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How to Spot the Recession Before They Do

If deflation caused by the credit market collapse overtakes the easing Fed and the falling dollar (leading us into a painful recession), we’ll hear about it from CNBC and FoxNews about nine months too late. Is there any way for the astute individual (who knows what shows up in the “news” is always past-tense) to spot the breakdown as it’s happening?

There is- watch the commodities, they react first.

Gold and Oil

Keep an eye on the charts of Oil and Gold for a top, see the dollar find a bottom against… everything, and when you’re comfortable we’ve rolled over into the spiral, plan your trades accordingly. What worked brilliantly the last year or so may suddenly stop working, and you’ll find your trades hitting stops instead of profit targets.

That will mean it’s time to get out the old playbook and mix things up, because we’ll be on the field with an entirely different opponent.

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Dollar STRONGER Against the Euro?

Deflation could do it. Although the revision of the numbers from one (August) employment report ruled out any possibility of a recession, much less a deflationary recession, right? Right?

How about debt deflation? It’s coming, only question is whether the Fed has the power to stop it. In some circumstances, they don’t, just as Japan hasn’t for… what, 20 or so years. A deflationary contraction could conceivably outrun the Fed’s inflationary power, if it were severe enough.

Or maybe not. Hell, I grew up hunting rabbits and driving tractors, for Chrissakes. I’m still pissed that Case bought IH.

Here’s the chart:

Euro vs. Dollar - Is the Euro topping?
(click for larger image)

That’s a very Wolfe Wave -looking pattern to me. An ascending wedge for over 18 months, now a spike out of the wedge, a near-term bottom which touched the top trendline, and a retrace.

A break below $1.40/Euro would look like the start of a thrust, no? Could we see the low 1.30s in short order?

Let me put it this way: Think of every single thing you’ve heard or read about the dollar, gold, oil, etc recently. What percentage of people and articles are forecasting

  • A stronger dollar?

  • Falling gold prices?

  • Falling oil prices?

  • Falling stock prices?

Ten percent? Five percent? One percent? How many guests on CNBC are saying, “Oh yeah, Maria, $60 oil and $500 gold on the horizon”? Limit as x goes to zero?

Now, with virtually everyone on earth on the same side of the boat, what does your trading experience tell you would bring Mr. Market the greatest gleeful pleasure, evil sadist that he is?

Think about it.


Surprise Funds Rate Cut By Fed Imminent?

Heads-up to a developing situation:

Credit is crunching again, and banks are having liquidity problems- the Fed did $31.25 billion in Repurchase Agreements today. That sounded like a lot, so I went to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York website and copied the daily figures into Excel from August 1 thru today. Here’s what a quick chart of those figures shows:

Repurchase Agreements

Clearly something is up. Another point of interest- of the $31 billion in repos today, the Fed accepted $4.1 billion in the infamous mortgage-backed securities. Contrast that to August 10th, when they accepted that moldy paper for all $38 billion worth of repos.

So, the banks are in a temporary liquidity crisis, but it’s not because the MBS market is locked up and no one will buy the moldy paper. That doesn’t sound good…

Now for the next bit of chartage. The market is suddenly expecting a large amount of permanent money to be added to the system. This is reflected in the spike in the price of gold and the drop of the dollar against the euro. Here’s gold:

Spike in Gold Price

Credit Crisis anew. Permanent money. Sounds like only one answer to me: a cut in the Funds Rate. I had already publicly said that I felt the Fed would try to wait until the 9/18 meeting to cut, so as not to spook anyone. Today’s data leads me to believe they may not be able to wait that long.

Cheers.


Refinancing Subprime Loans to Prevent Debt-Deflation

It is not the responsibility of the Federal Reserve–nor would it be appropriate–to protect lenders and investors from the consequences of their financial decisions. (from Ben Bernanke’s Aug. 31 speech)

The Chairman is exactly right, and I’d go a step further: It is also not the responsibility of the taxpayers to protect lenders or investors.

As I’ve mentioned, one of my core beliefs is that true adulthood and maturity are the result of learning to accept and deal with the consequences of our own decisions. More importantly, it’s learning to consider the consequences before we commit to a decision, not just whether “I want it.”

Giving others (our children, our spouses, entitlement recipients, Katrina victims, subprime borrowers, Citibank, Long Term Capital Management, the United States Congress) the freedom to make decisions without having to consider the consequences does nothing but induce a spiral of more and more irresponsible behavior.

It is our job, as parents, friends, citizens, fellow humans, to maintain the connection between Freedom and Responsibility. That’s how they become independent and self-sufficient, instead of mewling, manipulative exploiters unable to control themselves and always needing someone else to bail them out.

