Pages

5/29/09

Bob Prechter: Gold is Still Money

By Robert Prechter, CMT
The following article is excerpted from a brand-new eBook on gold and silver published by Robert Prechter, founder and CEO of the technical analysis and research firm Elliott Wave International. For the rest of this fascinating 40-page eBook, download it for free here.
Have you ever traveled abroad and taken a look at the local currency and wondered how the citizens of that country could take seriously what looks like “Monopoly money?” I’ve got news for you: You’re using the same stuff. Monopoly money is the money over which some government has a monopoly. It is the currency of the realm only because the state makes it illegal to use any other type.
Promissory notes issued by a state and declared the only legal tender are always doomed to depreciate to worthlessness because of the natural incentives and forces associated with governments. A state cannot resist a method of confiscating assets, particularly one that is hidden from the view of most voters and subjects. By extension, it is unreasonable to advocate a standard for such notes, which is simply a state’s promise that its currency will always be redeemable in a specific amount of something valuable, such as gold. A gold standard of this type is only as good as the political promises behind it, reducing its value to no more than that of paper. It could be argued, in fact, that a state-sponsored gold standard is far more dangerous than none at all, as it imbues citizens with a false sense of security. Their long range plans are thus built upon an unreliable promise that the monetary measuring unit will remain stable. Later, when the government’s “IOU-something specific” becomes, as Colonel E.C. Harwood put it, “IOU nothing in particular,” reliability disappears and the arbitrary reigns. Although the populace tends to retain its confidence in the currency for awhile thereafter, the ultimate result is chaos.
The only sound monetary system is a voluntary one. The free market always chooses the best possible form, or forms, of money. To date, the market’s choice throughout the centuries, wherever a free market for money has existed, has been and remains precious metal and currency redeemable in precious metal. This preference will undoubtedly remain until a better form of money is discovered and chosen. Until then, prices for goods and services should be denominated not in state fictions such as dollars or yen or francs, but in specific weights of today’s preferred monetary metal, i.e., in grams of gold. Anyone might issue promissory notes as currency, but the acceptance of such paper certificates would then be an individual decision, and risks of loss through imprudence or dishonesty would be borne by only a few individuals by their own conscious choice after considering the risks. Critical to the understanding of the wisdom of such a system is the knowledge that private issuers of paper against gold have every long run incentive to provide a sound product, just as do producers of any product. As a result, risks would be minimal, as the market would provide its own policing. Thievery and imprudence will not disappear among men, but at least such tendencies in a free market for money would not have the potential to be institutionalized, as they are when a state controls the currency. From a macroeconomic viewpoint, occasional losses resulting from dishonesty or imprudence would be extremely limited in scope, as opposed to the nationwide disasters that state controlled paper money has facilitated throughout history, which have in turn had global repercussions. As Elliott Wave Principle put it, “That paper is no substitute for gold as a store of value is probably another of nature’s laws.”
That being said, it is also true, and crucial to wise investing, that markets come in both “bull” and “bear” types. Being a “gold bug” at the wrong time can be very costly in currency terms. For nearly three decades, gold and silver’s dollar price trends have confounded the precious metals enthusiasts, who for the entire period have argued that soaring gold and silver prices were “just around the corner” because the Fed’s policies “guarantee runaway inflation.” Yet today, 29 years after the January 1980 peaks in these metals and despite consistent inflation throughout this time, their combined dollar value (weighting each metal equally) is still 40 percent less than it was then.
It is all well and good to despise fiat money, but it is hardly useful to sit in gold and silver as if no other opportunities exist. In contrast to the one-note approach, which has had an immense opportunity cost since 1980, competent market analysis can help you make many timely and profitable financial decisions in all markets, including gold and silver.
For more in-depth, historical analysis and long-term forecasts for precious metals, download Prechter’s FREE 40-page eBook on Gold and Silver.

Robert Prechter, Certified Market Technician, is the founder and CEO of Elliott Wave International author of Wall Street best-sellers Conquer the Crash and Elliott Wave Principle and editor of The Elliott Wave Theorist monthly market letter since 1979.

