DOW THEORY ANALYSIS SAC
April Newsletter
Life's Unintended Consequences
Enrico Orlandini
Apr 10, 2007
written on Apr 8, 2007
As most of you know by now
I live and work in Lima, Peru. When I first started this business back in 2001 I was actually
living in Italy. After a three year absence I moved back to Lima
in 2002 and took my ten or so clients with me. How come I only
had ten clients? I suppose it had something to do with the fact
that I specialized in gold and silver and would tell anyone with
ears that gold was going to US $3,000 an ounce. When you say
something like that, you are immediately labeled "one of
those". My prediction sounded a lot crazier in 2002 than
it does now. As gold has gone up so has my client base. Life
in Lima probably sounds 'exotic' and 'tropical' but it really
isn't. It's really quite harsh, dirty, disorderly, and corrupt.
It's kind of like Detroit but with an attitude. I live in Lima
due to convenience, habit, and because that's where the Universities
are. My daughter is in her freshman year and I don't want her
to go overseas just yet. When she's gone, and my grandson goes
with her, I know the 'nest' will be empty and that part of my
life will be over. It's not something I look forward to so I
guess I'm trying to postpone the inevitable. That's human nature!
When I want to escape the trials
and tribulations of everyday existence in Lima and ponder life's
mysteries, I leave the Capital and go to a place called Lunahuana.
It's a little berg located 175 kilometers south and east of Lima.
There's almost no crime and it's really quite clean. I have a
small hotel situated at the base of a mountain overlooking the
Cañete river rapids. These rapids are fairly well known
throughout Europe, and from my perch on the top floor I can watch
the tourists rush by; sometimes upside down. Usually it's a comical
sight but every once in a while comedy turns to tragedy. Someone's
head collides with a boulder and the boulder almost always wins.
Personally, I like my water in a glass right next to another
glass of good single malt whisky (never mix the two or millions
of Scottish ghosts will haunt you for eternity). That's as adventurous
as I care to get.
I'm in Lunahuana right now
and as I said before I come here to ponder and I have been doing
a lot of pondering lately. People are really confused right now
and that confuses me. Here's an example: more than one client
has told me that he/she is really worried about gold and
by implication thought I should be too. I told them I was worried
about a lot of things in life, but gold was one of the few things
that doesn't worry me. What causes me to ponder is the very phrase
"worried about gold". It displays a lack of understanding
as to just what gold is and the purpose it serves. Gold
is a store of wealth, the only true store of wealth in today's
world, and it is insurance against real problems. Although it's
been around for five thousand years, it can be manipulated over
the short run, but it cannot be debased over the long run. Like
an old farmer once told me, the cream always rises to the top
and gold is the financial cream. To worry about gold is the equivalent
of worrying if the sun is going to come up tomorrow morning.
I don't worry about gold, but I do worry why gold is rising
in such a relentless fashion [1] . What does
gold see in our future that is so bad that is has almost tripled
in price over a six year period (almost unnoticed I might add)?
Additionally it has many intelligent analysts projecting that
it will triple again by the end of the decade if not sooner.
I don't know, no one does, but I do know I will find out and
that is scary to say the least. If I had to guess I would say
it has to do with two things: a serious escalation in Middle
Eastern tensions, and its by-product, massive debt in the US.
Mind you, this is just a guess.
As an aside, I would like to
say that I almost never worry about any investment once I've
placed my money. I do all my worrying before hand, but never
after. I take great pains to turn over every stone possible before
I make my bet. There is nothing worse than missing that little
fact that was dangling right under your nose and would have warned
you of impending financial indigestion. We've all done that at
various times in our lives and it's not a pleasant feeling. There
is no better teacher than a margin call!
