Tagesarchiv für den 10.08.2009

Querschuss

“Japans zarte grüne Triebe”

Das japanische Cabinet Office meldete heute Morgen die Daten zu den Auftragseingängen der 280 großen Hersteller des japanischen Maschinen-und Anlagenbaus für Juni. Die Maschinenaufträge, exklusiv den volatilen Bereichen (blau im Chart), steigen kräftig im Vergleich zum Vormonat, auf ein Volumen von 732,844 Mrd. Yen (7,543 Mrd. Dollar) an. Dies entspricht einem Anstieg von +9,7% zum Vormonat! Im Vergleich zum Vorjahresmonat handelt es sich aber immer noch um einen Einbruch von -29,84% und dieses Auftragsvolumen im Juni markiert immer noch den dritttiefsten Stand (nach Mai und April 2009) seit Beginn der Datenerhebung im Jahre 1987.

> Die gesamten Maschinenaufträge (rot) im Volumen von 1,5416 Billionen Yen, steigen im Juni um +2,3% zum Vormonat und brechen noch um gewaltige -41,18% zum Vorjahresmonat ein! Der Langfristchart zeigt ganz deutlich von welchen niedrigen Niveaus die Erholung startet! Quelle saisonbereinigte Daten: Esri.cao.go.jp <

Die Maschinenaufträge sind ein Indikator für die Investitionen der Unternehmen in den nächsten 3-6 Monaten. Offiziell wird der erste Anstieg seit 4 Monaten bei den Auftragseingängen für japanische Maschinen als ein Anzeichen dafür gewertet, dass die schlimmste Rezession der Nachkriegszeit sich dem Ende neigt.

> Auch die japanischen Exporte zeigten im Juni eine Erholung an, im Vergleich zum Vorjahresmonat ging es "nur" um -35,7%, auf ein Volumen von 4,599 Mrd. Yen abwärts, nach -40,9% im Mai. Allerdings für Juli zeigen die ersten vorläufigen Daten auf Basis der ersten 20 Tage schon wieder einen Einbruch auf -40,2% an. <

Jenseits des offiziell verblasenen Optimismus, sieht es an Hand der Langfristcharts noch sehr wackelig aus und die Daten bewegen sich immer noch auf tiefen Niveaus!

Querschuesse-Forum

Kontakt: info.querschuss@yahoo.de

"By keeping rates artificially low and pumping money into the system, equities, markets and economies will face unintended consequences, including another financial crisis in the next five to 10 years. This crisis has not been fully cleansed out of the system." in Financial Standard

Marc Faber is an international investor known for his uncanny predictions of the stock market and futures markets around the world. Dr. Doom also trades currencies and commodity futures like Gold and Oil.
“Sugar is certainly going to go much, much higher during the course of the bull market. Sugar is still 70 percent below its all-time high and not many things in life are 70 percent below what they were in 1974. Sugar has a wonderful future.” Jim Rogers, Bloomberg, August

In my last entry I tried to set out the necessary shifts over the next few years as the world, and especially China and the US, works out its imbalances.  These shifts will take place, I am pretty sure, but they can do so under a “good” scenario and a “bad” scenario.

So what does all this have to do with the SED?  It means that the best hope for the two countries, I think, is a well coordinated set of policies acknowledging that the US savings rate must rise, and with it the Chinese must decline, but also recognizing that if this happens too quickly, or is accompanied by a collapse in trade, it will be bad for the US and terrible for China.  These coordinated policies must also acknowledge – and this becomes much more difficult – that the current Chinese stimulus may be making the adjustment more difficult, and much of it will have to reversed at the same time as the “appropriate” measures aimed at spurring consumption may cause a short-term rise in unemployment.

Finally, the while the US commits to keep fiscal spending high, to turn a blind eye to trade disputes, and to run large trade deficits for several years more, China must commit to the financial sector and currency liberalization that will effectively reduce subsidies to producers and constraints on consumption.  The SED might also discuss the ability of workers to demand and enforce wage increases, since there is a wide consensus in China and abroad that among the main reasons for low household consumption in China is that wages are rising too slowly relative to GDP, and household savings are “taxed’ too heavily via interest rate policies.  Of course discussing workers right in a bilateral context is politically difficult, even without the irony of this particular discussion, so it will probably not happen.

