy stocks with good technicals and obviously with good stops in place. This is our first daily up move from new lows, we should expect a dip move on the daily that looks like a low retest that fails to go lower. That would signal on a longer term we have a bounce of longer term than just 3-4 days. The Hourly DJ-30 has already put in a three wave hourly move up with Friday's breakout move noted in our live chat for day traders. 8200 would be my area of support I would like to see the DJ-30 hold for any big moves down now. Any bad news about the Black Friday shopping could start the wave 2 dip, before the next big wave up with the DJ-30 into the 9287 to 10,000 area.
For the QQQQ the support of last resort is 27.50 area. And for the SP-500 is 825.00 area.
Today trading range for the DJ-30 appears to be in the 8600 low area to 8800 high area. With selling pressure after 4 up days. The QQQQ range is about 29.00 to 29.50 area. The SP-500 range is about 897.13 and 859.00 Note: FRIDAY is a ½ trading day, closing at 1PM EST
Monday, December1, 2008.
Last Friday, the ½ trading day saw a light volume rally to the upper side of our market range. Last Friday, on a daily, and on a two day chart, combining the action of Wednesday and Friday, we got sell signals going into the close.
In keeping with the sell signals we went long some "Short ETF's", and short the DJ Emini Futures, over the weekend, in order to grab the likely gap down move for Monday.
Today, I am looking for the start of the market retest of the lows of November. I am expecting, and hoping, that they fail to produce new lows, that would signal it is a wave 2, and give us the signal for the third leg of three legs for a positive move into Christmas and new highs for this bottom bounce. A rally into December would be psychologically beneficial for the markets and traders. New market lows we can save, and savor, for 2009. DJ-30 supports come in at 8600 and 8410 today. QQQQ supports come in at 28.40 and 27.60 SP-500 supports come in at 858. And 830
Remember to have a plan and trade the plan. If you do not have any exit plan do not initiate a opening order.
GOVERNMENT REPORTS
Dec 1 10:00 AM Construction Spending Oct - -1.1% -0.9% -0.3% - Dec 1 10:00 AM ISM Index Nov - 38.0 38.0 38.9 - Dec 2 12:00 AM Auto Sales Nov - 3.8M NA 3.8M - Dec 2 12:00 AM Truck Sales Nov - 4.3M NA 4.1M - Dec 3 8:15 AM ADP Employment Nov - - -173K - - Dec 3 8:30 AM Productivity-Rev. Q3 - 1.0% 0.9% 1.1% - Dec 3 10:00 AM ISM Services Nov - 43.5 42.6 44.4 -
Dec 3 2:00 PM Fed's Beige Book - - - - - - Dec 4 8:30 AM Initial Claims 11/29 - 525K NA 529K - Dec 4 10:00 AM Factory Orders Oct - -3.7% -2.7% -2.5% -
GOLD Gold Target now is $800.00 on downside and $775.00 on down side.
US DOLLAR target 87.19 upside and 85.50 down side.
Natural Gas Natural Gas, XNG air kissed the 50 sma 420, look for dip now . It should hold up better in this cold weather that crude oil relatively speaking even in the crude dip today.
MOBO BREAKOUTS TO THE UPSIDE
THOR CHD
$2 > STOCKS with positive indications FNM up 146% from last Wednesday post. Selling today. GNBT GNLB EEE
BULL ENGULFING WMI
BULL KICKER GNLB
SPECIAL SITUATION STOCKS MVIS up 70% off lows , Our special Watch stock with new product development. Showing up technicals for Friday +3% and +8% Monday.
SNAP BACK UP
DTO
DOWNSIDE MOVERS 25 STOCKS BREAKING MOBO LOWER BAND BCE FXP EEV SIG HRL
A LIST OF TRIPLE LEVERAGED ETF's 300% times the underling's move
All double and triple long Index ETF's
FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN OUR AET CLASS:
Next class is in Dallas Texas
Date: Dec 6 -7 , Saturday and Sunday.
Hotel: Crown Plaza Hotel
7050 Stemmons fwy , Dallas . 75247
214 630-8500
I WILL BE TEACHING OUR EPPV NEW STUDY IN THIS CLASS.
EMINI WORKS SHOP IN FRANCE I am considering doing an Emini Boot Camp this summer.
Location would be in the Canne, France area.
I am looking at renting a Villa/Large Estate with 5-6 bedrooms for Traders, with or without spouses.
I each session would last for one week for the 5-6 students.
I would set up a trading room, wired for internet live trading.
We would bring in new students as others left.
Trading starts at 3:30 PM so we get plenty of time to do other things as well as study and prepare for the markets each day.
And we would also do some side trips around the local area.
We would keep the same Emini prices for classes, while you paid your travel expenses.
Let me know what you think.
EPPV TECHNICAL INDICATOR 4.0 for Trade Station is now available on our web site, wallstreetteachers.com (407) 719-2592
Live chats began again. They can be reviewed in the archives at http://www.chartsnchat.com/
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