So what else bothers me? Bush
along with US domestic and foreign policy just scare the hell
out of me. Did you ever know an accident was about to occur before
it did? That's the way I view US policy. I could be selfish and
say that what Bush does probably won't affect life here in Lunahuana
much, if at all. But I have children and grandchildren who are
going to grow up in the world Mr. Bush leaves behind and that
is a troublesome thought to say the least. Unlike their father,
they'll probably view Lunahuana as way too confining. The world
is their oyster and there is nothing worse than an oyster gone
bad. They just don't go down well at all. For as long as I can
remember, I have always been able to project well out into the
future and the things I see now are quite frightening. My fear
is aggravated by the extremely high level of complacency that
exists in absolutely every fiber of American society. How do
you measure complacency? The market has its barometer and it's
called the VIX which is short for Volatility Index. Take a look:
I've been in the investment
business for a while now and I don't recall such a prolonged
period of high PER's, low dividend yields, and low VIX readings.
Either everyone has ice water running through their veins or
everyone is piled over on the wrong side of the boat. Any bets
on how that will end?
There are rumblings in the
US political scene right now that have an ominous look to it.
Bush has said he will not sign any spending bill that includes
a timetable for an Iraq pullout and that includes emergency spending
bills. Here's a man that's been fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq
for almost five years, has nothing to show for it, and yet he's
arrogant enough to say "it's my way or the highway".
Polls asking Americans if the feel safer today than they did
five years ago show the majority answer in the negative. Thanks
to the prior Congress's stupidity, the President enjoyed a free
ride at the expense of the American public and the American soldier,
and now that the silver spoon has been taken away, he's not a
happy camper. What could be running through his mind right now?
He knows that a veto will cause the US government to run out
of money and that will cause a significant portion of US activity
to grind to a halt. I think the IRS alone employs almost one
million people and I'm sure they've become accustomed to taking
a paycheck home on a regular basis. And what happens to the soldiers
abandoned in Iraq if the US can't pay its bills for any reason?
Then we have the political repercussions. There is already a
move underway to impeach Bush and it's not just Democrats behind
it. There are certain elements within the Republican Party that
would be willing to support such a measure under certain circumstances
and Bush is aware of this. This is not good and I am not the
only one to pick up on this. This quote is from last week's Economist:
"Many people will rejoice
at the sight of a besieged White House and Mr. Bush and Dick
Cheney ducking for cover. But regardless of what you think about
the most inept of presidencies, the current civil war in Washington
has the making of a tragedy -- both for America and for millions
of people around the globe. For instance, the Doha trade round,
with which so many Democrats are keen to play politics, could
lift millions of the world's most wretched inhabitants out of
poverty, there is a huge amount that president and Congress would
and should collaborate on, from immigration reform to the care
of the elderly. For such huge gains to be sacrificed, voters
will surely demand good reasons."
As intelligent as this comment
seems, I think it grossly underestimates Bush as a person. He
is a man on a mission and he isn't about to fold up his tent
and go quietly into the night.
Well, if he isn't willing to
negotiate and he isn't willing to take no for an answer, then
what's left? I have a thought on the subject and I am going to
share it with you even though I may be way off. Bush is bound
and determined to do things his way and I don't see him changing
at this late stage. He does have one alternative: if Congress
doesn't give him what he wants he could declare martial law,
suspend the US Constitution and Congress along with it, and virtually
rule as a Dictator. At the same time he could/would introduce
some sweeping Patriot Act like changes including travel restrictions,
confiscation of certain assets like gold and silver, a prohibition
on the transfer of funds overseas, limiting freedom of the press
(even more than it already is), and much more. There would be
no fourth Amendment rights, no right to legal council, no right
to bear arms, and so on... In short, Guantanamo would come to
the US. I keep on turning this over in my mind and I see the
path he's taken and look outward and I just don't see any other
way for him to go and still be true to himself. It's always possible
that when push comes to shove, he'll find a new religion and
choose a different path. It seems to me that such a conversion
will be no less than an admission of failure and the crowning
fiasco in what could possibly go down in history as one of the
worse Presidencies ever. Mr. Bush has his ego and I just can't
see him going through the rest of his life with that cross on
his shoulder. Nixon was able to handle it, and even overcome
it to a degree, but Bush is no Nixon.
Finally, I would like to close
with the one thing that really worries me. During the Cold War
the Russians, Americans, and Chinese spent fortunes inventing
all types of horrible weapons; some we know about but most we
don't. The old Soviet Union spent so much money building weapons
of mass destruction that it actually came apart at the seams.