When I discuss these issues, I am often confronted by the “aha!” crowd who point out that my analysis must be wrong because if China does what I think they should do that would cause a rise in unemployment.  How can a policy be the right one if its implementation leads to a bad outcome?

That’s easy.  It can be the right policy if the alternative leads to a worse outcome.  That’s the problem.  There is no silver bullet here that can kill all the demons and leave us living happily ever after.  As I see it, the imbalances of the past decade were real and must be addressed, and we have broadly speaking three possible ranges of outcomes:

1. The US returns to its consumption orgy, the US trade deficit surges, and we’re back to the wonderful days of 2005. China can continue pumping out production and funding US consumption.  The problem of course is that this cannot be a permanent solution.  It just postpones the resolution of the global imbalances while fueling another asset bubble and saddling the US with even more debt and China with even more excess capacity.

2. China begins a long – five or six years at least – process of forcing the necessary structural changes that will permit a shift from a production-led economy to a consumption-led economy.  The changes necessary involve liberalizing interest rates and the banking system, allowing workers higher wages, and a number of other measures to boost SMEs, the service sector, and household consumption.  In the short term, however, nearly all of these measures will involve closing down unprofitable production facilities.  This must be done in conjunction with the US, so that the US adjustment is slowed down to a pace which China can absorb.  The US would do this by keeping fiscal expansion high enough to counteract the contraction in US household consumption.

3. Everyone does what they want to do anyway with no attempt at serious coordination.  US savings rise.  Chinese production rises too.  These two forces are globally incompatible and eventually lead to a sharp contraction in global GDP growth.  The effects on China might include, but are not limited to, an explosion in Chinese inventory, a sharp and nasty contraction in international trade, or a brutal rise in Chinese NPLs and an unsustainable government debt burden.

High savings in China is not an accident.  Chinese trade and industrial policies that were aimed at generating employment growth by directly or indirectly subsidizing the cost of production, including currency and interest rate policies, nearly all effectively created forms of income and consumption taxes that constrain consumption even as they boost production (and a rising savings rates just means that production is growing faster than consumption), and to remove the latter you need to remove the former too.

It’s not so easy to increase consumption

So they have a dilemma: Remove the producer subsidies so as to allow consumption to grow, but cause subsidized producers to go out of business.  Or keep them in place, and perpetuate the production/consumption imbalance.

One way or the other Chinese policymakers are destined to be “successful” in raising the consumption share of GDP, because as the US reverses its earlier relationship between consumption growth and production growth, the rest of the world, which ran the opposite position, must also ultimately reverse.

Now for the next few years China’s savings rate will almost certainly decline and its consumption rate rise – it has no other choice except to inflate a major, debt-fueled overinvestment boom – but will that happen because of high growth in consumption or low production growth?  That is where policy matters very much, and the longer they wait to address the imbalance, the worse the outcome gets, I think.

Clearly Beijing wants to raise consumption quickly.  Not too long ago a group government economists were reported to have reported on their website (sorry, but I lost the link):  “The new policy measures and initiatives will be the latest effort to shift growth from focusing on capital investment to a more sustainable model that gives domestic consumption a more important role in boosting economic growth.”

But they’ve been wanting to do this for a several years – as they explicitly acknowledge by calling this the “latest” effort but the fact that it is harder to this now then it might have been three or four years ago doesn’t inspire me with much confidence.  It seems to me that most policies that will boost consumption in a stable and efficient way fall into one of two camps.  Measures like building the medical and social safety net, gradually getting banks to direct lending to service industries,  loosening the one child policy, and so on can be very successful, but will take years before they have much impact on real consumption.

In that camp I might add measures to force banks to increase consumer lending, because I think the last time they tried that (with car loans), nearly half the loans went NPL, suggesting that at first consumer lending will simply consist of free consumption financed indirectly by the government, when it bails out the NPLs.  This is a form of “consumption” I guess, but it is not really what the doctor had ordered.

Bad or worse

On the other hand reversing the policies that might have repressed consumption in the past will probably work more effectively within a shorter time horizon.  These would include liberalizing interest rates and allowing them to rise (which reverses the implicit transfer from households to producers), allowing workers to organize to demand higher wages, raising the value of the RMB, and so on.  Unfortunately nearly all of these measures would hurt manufacturers, especially in the export sector, and would cause an initial rise in unemployment.  I am not sure it is possible to manage the transition without a sharp, short-term rise in unemployment caused by the downsizing of the export sector as its implicit subsidies are removed, and it isn’t clear to me that any country that has managed a similar transition has been able to avoid this. My guess is China will have to do this, but will wait until they have no choice – building up in the mean time even more excess capacity and bad debt. And bad debt, as I have argued before, must be resolved at some point in the future, and unfortunately usually in a way that constrains consumption growth.

