Feature
Tharp�s
Thoughts
Market Update for
February 2009
Market Condition: Volatile
Bear
by
Van
K. Tharp, Ph.D.
I
always say that people do not trade the markets; they trade their
beliefs about the markets. In that same way I'd like to point out
that these updates reflect my beliefs. If my beliefs and your
beliefs are not the same, then you may not find them useful. I find
the market update information useful for my trading, so I do the
work each month and I'm happy to share that information with my
readers.
However,
if your beliefs are not similar to mine, then this information may
not be useful to you. Thus, if you are inclined to do some sort of
intellectual exercise to prove one of my beliefs wrong, simply
remember that everyone can usually find lots of evidence to support
their beliefs and refute others. Just simply know that I admit that
these are my beliefs and that your beliefs might be different.
These
monthly updates are in the first issue of Tharp�s Thoughts each
month. This allows us to get the closing month�s data. These
updates cover 1) the market type (first mentioned in the April 30
edition of Tharp�s Thoughts), 2) the five week status on each of
the major U.S. stock market indices, 3) our four star
inflation-deflation model plus John Williams� statistics, 4)
tracking the dollar, and 5) the five strongest and weakest areas of
the overall market.
Part I:
Market Commentary
Technically, 7,470 in the DJIA
(Dow Jones Industrial Average) is
the 50% retracement level of the entire bull market that began in August
1982. The previous bear
market bottom was on Oct 9, 2002 when the DOW was at 7,286.
We�ve gone below that level and at 7,100, we not only cut
in half the October 2007 highs of 14,198.50, but we have given back 50%
of the 27 year move from the start of the big bull market of the
1980s to yesterday.
If you invested in 1982 and just
bought and held securities, then you�ve lost 50% of the gains that
you had for retirement during that time.
And at the current level (Tuesday�s close) of 6,726.02,
there is no support for a long ways.
The market
still has a way to go until we reach the single digit PE ratios that
usually happen at the end of a bear market.
John Williams, the economists who writes the Shadow Stats
newsletter, thinks that the DOW could fall another 70% from these
levels. He might be
right but that will probably be in the third downleg of this secular
bear market.
Dow Industrials 1982 - 2009

In the fourth
quarter last year, the economy officially contracted by 6.2%.
And unemployment reached 7.6%.
This, of course, is the official unemployment number that
results from the government manipulating statistics.
Part II:
The Current Stock Market Type Is Volatile Bear
I have now
substituted my new market type for the 1-2-3 model (which is still
in red light mode for those of you who like the old data). I�ve
done this because when the 1-2-3 model goes below a certain PE
ratio, it automatically changes one of the three signals to go.
However, I expect us to be in a secular bear market until the
PE ratios of the S&P 500 reach single digits.
Thus, the 1-2-3 model doesn�t really fit my current beliefs.
My advice,
once again, is that secular bear markets usually end when the PE
ratios of the S&P 500 hit around 6-8 (e.g., 1932, 1942, and
1982). We�re in the
worst crisis since the Great Depression and perhaps in one that is
worse. Are you willing
to risk the PE ratio of the S&P 500 dropping to single digits?
My advice: get in the market when prices are above the 200
day moving average and get out when they are below
(or at least stay out until our market type turns to bullish
for at least two weeks). That
would have kept you out of this market throughout 2008.
The table below
illustrates the weekly market type, based on rolling 13 week windows,
since October 2008. We're still in a volatile bear market.
Volatile
Bear
|
02/27/09
|
Volatile
Bear
|
02/21/09
|
Volatile
Sideways
|
02/13/09
|
Volatile
Sideways
|
02/06/09
|
Volatile
Bear
|
01/30/09
|
Volatile
Bear
|
01/24/09
|
Volatile
Sideways
|
01/16/09
|
Volatile
Sideways
|
01/09/09
|
Volatile
Sideways
|
01/02/09
|
Volatile
Bear
|
12/26/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
12/19/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
12/12/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
12/05/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
11/28/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
11/21/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
11/14/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
11/07/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
10/31/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
10/24/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
10/17/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
10/10/08
|
Volatile
Bear
|
10/03/08
|
Notice that
we�ve had some periods that could be called bullish based upon
shorter term market type measures.
However, the 13-week market type is a long way from anything
but bearish.
So let�s
look at what�s happening in the three major U.S. indices.