Now we are left with modern day Russia and a bunch of satellites
run by various thugs and thieves. Some would even go so far as
to argue the Russia is run by a thug. My point is this: no one
knows where all of these weapons are and there are people out
there willing to sell anything and everything for and account
in Switzerland with six zeros behind a number. There are also
people out there with a real (or perceived) ax to grind and they
are willing to die in order to do it. Our problem as westerners
is that we tend to focus on everything with an ethnocentric pair
of glasses. Other cultures don't have that problem. Having lived
in a third world country (some would argue that it's a fourth
world country) for more than two decades, I've come to recognize
a major difference: life has little or no meaning for most people
in these countries. When I first came to Peru, I used to wonder
how people could just step out into oncoming traffic and cross
a busy highway without so much as a glance. I thought it was
a local phenomenon but then I experienced the same thing in Bolivia
and Ecuador. It finally dawned on me that to die simply puts
an end to their suffering. Every morning they get out of bed,
they struggle to find food, shelter, and clothing, and on most
days they fail. To make matters worse they have a wife and children
whom they can't help. Death puts an end to all of that... a better
life is how some religious groups refer to it [2].
People who fit into this category
are actively being recruited by other people who are less than
scrupulous and some of these recruiters have real money. Here's
where my fear comes into play. It is not all that difficult to
buy a significant weapon. Then you put it in the hands of a group
of individuals who have nothing to lose and they detonate it.
Once that genie is out of the bottle, you will never get it back
in. Meanwhile Bush is nation-building, whatever that is, and
alienating people left and right. We live in very dangerous times
and we are making enemies at an alarming rate. It's just a question
of time before there is an incident that will change the world,
the way we perceive each other, and the way we interact. That
is a change I am not looking forward to.
MARKET COMMENTARY
Editor's
note:
Readers in a hurry can zoom down to the gold,
silver and HUI commentary by clicking here.
I find the debate regarding
the future path of interest rates to be one of the most fascinating
issues going on in today's markets. The futures have priced in
two to three rate cuts later this year and yet bond prices continue
to fall. As of late the tide has begun to shift and some are
talking about possible rate hikes. Even some of the Federal Reserve
presidents have implied that the threat of inflation may require
eventual rate hikes and the bonds seem to confirm that; at least
for the moment. The direction that rates choose will be very,
very important and will have consequences, intended and otherwise.
These consequences are a real dilemma for the Federal Reserve
and I don't believe there are any simple answers. Interest rates
and housing are joined at the hip and housing isn't doing too
well as the following weekly chart of the Housing Index demonstrates:
Keep in mind this chart is
dealing with history and probably has yet to factor in the full
affects of the "sub-prime" debacle. Sub-prime has to
do with "no income verification" loans as well as other
types of mortgages that allow people to get in way over their
heads. A person with a forty thousand dollar a year income can
buy a two hundred thousand dollar house and initially make payments
of less than one hundred dollars a month. Before the housing
market topped these buyers would refinance and take the extra
cash from an appreciated asset. Appreciating home values are
the only thing that has fueled consumption for a number of years
now. Now these same assets are depreciating while mortgage rates
have risen somewhat and the monthly payments have skyrocketed.
That has led to a large number of defaults. A further increase
in rates by the Federal Reserve could make a bad situation far
worse than most imagine.
What happens if the Fed doesn't
raise rates or even decides to lower them as the futures market
seems to indicate? On the plus side you may postpone a disaster
in the housing sector while on the negative side there is a lot
of competition for foreign capital. It now appears other central
banks around the world don't have any compunction about raising
rates. It is now becoming painfully obvious that foreign capital
is now searching out other ports [3]. That is
going to make placement of US debt a difficult task. As I see
it, the US Fed will have no choice but to monetarize US debt.
Monetarization occurs when you print dollars to buy your own
bonds and is very inflationary. I think the Fed is coming to
realize that it is the only way out. Take a look at the weekly
chart for the US bond:
Note the ominous head-and-shoulders
formation on the right hand side of the chart and Friday's close
below the 200-wma. On Thursday the June bond futures contract
closed down .08 at 111.01 and that is below the critical Fibonacci
support at 111.05. That support now becomes resistance
and there is further resistance at 112.11 while
strong support is at 109.30 and 108.26.