The Problem With Subprime Defaults: The Deflationary Shock

Unfortunately, the consequences materializing from the actions of irresponsible lenders and borrowers don’t affect just them. Otherwise the solution would be easy- let the bums feel the sting! Trouble is, that sting is like a firecracker under a butane tank, the butane tank which is our entire economy- and those consequences would snowball into something that seriously hurts all of us.

You see, due to the way our fiat money system works, debt is money. Banks create money by loaning their excess reserves (how much excess exists in the system at a given time is one way the Fed exerts its influence). These loaned dollars (someone’s debt) are in turn deposited by the recipient, and the bank gets to count that money on its balance sheet, and turn around and loan most of it back out, which is then re-deposited somewhere else, etc.

This multi-generational money creation machine (think biblical- “10 dollars begat 9 dollars which begat 8 dollars…”) is how a few billion dollars added to the system can balloon into many many billions of new dollars floating around our economy in search of a product to purchase (or a 3BR, 1.5BA w/ 2CG and WBFP).

Now the ugly flip side: It works the same way in reverse. Drain a few billion dollars out of the system, and it results in many many billions fewer dollars floating around, since the cornerstone of the pyramid has been removed.

Fewer dollars chasing the same products- that’s also known as deflation, and as it ripples through the economy it affects us all. A deflationary spiral occurs when such a ripple adversely affects other borrowers (deflation makes debt more expensive and harder to pay off with future earnings), and those borrowers begin to default, which removes more money (debt) from the system, which compounds the problem and makes the deflation worse, and on and on…

Eventually the system can contract so much that massive defaults begin to occur even in “prime” loans. If we get that far, we’re in another Great Depression.

How To Prevent The Losers From Triggering A Depression - Refinance

As with your kid who’s been arrested for getting caught smoking pot naked in the back seat of the Lexus with the preacher’s daughter… it’s a little too late to go back and say, “DON’T DO THAT, YOU IDIOT!”

What we’re faced with is a choice between the lesser of evils. To do nothing and “let the bums feel the sting” is to do great damage to our own financial future through the mechanism of debt-deflation.

To write hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer-funded checks to the banks and relieve the bums of their responsibility is even worse. As I described above, that would just encourage more of the same behavior, from the bums and from the banks.

As much as possible and although we hate it, we need to prevent the bums from defaulting, but we need them to continue to carry their debt and make payments on it. The answer? Some type of refinancing solution. In this scenario, the banks take a little hit, the taxpayers take a hit (the refinanced loans would doubtless involve some type of government backing, which means it would cost us… but significantly less than actually taking on the debt itself), the irresponsible bums keep their loans at a lower rate which (hopefully) they can make payments on. The debt-money stays in the system, and we have a much better chance of weathering the coming recession. Oh yeah, did I mention that?

I believe this is why Chairman Bernanke is encouraging banks and legislators to pursue a refinancing solution, as in his letter to the honorable Chuckey Schumer:

The federal banking regulators have encouraged banks and thrifts to work actively with troubled borrowers to modify loans or to refinance as needed to avoid default or foreclosure…

and

It might be worth considering at this juncture whether the private and public sectors, separately or in collaboration, could help the situation by developing a broader range of mortgage products which are appropriate for low-and moderate-income borrowers, including those seeking to refinance. Such products could be designed to avoid or mitigate the risk of payment shock and to be more transparent with respect to their terms.

In short, there is no easy way out of this mess. There’s painful, and there’s more painful. Those are our choices, our consequences for allowing a system which rewards greed, immediate gratification and irresponsibility.


Ugly OGRe Finally Gives Buy Signal; Some Macro Thoughts on Deflation and Recession

We got our buy signal, and we got long. In the previous post I’d said

I see Thursday 8/16/07 as a PRIME, and possibly the LAST, opportunity for a buy signal to emerge before we have to look away

and I also said

I will get long very aggressively on any good OGRe (Opening Gap Reversal) once it trades back into today’s range.

This OGRe wasn’t a pretty one, however. (For a more thorough discussion of how I view OGRes, see this post about Trading Opening Gap Reversals). We got our gap down, but then spent the day alternating between ecstasy and agony with those wide swings… until 3pm EST, that is. Then we got that outrageous “4 dollars straight up in 50 minutes on huge volume” rally right at the end:

SPY intraday chart 8/16/07

The daily chart looks more like a nice clean OGRe since it doesn’t show those intraday vascillations:

SPY chart 8/16/07

Note that, per the Gospel According to Steve Nison (aka Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques) it’s not a hammer since the lower shadow isn’t at least twice the length of the real body. However, the real body on this monster is $2.31 wide, and the lower shadow is another $2.79 below that, which is still jaw-dropping.