Weekly
Changes for the Three Major Stock Indices |
|
Dow 30 |
S&P 500 |
NASDAQ 100 |
Date |
Close |
%
Change |
Close |
%Change |
Close |
%
Change |
Close
04 |
10,783.01 |
|
1,211.12 |
|
1,621.12 |
|
Close
05 |
10,717.50 |
-0.60% |
1,248.29 |
-3.10% |
1,645.20 |
1.50% |
Close
06 |
12,463.15 |
16.29% |
1,418.30 |
13.62% |
1,756.90 |
6.79% |
Close
07 |
13,264.82 |
6.43% |
1,468.36 |
3.53% |
2,084.93 |
18.67% |
Close 08 |
8776.39 |
-33.84% |
903.25 |
-38.49% |
1211.65 |
-41.89% |
30-Jan-09 |
8,000.86 |
-8.84% |
825.88 |
-8.57% |
1,180.25 |
-2.59% |
6-Feb-09 |
8,280.59 |
3.50% |
868.6 |
5.17% |
1,277.49 |
8.24% |
13-Feb-09 |
7,850.41 |
-5.20% |
826.84 |
-4.81% |
1,236.85 |
-3.18% |
23-Feb-09 |
7,114.78 |
-9.37% |
743.33 |
-10.10% |
1,128.97 |
-8.72% |
27-Feb-09 |
7,062.93 |
-0.73% |
735.09 |
-1.11% |
1,116.99 |
-1.06% |
Year
to Date |
7,062.93 |
-19.52% |
735.09 |
-18.62% |
1,116.99 |
-7.81% |
So the
markets finished off minus 34% to minus 42% last year.
And the DOW and S&P 500 are down nearly 20% again this
year (and at the current levels they are down 20%). It�s not a
pretty picture. Can you
remember when corporate pension funds expected their pensions to be up 10%?
In fact, corporate accounting almost required it.
So what are they doing now?
Bankruptcies are happening with some regularity.
Part
III: The Strongest and
Weakest Market Components
I have a new
model in which we track the relative strength of the various ETFs
representing the economy of the entire world.
I will be publishing this once a month.
Ken Long, who developed the algorithm we use, publishes a
similar report every weekend at www.TortoiseCapital.com. If you�d like more information,
then I�d suggest you attend our ETF workshop, which is held
several times each year. Ken explains how these numbers are derived
in this workshop.
The areas in
green are strong and those in brown are very weak.
By the way, I usually consider strong to be in the 70s and
there is obviously nothing in that range on this particular chart.
My entire world view is continued in the charts below.
By the way,
if you didn�t read my article on GLD last week, then please take a
look at it. ETFs have
some additional risk that the underlying instrument doesn�t have,
just like mutual funds have risks that the stocks they own do not
have. Namely, the
instrument you are trading could fail (and cost you extra money),
while the underlying trading instrument (i.e., gold) could be doing
fine.
Also the top
and bottom ETFs (shown on the 2nd table) are usually double leveraged.
I read recently that the average trade in these ETFs is about
20 minutes. They are
trading instruments only and do not correlate very well with the
underlying instrument long term.
This world
view looks a little better than the world view presented last month.
There are currently 7 ETFs (other than the double leveraged
and inverse funds) that are green:
1.
The US dollar bullish
at 54
2.
Gold (gld) at 53
3.
Silver (svl) at 53
4.
Chile at 51
5.
Three shorter term
bond funds at 50
I�d like to
point out that there is NO consistency in this market� no long
term trends except perhaps gold.
So this is a dangerous market to make any long term
investments in today.

Click
here to view larger chart
The next part
of the chart shows commodities, real estate, and interest rate
products.

Part IV:
Our Four Star Inflation-Deflation Model
Once again,
we are in a credit contraction mode, so it is not the inflationary
bear market I once thought we were going to get six or seven years
ago. But I suspect that
we�ll be in one by the end of 2009.
Gold is certainly suggesting that.
The entire
world is experiencing a credit contraction.
We�re in a second stage deflation, which typically is
supported by governments and ends when the governments fail.
�
Governments across the
world are trying to reduce the possibility of deflation with near
zero interest rate policies. And
budget deficits are skyrocketing as a result of this policy.
�
Economic
recessions/depressions will get worse.
This worsening will cut into tax revenues and that will lead
to debt defaults. And,
by the way, these defaults come with no warnings.
The next thing that will happen will be the breaking of
the last bubble�debt instruments.
So with that
in mind, let�s now look at our measure of inflation/deflation.
Date
|
CRB/CCI
|
XLB
|
Gold
|
XLF
|
Dec-05
|
347.89
|
30.28
|
513
|
31.67
|
Dec-06
|
394.89
|
34.84
|
635.5
|
36.74
|
Dec-07
|
476.08
|
41.7
|
833.3
|
28.9
|
Dec
08
|
252.06
|
22.74
|
865.00
|
12.52
|
June
08
|
595.98
|
41.64
|
930.25
|
29.12
|
July
08
|
548.86
|
39.75
|
918.00
|
21.63
|
Aug
08
|
516.47
|
40.38
|
833.00
|
21.42
|
Sep
08
|
452.42
|
33.40
|
884.50
|
19.89
|
Oct
08
|
369.56
|
25.92
|
730.75
|
15.53
|
Nov
08
|
361.74
|
23.05
|
814.50
|
12.66
|
Dec
08
|
352.06
|
22.74
|
865.00
|
12.52
|
Jan
09
|
364.50
|
21.06
|
919.50
|
9.24
|
Feb
09
|
352.45
|
19.22
|
952.00
|
7.56
|
We�ll
now look at the two-month and six-month changes during the last six
months to see what our readings have been.