As coincidence would have it, the 108.26 also corresponding to
the neckline formed by the aforementioned head-and-shoulders
formation and will be critical.
In all honesty I was somewhat
surprised to see the break of 111.05 as it represents the 50%
retracement from the 260-day high back down to the 260-day low.
I will be more than interested to see if we can close below it
again on Monday. Right now we have RSI, MACD, and the histograms
all headed in the same direction and that's down. Bonds are not
even close to being oversold so the decline could still have
legs. I have been short the bonds from 113.06 in spite of the
fact that I believe the Fed will eventually be forced to lower
rates. That will be a blow to the dollar and lower bond prices
will eventually act as a drag on stocks. These are the unintended
consequences I referred to earlier and it will be interesting
to see how the Fed handles the transition. Lower rates are an
admission that Fed policy failed and I don't think markets will
take kindly to it. Although lower rates could be a short-term
boom to bonds, I believe it will be a long-term bust as it will
make bonds unappealing. Currently bonds could fall a bit more
but I would be very surprised if we tested the neckline much
less broke down through it. In fact I am seriously thinking of
taking my profits on Monday and taking a seat on the sidelines.
Next we have the Dow which
has taken a decidedly different turn (yet again) from what I
would have imagined in early March. The June 07 Dow futures contract
topped at 12,910 on February 20th and then began to fall off
a cliff less than a week later. An intraday low of 12,035 was
posted on March 14th and since then we've been in rally mode.
Take a look at the daily chart for the cash Dow:
Since posting the March 14th
low, we have traced out a series of higher lows and higher highs.
On Thursday the June Dow futures contract closed up 27 points
at 12,622 and back within striking distance of the all-time high.
I was originally looking for an 11,732 low and then a rally back
up to a lower high on or about April 12th. That scenario is now
in danger of collapsing and the key will be 12,671 in
the June contract. Good Fibonacci support comes in at 12,433
and then 12,184. Finally, the February 27th break
left a large gap down on the open. That gap runs from 12740 down
to 12,690 and any attempt to fill it will more than likely lead
to a test of the all-time high.
The rest of the indexes (Transports,
S & P, Banking, and Consumer) are also at various stages
of recovery. The Consumer index is the strongest and is the engine
that has been driving the economy for four years now and is followed
closely by the S & P Index. Transports seem to be having
more difficulties than the Dow. Take a look below:
Unlike the Dow, the Transports
did not make a higher high this week and that is important as
it was the Transportation Index that led the Dow to its all-time
high. Now it's the Dow leading the way and that is another change
in character. These changes are important as they usually signal
a top is in, or at the very least, being formed.
One of the surprising changes
has to do with the Banking Index. Its rise was just as
relentless as the Consumer Index, but unlike the Consumer Index,
it has yet to recover. Take a look at the daily chart below for
the Banking Index:
Thursday saw a test and marginal
close above the 200-dma and I have to ask myself what this means.
Initially, you could have attributed it to the loss of the Yen
carry trade but I now believe it goes deeper than that. For four
years the Fed has literally guaranteed banks a "free lunch"
as they dropped rates to historic lows. This allowed banks a
source of cheap money that they loaned out to US consumers at
much higher rates. The banks made the spread and grew fat in
the process. Think of it as the Greenspan Carry Trade!
Although it's too early to tell, the chart above seems to be
saying that the party is over. A combination of higher rates
and a sub-prime hangover may be too much for the banks bottom
line.
In conclusion, I believe there
will be an attempt to fill the gap in the Dow and it should occur
within the next two to three trading days. If we do manage to
close it, we'll probably rally to a higher high, around 1,491.00
or even 1,521.00 in the cash S & P and it should come in
on June 12th which would be 90 days from the low. This market
has stuck to the 90 day cycle throughout and I don't expect that
to change. Meanwhile I am short the Dow from 12,450 and will
stay that way unless I see a new high.