Long, But Not For Long

This trade, like most I’ve written about the last few months, is based on my current RSI(4) -based methodology. These trades typically last from a few days up to about three weeks, with the majority on the “few days” end. So this is still a quick little swing trade in my book, not a pronouncement that we’re headed back for all-time highs.

So Was This The Bottom?

I don’t think so. The macroeconomic factors haven’t resolved in the least. In fact, I’ve continually made fun of the talking heads’ using euphemistic language like “housing slowdown,” “slump” and the ubiquitous “soft landing” … we’re not even close to the last shoe dropping on the housing bubble (can we all agree on that term now?). I firmly believe there’s a Dragon in the Corner and that we’re about to enter the recession portended by the yield curve inversion starting in December 2005 (remember, the recession often takes 18-24 months to show up, but of course the choir has endlessly sang “This Time Is Different”).

Note the deflationary symptoms rapidly emerging: tight credit, reduced money velocity, and hey bugs… check your gold prices– who says gold goes up because people buy it when they’re scared? People are scared as hell right now, but gold is faltering because of the risk of big “D”. Oil’s down, too, thanks to the stronger dollar. And yes, I believe the Fed’s response will be to lower the target Funds Rate soon and start increasing money supply vigorously, but in this case, I’d agree that it’s about their only choice since we’re so far down the Rabbit Hole.

Also, I’ve extensively (exhaustively, painfully) backtested the RSI(4) method I currently use, and it’s told me something: in uptrends, it tends to cycle from the high 20s to the mid 80s, sometimes spiking into the 90s (i.e. skewed upwards overall). In downtrends, on the other hand, it tends to drift up into the 70s, then soar down into the low teens or even lower. The last few cycles, it’s been acting less and less like these are “pullback in an uptrend” swings, and more like full-fledged downtrend thrusts. I may be switching from buying drops to shorting rallies in the very near future.

So You’re Overtly Negative, But You’re Aggressively Long Right Now…

Precisely! ;-)


The Fed Should Not Be The Hedge Funds’ Insurance Agency

On July 26 I wrote the following:

I think stocks are being sold, bonds are being bought and yields are dropping precipitously in anticipation of something we “average” people don’t see yet; some economic news which eliminates any possibility of the Fed raising interest rates (not that there is such a possibility right now anyway), and in fact points to the possibility of lowered rates. That would only happen as a way to increase liquidity in the face of some severe, “unexpected” developments.

Now we have the story that the illustrious James Cramer is pleading for a Fed “rescue”.

I’ve written repeatedly over the last couple of years about how our economy’s best hope was for growth strong enough that the Fed could comfortably raise interest rates back to, or even better, above historical norms in order to contain that growth and its accompanying inflation. A strengthening dollar which would give China room to revalue its yuan without crashing our economy or bond market. I felt, and feel even more so now, that such strong growth lies somewhere between highly unlikely and impossible.

I wrote that the alternative (tepid growth in spite of low interest rates- and mortgages still under 7%!- and in spite of an extremely weak dollar) would paint the Fed into a corner and leave them with no wiggle room to do anything but start lowering rates back towards zero to try and re-stimulate our irresponsible debt- and- spend binge, the cycle which has gotten us to this point in the first place. Lowering from here (the lofty 5.25% level!) would cause the dollar to go into a spiral. The Chinese and Japanese would have to buy massive quantities of U.S. Treasuries to try to keep their currencies cheap relative to ours. I believe the current figure is that China is now up to about 1.3 trillion dollars worth of… us. At what level do we start referring to them as “lord”? When their ownership exceeds our GDP (about 10 trillion right now)?

The hangover we’re just beginning to feel is a very intense one, built up starting with the Greenspan-Bush delay of the 2002 “recession- which- wasn’t” by flooding the economy with unprecedented liquidity, resulting in the explosive increase in prices (stocks, homes, etc) we’ve subsequently seen. Milton Friedman would be proud. Not.

It’s not unlike drinking a fifth of whiskey to avert the pain we brought on by sucking down a 12-pack yesterday. We have not averted the pain, we have simply delayed it… to be paid later, with interest. And what Cramer is calling for is the equivalent of yelling, “Bartender!“. The problem has developed over years, and will resolve over years. It’s why I laugh when I hear silliness like, “Do you think the housing slowdown is over?”… it’s not a slowdown, it’s a drastic reversion to the mean, and at best, we’re at the “end of the beginning,” with the fun part yet to come. This stuff takes time.

Let’s hope the Fed does not “rescue” the billionaire parasites until their bleeding begins to threaten the entire economy (admittedly, that won’t take too long). For the long-term good, let’s fess up, take a couple of aspirin, and get ready for our hangover.