One of the things that worries me is that the trajectory of rising US savings and increased investment in Chinese production is likely to squeeze the tradable goods sector in most countries around the world as China increase its market share.  This will lead to accusations that China is behaving in a predatory way, and will almost certainly lead to increased trade tensions as policymakers around the world try to protect their tradable goods sectors form “unfair” Chinese competition.

But I don’t believe that China should be considered predatory. China desperately wants to raise its consumption rate, because it is highly likely that for the next few years Chinese GDP growth will be limited to something below Chinese consumption growth.  Beijing would love to find the magic policy that transforms Chinese consumption overnight and turns China into a continental economy driven by internal demand.  It would love to see the trade surplus reduced not by a collapse in exports but rather by a shifting of exports to domestic consumption and a rise in imports (this last maybe).

The problem is that there is no such magic policy.  I cannot find any historical precedent of a country that was able to make the transition quickly and painlessly, and because of its own domestic problems – especially the employment effect of the contraction in the export sector – China is facing a difficult set of policy choices.  The fact that the fiscal stimulus may be exacerbating China’s reliance on the export sector was not the plan.  The fiscal stimulus is aimed at arresting a sharp and probably politically unacceptable rise in unemployment, and the fact that so much spending has gone into investment, rather than consumption, reflects rigidities in the economic and financial structure.  China would love to see explosive growth in domestic consumption, but there is no way they can easily engineer such growth.

So we are stuck with policymakers, in China and elsewhere, making the best of a bad situation.  They can be criticized for not beginning the adjustment process when conditions were much easier, but that is a criticism that can be spread around pretty thickly to policymakers in quite a few countries.  Anyway it is too late.

In these circumstances policy coordination matters a lot, and I see too little of it to have much optimism.  Beijing, Washington and Brussels must recognize that China and the world is still in a more vulnerable position than anyone seems to realize, and that rising US savings and rising Chinese investment create conditions for two seemingly irresistible forces to go head to head, and without coordination the consequences could be much worse than we expect.

Bull Bear Trader

Hedge Funds Up As Equities Continue To Work

On average, hedge funds were up 2.44% July and 11.89% for the first seven months of the year according to data from HedgeFund.net (see hedgeweek article). This was the best seven month performance data since 1999, driven in part by the rising equity markets and near record performance in directional fixed income. Convertible arbitrage returned 6% in July and is the best strategy year to date, while managed futures have lagged equity-based strategies. Nonetheless, even with the current out-performance, 54% of funds are still below January 2008 levels.
Guy M. Lerner

The Dollar Index: Key To Market Dynamics

Over the next couple of weeks, I will attempt to put together an asset class road map that should help navigate the weeks and months ahead. In a nutshell, I would have to state that I like commodities over long term Treasury yields and equities, and the key driver will be the falling US Dollar Index.

Ever since I wrote the article "Very Dangerous Time For Dollar Index" on June 19, 2009, I have gotten several questions from readers about how I could be bearish on equities while maintaining bearishness on the Dollar. It seems to be a given that Dollar devaluation only leads to higher stock prices. While currency devaluation does lead to asset inflation, this can be too much of a good thing as inflationary pressures (real or perceived) will eventually begin to become a headwind for higher equity prices.

And this is what we saw in late June and early July, 2009. Inflationary pressures as measured by trends in commodities, gold, and yields on the 10 year Treasury bond remained strong and the market almost rolled over. Once these trends lost momentum, stocks reversed strongly to the upside over the past month. This pattern was pretty much repeated over and over again in the prior bull market for equities.

But I am ahead of myself. So let's first look at weekly chart of the Dollar Index (black line) versus S&P500 (blue line). See figure 1. For much of the late 1990's, stocks and the Dollar Index traveled together. These where the days when a strong Dollar and a strong economy and a strong stock market went hand and hand. This was prior to point 1 on the chart. At point 1, the historic multi-decade bull run for equities was over, and several years later at point 2 the US Dollar Index topped out as well. Both asset classes fell together and then equities bottomed at point 3. The Dollar Index continued lower for another 2 years finding a bottom at point 4. From the bottom in equities at point 3 in October, 2002 to the bottom in the Dollar at point 3 in December, 2004, the S&P500 gained 50%!!