Gold
Gold is one of my favorite subjects and I can never get enough
of it. The June 07 Gold futures contract went into the Easter
holiday at 679.4 and that is a new closing high for this leg
up. Some months back I advised you that gold was going to a minimum
of 775.0 before we would run out of steam and nothing
has changed my mind. I also told you that we would have two 7%
corrections and that is just what happened. Now I am going to
tell you that gold is on the threshold of an explosive move to
the upside; the type of move where you could see an advance of
100.0 within a seven to ten day period. We have overcome good
resistance at 667.1, 672.5, and 687.0
is the next target followed by a test of the significant Fibonacci
resistance at 696.0. It was this resistance that
turned back the last rally but I don't think it will stop gold
this time around. Here are the magic Fibonacci numbers with respect
to the June 07 gold futures contract:
| GOLD'S
SUPPORT |
GOLD'S
RESISTANCE |
| 623.3 |
696.0 |
| 649.3 |
721.7 |
| 672.5 |
746.3 |
The 775.0 resistance number
I referred to earlier is with respect to the spot price for gold
and it should be enough to stop the current leg up, but that
doesn't mean that it will. As usual, I like to put gold's activity
into perspective and the best way to do that is to view the historical
chart:
This entire rally is nothing
short of spectacular and what is even more fascinating is that
the best is yet to come. You can see the May 2006 high of 732.0
and we are now within shouting distance ten months later. If
there is one thing that makes me believe that we could go higher
than 775.0, it is the fact that we have been consolidating gains
for ten months. That could/should provide a powerful base for
rally that may go well beyond 775.0 and could even challenge
the all-time high at 882.5 but we'll just have to wait and see.
Silver, and to a lesser degree
gold stocks are following in gold's footsteps. The May Silver
futures contract closed up 12.0 at 1374.0 on Thursday and that
is a new closing high for this leg up. Like gold, silver has
a set of important Fibonacci numbers as well. They are as follows:
|
SILVER'S SUPPORT |
SILVER'S RESISTANCE |
|
1,328.1 |
1,389.6 |
|
1,358.7 |
1,423.6 |
| |
1,456.0 |
In all honesty, I see more
upward potential in silver tight now than I do in gold and the
following P & F chart for silver tends to agree with me:
We have a bullish price objective
of 21.5 and that is slightly above my 20.73 objective and more
than 40% above Thursday's close. Silver appears to be leading
gold at this point in time while gold stocks appear to be following
both; or maybe dragged would be a better word. On Thursday the
HUI closed down 1.87 to end the week at 354.15 and that is just
below good Fibonacci resistance at 354.84. There is good
Fibonacci support at 351.59 and 336.11.
I have been vacillating about the future of gold stocks to the
point that I sold 25% of my portfolio some weeks back. I still
hold the same portfolio that I bought in September 2004 and it
is as follows:
BUENAVENTURA (BVN) = 20%
COEUR D'ALENE (CDE) = 5%
GOLDCORP (GG) = 15%
NEWMONT (NEM) = 10%
ROYAL GOLD (RGLD) = 20%
SILVER WHEATON (SLW) = 5%
CASH = 25%
Actually the cash component is a bit misleading as I used it
to but gold on the futures market. Take a look at the following
weekly chart of the HUI:
I have been wondering for weeks
now if the HUI will follow gold up or the Dow down. As of today
I do not have a definitive answer but as you can see above, the
HUI is being compressed into a tighter and tighter range with
a series of higher lows and lower highs. We are coming to a crucial
moment in time where there will be a breakout in one direction
or the other. Given the fact that this is a bull market,
the odds heavily favor a breakout to the upside but the fly in
the ointment could be the Dow. If the Dow rallies until
mid-June than I suspect new highs will be made but if the Dow
turns down this week, it might be a different story. We'll just
have to wait and see. In the meantime I am long gold, silver,
and gold stocks and that will not change.
Now we come to commodities.
I have been bullish the CRB for almost as long as I've been bullish
gold and the results have been just as agreeable. Originally
I started out buying the CRB Index and then branched out into
oil, copper, the grains, and cotton. Only cotton has been a laggard.