The CRB is now reaching levels not seen since 2005.
Date
|
CRB
2
|
CRB 6
|
XLB2
|
XLB6
|
Gold2
|
Gold6
|
XLF2
|
XLF6
|
Total Score
|
|
Higher
|
Lower
|
Lower
|
Lower
|
Higher
|
Higher
|
Lower
|
Lower
|
|
|
Feb
|
|
-1/2
|
|
-1
|
|
+1
|
|
+1
|
+1/2
|
|
Notice
that our model has now moved back to slight inflation.
This is a continuation of the weakening of deflation over the
last few months.
Gold is nowhere near its all-time high (inflation adjusted), which
occurred on January 21, 1980 at $850 (kitco London PM fix).
If that is adjusted for real inflation, based on the shadow
stat�s data, gold would have to reach $6,650.
Silver�s all-time high also occurred in January 1980 at
$49.45. Adjusted for
inflation it would have to reach $387 to hit a new high.
And does Warren Buffett still own 20% of the world�s
silver, purchased at about $4/oz?
Part
V: Tracking the Dollar
The dollar is continuing its uptrend because of deleveraging.
Month
|
Dollar
Index
|
Dec
00
|
104.65
|
Dec
01
|
109.51
|
Dec
02
|
101.48
|
Dec
03
|
86.21
|
Dec
04
|
80.10
|
Dec
05
|
85.65
|
Dec
06
|
80.89
|
Dec
07
|
73.69
|
Dec
08
|
80.69
|
|
|
Jul
08
|
70.91
|
Aug
08
|
74.09
|
Sep
08
|
75.51
|
Oct
08
|
80.39
|
Nov
08
|
82.74
|
Dec
08
|
80.69
|
Jan
09
|
81.01
|
Feb
09
|
83.11
|
The
dollar has been in an uptrend since July.
China has requested that the U.S. avoid sinking the value of
the dollar. They are threatening to stop buying our debt if we
don't, but why
would they anyway?
Incidentally,
gold�s performance is excellent when you measure it in most other
currencies besides U.S. dollars.
General
Comments
John
Williams (of ShadowStats.com) says that our problems in this recession/depression are
structural. What does
that mean? First, due to
trade agreements with other countries, there has been a massive loss
of U.S. jobs, including a loss of 3.6 million jobs in 2008.
Second,
we�ve allowed our manufacturing base to disappear.
As a result of these two factors, household income is down
14% from its 1972 highs�despite now having multiple bread winners
in the same household. And
this is based upon the U.S. government�s data on inflation, not
real inflation.
When
the U.S. dollar was decoupled from gold in 1971, the U.S. debt
ceiling was $430 billion. And
I remember thinking that was a lot.
Today that ceiling is now $12.1 trillion.
What
can we predict?
�
Probably
double digit inflation by the end of the year and this might be
based upon government statistics, not real inflation.
�
A massive
sell-off of the U.S. dollar. This
might take several years to start, but it will start.
�
A debt
bubble collapse when interest rates go up.
For example, between Dec 30, 2008 and Feb 9th,
2009, the 10 year bond went from yielding 2.05% to 3%.
Thus, if you owned a portfolio of those bonds worth about a
million dollars on Dec 30th,
by Feb 9th, that portfolio would have gone down to
about $540,000. That�s
a tremendous fluctuation for just a six week period.
Crisis
always implies opportunity. And
if you watch, there is plenty of it.
Right now, unless you are a very nimble trader, I�d
recommend that you stand aside in cash.
Perhaps you might want to own some physical gold, such as
coins, but pay no more than 3% over the spot price of gold for
coins. And wait
patiently for the tremendous opportunities that will occur.
I
am leaving on a cruise in late March.
I�ll be on a ship sailing up the South American coast.
If I have internet access, you�ll get an update for March.
Otherwise, we will be skipping the March update.
Until then, this is Van Tharp.
About
Van Tharp: Trading coach, and author, Dr. Van K. Tharp is widely
recognized for his best-selling book Trade Your Way to Financial
Freedom and his outstanding Peak Performance Home Study program
- a highly regarded classic that is suitable for all levels of
traders and investors. You can learn more about Van Tharp at www.iitm.com.
|