by MrBill » Mon 17 Sep 2007, 03:43:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('firestarter', 'M')r. Bill,
When you sound like a bear then I begin to fear.
Glad you're back posting again.
PS: you didn't mention anything about $80 oil and where you think it's going from here.
It was already looking toppy around the $80 level last week after a near continuous run-up from $69 this past weeks. However, I had not seen any reversal. Now on the daily chart you can see a two day reversal in the making.
It may get some follow through IF a) the market is disappointed in a Fed cut of only 25 bps (or no cut at all), and/or b) no hurricane pops up on the radar screen that threatens US assets in the Gulf.
Plus it is hard to see why we are, say $80, here at the moment without any definititive supply disruptions? The market had been in backwardation, so this tends to favor the bulls who get paid to roll their longs. This is good for ETF and other long-only investors as they can buy and hold. However, the roll is not as negative (as in downwards) as it had been and some contracts are more flat than inverted.
So chalk it up to strong demand in general, but total demand last week was finally slightly negative for the first time in ages, despite high prices that consumers and businesses seemed immune to, so maybe we are seeing the top of the proverbial bell curve now?
I would like to think so? I think you can build the argument that so long as everything else was ticking along fine that demand destruction was not at the pump, but in other sectors of the economy like discretionary spending. But now that shaky markets on the back of the subprime mess have exposed cleavages in the market it is harder for the end consumer to remain oblivious to problems in the real economy. That and the $800-900 billion already piled onto credit cards to keep spending. This is where problems start to affect those let's say that are not directly impacted by housing woes.
And we are starting to see contagion into other economies as well. Anecdotal evidence of a real vacation property slowdown in Spain are starting to surface as well as this weekend's run on Northern Rock, a UK home and loan financial institution. That is separate from the German Landesbanks that had direct exposure to the US housing market through CDOs. Both southern England and a lot of Spain's coastal areas were in housing bubbles. Perhaps more Spain than London. But like in the USA, a lot of economic activity in Spain was linked to the building and real estate engines that were driving the wider economy.
I would say that any slowdown in the UK and its effect on holiday and retirement properties will affect all the Club Med countries and even places like Cyprus. That would be a good thing as construction here has been too fast and too indiscriminate, and besides we do not have the water to support that type of over-development. But yes, it will have a knock-on effect on these economies as well.
Meanwhile, the squeals of Mr. Sarkozy about the strength of the euro are not just theatrics either. France has failed to restructure its economy since joining the eurozone, along with Italy, and now they are both suffering from a strong euro that is curbing low value-added exports and encouraging cheaper imports from China. Growth in Chinese exports to Europe are outpacing exports to the USA for the second year and can only get worse if the US economy slows down and the US dollar slides against the euro.
As a matter of fact this is exactly what China would like to see happen. Increased exports to Europe help to keep China's export engine running smoothly and support full employment, while China can allow the yuan to strengthen against the US dollar so long as they remain export competitive against the euro. A strong euro also gives China an alternative to the US dollar zone to park its external savings as well. Not good for plugging the US' budget deficits, but likely to help the US close some of its trade gap. Never the less a weak US dollar will exacerbate the US' energy import bill.
Is this the famed decoupling of Asia and Europe from the US argument? Well, sort of. I do not think you can remove final US demand completely and say the rest of the world will not notice. And they will be hit with higher interest rates, wider credit spreads and tighter lending conditions going forward with a time lag as well. But perhaps enough of a decoupling that we avoid a nasty collapse in world trade and capital flows.
Sort of a Japan moment for the USA where some strong, export orientated companies perform well despite some real pain and restructuring in the domestic economy. A so-called two tier economy. And that has been ongoing in Japan for close to 15-years now of low, slow and no growth as asset prices deflated and excess capacity was worked out of the system.
The start of the Q3'07 earnings season is just kicking off this week with some of the banks and brokers first up to the plate. That along with the Fed's decision (the BOJ also meets this week) will likely define what happens next. Merrill Lynch and Lehman Bros. have already given warning of reduced income and extra exposure to assets that have had to be re-priced downwards. Is all the dirty laundry on the line already? I doubt it. Despite some losses in the banking sector, investors, but not insiders, have been quick to jump back into depressed stocks. I believe that may prove to be premature.
Now I need a favor (again). I held discussions on Friday about starting another mutual fund. This one focused on mining. In particular African mining stocks and private equity, but it would have an international component for liquidity purposes. It is very hard to keep capital fully employed in small start-ups and those firms needing a longer incubation period, and also keep cash flow positive or to allow for early withdraws, so one needs some medium and large cap stocks that will compensate for the barbell payoffs inherent in start-ups.
The problem being that I really do not know too much about mining stocks in general, so I will need to get myself up to speed. Which mining stocks do you like and why? Thanks.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.