Figure 1. Dollar v. S&P500/ weekly

After a wide trading range with an upward bias (for over a year), US equities sprinted higher starting in November, 2005. This is at point 5, and it also marked the highs for the US Dollar, which went on a downward path for over 2 years. In October, 2007 at point 6, the S&P500 topped out, and within 6 months the US Dollar Index found a bottom at point 7. At point 8, the Dollar Index peaked, and lo and behold, the equity markets found their footing putting in the March, 2009 bottom.

Since 2000, the movements in the US equity markets can be explained (for the most part) by the movements in the US Dollar. A weaker Dollar has been kind to equities even if the fundamental foundation for such a relationship is wrong on two accounts. One, no country has ever devalued its way to prosperity. Two, the foundation for such asset growth -too much money chasing too few assets - is not sound. It leads to economic and financial instability once these excesses are unwound. This is not organic growth, and it provides a false sense of prosperity. But enough of the moral ground.

So let's get back to the Dollar Index. In the June 19 article, I presented a very simple trading system, which warned that the Dollar had a high likelihood of unraveling. See figure 2 a weekly chart of the US Dollar Index (symbol: $DXY). The premise of the strategy was this: 1) short the Dollar Index on a weekly close below 3 pivot low points; and 2) cover the position on a weekly close greater than the 40 week moving average. There were no other filters involved in this strategy. The strategy triggered a signal to short the Dollar 2 weeks ago.

Figure 2. Dollar Index/ weekly

Such a strategy produced 19 trades since 1975. There were 42% winners; no single trade lost more than 5%; 5 of the trades had gains greater than 14%. These parameters - lots of small losers with several big winners - are consistent with a trend following strategy.

To look at each trade, I introduced a concept called Maximum Favorable Excursion or MFE. MFE measures in percentage terms how far a trade can go in your favor before it is closed out for a loss or a win. For example, look at the MFE graph from our "close below 3 pivot points strategy" in the Dollar Index. Remember we are shorting the Dollar Index here. See figure 3. The green caret within the blue box represents one trade. This trade ran up about 9% (x-axis) and was closed out for a 2% gain (y-axis). We know this trade was a winner because it is a green caret.

Figure 3. MFE
Looking at the graph, we see that 5 of the 14 short trades ran up greater than 14% before being closed out; these are the carets to the right of the blue vertical line. So think about that for a second. You short the Dollar Index based upon this pattern, and you have a 26% chance (5/19) of seeing prices fall significantly.

Taking it one step further, we see that 13 out of the 19 trades had an MFE greater than 5%; this is to the right of the red line. In other words, if there is a close below the 3 pivots, then there is an 68% chance (13/19) that the Dollar Index should fall at least 5%.

So when I state that the Dollar Index (symbol: $DXY) has a very high likelihood of embarking on a major down swing in the coming weeks I am basing this comment on these observations. But here is the real kicker in all this: 1) the average of all trades from this strategy lasts 37 weeks; 2) a losing trade will last on average 17 weeks; 3) a winning trade will last on average 65 weeks. We are only two weeks from the current sell signal.

So think about this for a minute: if the Dollar continues in a down trend, there is a high likelihood of large losses and these losses should occur over the next year. This will likely keep a bid under equities for longer than most of us are expecting. Commodities will also be strong and should outperform equities. Let's add a third symbol to figure 1, and this is the CRB Futures Index (gold line). What we see and what we know is that in a falling Dollar environment, commodities will outperform. See figure 4. Equities will be hampered by real or perceived inflationary pressures as trends in commodities and long term Treasury yields rise. Equities will move higher in a falling Dollar environment, but their ascent should be a lot choppier. Furthermore, without real organic growth -marked by job creation and wage inflation and consumer spending outside of government subsidies- any economic recovery will always be questioned for its sustainability.

