by MrBill » Fri 23 Nov 2007, 06:28:52
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('drew', 'C')ompletely off topic Mr Bill, (and Starvid) but I love your new avatar. The glowing halo strikes me as a bit Greek/Russian Orthodox/early Byzantine, which BTW is almost completely fitting for your present place of habitation. The monkey is good fun too.
As for the markets -yikes- although CIBC was looking rather sweet at $82 yesterday. That was around the point I bought it in '06. I dont think the banks are done bleeding yet, so I'll wait. Stupid CEF is making me some money, finally, just not enough yet.
A risky though for you; use the rest of my cash to buy BCE?? I'd get one more quarter of dividends (ex dec 14th) and the deal is supposed to finish in Jan 08. I'd profit about $3 bucks a share. The clincher is simple, the deal could fall through. How likely?? If the econ. really tanks does teachers have an escape clause? I bet they do. What do you think?
Drew
RE avatar. Thanks Drew. Bas was kind enough to make that up for me. To be honest I thought that my grinning 'where's Waldo' avatar might be starting to irritate people? But then again maybe it is just me? ; - )
I am a firm believer that global stock markets are headed lower, and that a potential recession in the USA will erode demand for energy, metals and commodities as well.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')The Fed's downgrade of the U.S. growth outlook highlighted vulnerability of the world's biggest economy as defaults in subprime mortgages hit banks. Investors also fret about further possible write-downs as well as rising inflation from surging oil, commodity and food prices.
Gold has been a haven in times of crisis for centuries and is gaining in popularity as an alternative investment to currencies and bonds. It is seen as a hedge against inflation and rose in value during the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Source:
Gold gains $6 on bargain hunting and Fed outlookI do not buy the de-coupling theory at all. At best there will be a time lag of six to 12-months before Asian growth starts to falter too. That may be a few months after the Beijing Olympics next summer, but I think we will look back at 2007 as the start of the worst recession or world slowdown since The Great Depression.
I may have to wait until 2008 for confirmation of that, but the alternative is central banks slashing rates, flooding the world with excess money supply and re-igniting run away inflation. I do not think they are that stupid, but I cannot dismiss that they might make a mistake thinking that it is the lesser of two evils.
Therefore, although I remain on the post peak oil resource depletion bandwagon in the medium to long-term, in the short-term I am pretty confident that we will see better entry levels into most of these strategic trades.
The exception being the US dollar where I see continued weakness. But even there it is conceivable that we might see a pullback to $1.4040 before breaking through $1.5000. That might come about by concerted central bank intervention in the currency markets, but that is mere speculation on my part at the present. There is no fundamental reason why the US dollar should be stronger.
As an aside. There was a huge correction to EUR/CAD, eh? $1.3280 to $1.4710! Ten percent in two weeks. Maybe I should be buying some CAD now? I am standing by my prediction of 1250 for the S&P 500 by year-end. Such weakness is not a supporting factor for the TSX, especially if metal and commodity prices also decline at the prospect of a steep economic slowdown in the USA. Therefore, although I do not know the specifics behind the BCE trade per se I am not a broad market buyer in any case. I am saving my powder for after we hit bottom and then may start higher.
Actually, I have to qualify that as well. I think we may see a New Year rally if we end the year on a weak note which I expect. Therefore, the closing days of 2007 may be a good bargain hunting time ahead of that expected bounce. But given the uncertainty, I would not allocate too much capital to that strategy. A little mad money, but no more. Especially, as I will be away for the first two weeks of January and therefore not in a position to closely monitor any larger positions.
We should know more on December 11th after the Fed makes their opinion clearer by either not cutting rates because they see the risk of inflation, or signalling that they are worried about a recession by dropping Fed funds. Neither higher inflation, and eventually higher interest rates, nor a US recession should be good for stocks. Although the prospect of a rate cut might spark a relief rally if stocks are already beaten down ahead of it.
At some point battered financial stocks are going to look attractive. I do not think at today's levels though. There is likely more bad news to come from the credit mess, but also as their revenues from normal lending fall as they tighten their credit standards. That will affect the real economy's ability to whether a slowdown without a full-blown recession.
By the way, I am not hung-up on the term recession, which technically means two consecutive quarters of zero or negative growth. I am more worried about a Japan moment where imbalances and excesses lead to years of low, slow, no growth in the overall economy. Heck, if we bounced back strongly in 2008 after just two quarters of flat growth I think a lot of policy makers would breathe a collective sigh of relief. No, I am talking about something deeper, nastier and longer lasting. Not just a lack of animal spirits, but kicking the beast hard while he is down.
If I were not worried about inflation then I would continue to be comfortable in cash. However, my nagging suspicion is that we will see stagflation, and I am not sure how to protect myself from that eventuality? For one I will be paying down my mortgage. It is not much, but it is one sure fire way to perserve wealth and free up future income for investment at the sametime. But other than living debt free the places to put idle cash elude me for the time being.
Have a great weekend and speak to you next week. Cheers.
UPDATE: the USD slide...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') -- Some Chinese shipyards are seeking
payment in euros as the dollar weakens, TradeWinds reported,
citing European brokers and an unidentified Greek shipowner.
Gezhouba Shipyard of Yichang and other ``emerging'' Chinese
shipbuilders have drawn up contracts with fees in both euros and
dollars, the newspaper said today.
The Bank of Korea on Nov. 11 urged yards in the world's
biggest shipbuilding nation to settle contracts in the won.
Japan, the second-biggest, plans to use the yen for new
contracts, the Shipbuilders' Association of Japan said Nov. 22.
Source: Nov. 23 (Bloomberg)
A friend of mine in Rotary imports clothing from China. That is a very exchange rate sensitive business for both suppliers and buyers. Her suppliers have also now started requesting payment in euro. Just a harbinger of things to come.