The strange thing about it all is after a significant correction
both oil and copper have begun to rally in spite of a slowing
economy in the United States. Let's take a look at copper's daily
chart:
Last week's rally took the
June 07 Copper futures contract above what was strong Fibonacci
resistance at 328.90 when it closed at 337.70 and
that only leaves resistance at 346.40. We are also
back above the 50-wma and not all that far away from the all-time
high at 377.00. Oil is following a similar pattern and the reason
is Asia. Actually, it has to do with our lenders changing dollars
for commodities and I suspect there will be a lot more where
that came from. That's another one of those unintended consequences
of printing dollars until the cows come home.
Grains are a relatively new
position for me. After a couple of attempts at establishing a
position, I finally had some success late last summer. I took
initial positions in corn, wheat, and beans and added on as they
rallied. Like all rallies, there have to be corrections and we
have been experiencing one for the last five weeks. Actually
wheat was the first to top out way back in October but it didn't
stop corn and soybeans from making new highs right up through
late February. I didn't add on because of wheat's weakness. I've
felt for some time that wheat must participate or any rally will
be short lived. I was looking for a blow out to the downside
and the US government was kind enough to oblige. How did they
do that? It was quite simple really; they issued a report on
March 30th saying that farmers may have planted the most
corn since 1944. That was all that was needed to produce a 20%
correction and provide me with the first decent buying opportunity
in quite some time. The same applies to soybeans. Take a look
at the daily chart for the Grain index:
Last week's government report
led to a decline down to a 158.07 low before buyers finally showed
up. We closed out on Thursday at 162.66 on fears of bad winter
weather that could damage crops already in the ground. That weather
materialized and I would not be surprised to see some more upside
pressure early in the week. In any event, I am long grains and
will stay that way for quite some time.
I would like to close out this
newsletter with a discussion of the dollar, the king of unintended
consequences. You see a declining US dollar makes US stocks and
bonds a lot less attractive and it also means that we import
inflation as a cheaper dollar raises the price of imports.
Likewise most commodities are
priced in UD dollars and a cheaper dollar means that foreigners
can buy more and that is inflationary. The US dollar has been
deteriorating for years now but we are approaching a critical
juncture. Since topping out at 92.00 early last year we have
broken support level after support level. Now last week we moved
below the 82.92 Fibonacci support level and all
that is left is some lesser support at 82.35 which is marginally
below last week's intraweek low. The more I watch the dollar
the more convinced I am that we will break below the multi-decade
low of 80.50 sometime later this year.
So if you're not into US dollars,
what is the alternative? As most of you know by now, I have been
long the Swiss Franc for almost as long as I've been long gold.
Then late last year I diversified into a group of what I call
commodity based currencies. These are the New Zealand dollar,
the Australian dollar, and the Canadian dollar and the results
have been worth the effort. The following chart of the New Zealand
dollar shows you what I mean:
Just last week we made a new
260-day high, and although we are somewhat overbought, I don't
think we'll see any significant correction until gold runs out
of gas. Aside from any temporary lift it can get from employment
reports and other government statistics, the dollar will continue
to decline and these currencies will continue to rally. There
will be no reprieve for the US dollar.
References
1 - Please
don't send me thousands of e-mails telling me that gold is stuck.
I will simply refer you to gold's historical chart in order to
make my point.
2 - This is
in no way a criticism of any organized religion.
3 - The world's
central Banks now hold the lowest percentage of dollars since
1999. It has dropped from 72.6% in 2002 to 64.7% in 2006. Recently
many nations have made clear their intentions to diversify out
of the dollar so this trend will only increase.
Apr 8, 2007
-Enrico
Orlandini
For those of
you interested in receiving information on the funds we manage,
please feel free to e-mail us at ebo@dtanalysis.com and we will respond
as soon as possible.
email: ebo@dtanalysis.com
website: www.dtanalysis.com
Orlandini Archives
DOW THEORY ANALYSIS SAC
formerly LASCO REPORT
Ignacio Merino 636
Santa Cruz
Miraflores, Peru
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