Figure 4. Commodity v. S&P500 v. Dollar Index

For now, the falling Dollar is the key asset class that is driving gains in commodities and equities. A lower Dollar will also benefit longer term Treasury yields. Over the next couple of weeks, I will update my thoughts on commodities and gold and long term Treasury yields. And I need to provide you with the information as to why equities will under perform commodities.
One notable from Friday was the extremely low reading in the CBOE Equity Put/Call Ratio. It closed at 0.49 – more than 31% below its 200-day moving average. In June I looked in detail at other times the Equity Put/Call closed more than 25% below its 200ma. It suggested a bearish edge for the following day has existed since the end of 2007. Concerned that the results were just a byproduct of a bear market I also showed all of the trades since the March low. Below I’ve updated that list with some additional observations.

(click to enlarge)


The far right hand column shows the intraday runup/drawdown. I’ve circled in green the -$393.90 result from July 31st. Since the trades are based on $100,000 each, $393.90 represents a move down of about 0.4%. What you’ll notice when looking at the list is that the 0.4% drop that day was the smallest intraday drop of any of the 15 instances listed since March 10th. In red I have circled every instance where the intraday runup the next day was less than 0.4%. As you can see of the 15 instances, 7 of them had an intraday runup of less than 0.4%. This is all during a huge rally off the March lows. While it’s just one of the studies I looked at in last night’s Subscriber Letter, this one suggests risk/reward favors the downside for Monday.
Nach Angaben des Statistischen Bundesamtes lag der Umsatz im Einzelhandel in Deutschland im Juli 2009 um real 1,0% niedriger als im Juli 2008 (Abb. 04943). In den ersten sieben Monaten, von Januar bis Juli 2009, verringerte sich der Umsatz um real 2,0% gegenüber dem vergleichbaren Vorjahreszeitraum.
Humble Student of the Markets

Timing the inflation/deflation trade

For investors, the inflation vs. deflation call is probably the Call of the Decade.

Never in my investment career have I seen opinions so bifurcated. While there are many smart investors calling for rising inflation because of the wall of money coming from fiscal and monetary stimulus around the world. At the same time, there are equally convincing arguments indicating that there powerful deflationary force at work and the global economy is facing, at best, an L-shaped recovery.


Enter the trend following model
In addressing the inflation vs. deflation conundrum, trend following models are especially useful as they tend to pick up on macro-economic trends, which are persistent. Using trend following modeling techniques, I have built an inflation/deflation timer. Here is how it works. While the details of the model are proprietary, I can say that they use common trend following techniques (crossing moving averages, trailing stops, etc.) to identify and profit from long-dated persistent price trends.

Here is how it works. When the timer model signals:

Inflation: Buy the Continuous Commodity Index
Deflation: Buy the long bond (iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treas Bond, Ticker: TLT)
Neutral: Buy the S&P 500 SPDR (SPY)

The results of the simulation are shown below. Returns are total returns, which include interest and dividends. Signals are generated at the end of day and then executed at the close of the next day. The simulation assumes no frictional costs.

The chart and table below tell the story. The timing model’s returns beat all the other asset classes, with a downside risk profile that is similar to the long bond.





Timing model shines at the inflation/deflation tails
When I compare the returns of the timing model compared to a passive 60% stock/40% bond asset mix benchmark, the timing model performs roughly in line with the 60/40 benchmark during normal periods. The real value of the model stands out during crisis periods, when fears about inflation and deflation dominate investment psychology.



Such a model could prove to be invaluable in the days ahead as investor sentiment oscillates between the extremes of rising inflation (or hyperinflation) and deflation. Under these kinds of circumstances, active management could significantly add to returns.


Stay long the inflation trade
So what is the timing models saying now?

It is currently showing a bullish reading on inflation. I will update these readings regularly here. If you are interested, drop me a line and I will put you on the list.
Guy M. Lerner

More Sentiment Charts

Several readers have requested a look at prior sentiment charts particularly around the 2003 bottom. I have put the "Smart Money" and "Dumb Money" indicators on a single chart.

Figure 1. Sentiment Indicators/ 2006 to present


Figure 2. Sentiment Indicators/ 2002 to 2006
Just last week on the 5th, CF Industries (CF) upped their bid for Terra Industries (TRA) from its prior bid of 0.4129 to 0.4539 shares to 0.465 CF shares. The deal currently values TRA at nearly $39 share (.465 x $83 CF share) or 30% above its Friday closing price of $29.91. How could the TRA BOD turn down that sweet offer?Many reasons exist for turning down a premium offer such as shareholder