5/18/09

22% of homwoners are underwater (67% in Vegas are)

According to the Wall Street Journal, 22% of homeowners are underwater in their mortgages. Many home mortgages were entered into with little to nothing down over recent years. Many of these mortgages represent homes bought during the bubble on the anticipation that price appreciation would continue. "Real estate always goes up" was the mantra, and still is if you ask a lot of folks. As soon as we herd the first downtick in this market, I heard a popular debt reduction specialist on the radio, whom I admire for everything but his lack of prudent long term market timing, say "now is the time to buy". Sorry, buddy, but the time to buy will look much worse than things do now.

We were in the camp that preferred to stay out of what we believed was another asset bubble, and so far we are fairly happy with that decision. For a while this was a very socially uncomfortable position to be in. Many friends and acquaintances did not understand why we would be "throwing our money away" on rent. Everyone seemed to be in the real estate game. Now, we have seen the prudence pay off, but we still don't believe the end is near.

Certain factors led to the real estate bubble. First is social mood. Society went from searching for gains in a roaring stock market to searching for gains in a roaring real estate market. An ebullient social opinion led the herding masses from one asset class to the next. Creative finance was king, saving and living beneath means was for the unenlightened (trust me, I have a little quiver of skis and snowboards to prove I was not imune myself). Holding cash, or even real money (gold), was seen as foolish.

As it turns out, cash did better than the stock market over the past decade. Now the purging of misallocations and malinvestments in real estate will allow us to say the same thing regarding the homes market in the future. Of course gold did much better than all of the above, which brings us to the next culprit -funny money.

When we herd as a society, we use our neo-cortex to offer rationalization for our behavior. We even create sophisticated tools to work for us in our herding behaviors. So, if Social mood led to the creatively financed asset bubbles, what was the main tool deployed by society to create such a mess?

By removing the final ties to the gold standard in the 70s, the government made it easier for the Federal Reserve Bank print more unbacked (by any physical commodity) dollars. The Federal Reserve has been increasing the supply of money in order to fight back the eventual purging of inflated asset prices. When new money is created, without backing by a physical commodity such as gold or silver, then the money in your pocket is inherently worth less than before the new money was created. Creative finance begins to rule over simple savings, and we herd like sheep into popular assets to try and earn more than we are loosing. For a while, the assets gain so much value that new highs in prices begin to reinforce the idea that timing and traditional methods of valuation are not important. The particular asset in favor is now seen as always a sound investment. We start to hear purported the idea that prices of the favored security "always go up". In order to keep all of this going, we need more and more creative finance and more and more funny money. The Federal Reserve Bank was happy to oblige, and we, as a society, have been happy to go right along with its printing. Until now. The enivitable colapse of the house of cards, now made much larger had it not been for the funny money, has arrived.

Tom Woods, in his latest book: Meltdown, states: "...the supply of money was increased dramatically during those years, with more dollars being created between 2000 and 2007 than in the rest of the republic's history." That's quite a feat! Funny money creates moral hazards and incentives to ignore economic law.

Currently, the real estate market is trying to find the proper price for the commodity known as homes, but massive debt and massive increases in the funny money supply lead me to believe the floor is further away than the ceiling. I was taught to buy when prices are near, and sell when they are dear. Prices may be declining, but they are still dear in my view. Unlike liquid markets where we can get in an out easily, the real estate market can have you traped in your holdings for a long time as potential buyer disapear from the scene.

Tom Woods lists other culprits in his book, including: Fannie May and Freddie Mac, The Community Reinvestment Act and affirmative action in lending, The government's artificial stimulus to speculation, The "pro-ownership" tax code, and The "too Big to Fail" mentality. I suggest that book to everyone. Its easy to read and lays out the Austrian case very well. I referenced social mood too. For that, for socionomics, you will need to go here.

5/15/09

Austrian vs. Keynesian Economics -Ron Paul on Morning Joe



"The special privileges granted to Fannie and Freddie have distorted the housing market by allowing them to attract capital they could not attract under pure market conditions....Like all artificially created bubbles, the boom in housing prices cannot last forever. When housing prices fall, homeowners will experience difficulty as their equity is wiped out. Furthermore, the holders of the mortgage debt will also have a loss. These losses will be greater than they would have otherwise been had government policy not actively encouraged over-investment in housing." -Ron Paul, speaking to Congress in 2003 (that would be before the housing crash, people!).

"I'm just reciting what I've learned by studying free-market economics; and we haven't had free-market economics [as policy]. Now they're blaming capitalism for all of these problems and not enough regulation. We've had crony capitalism. We've had inflationism, corporatism, big government! No, we've not had true free-market capitalism." -Ron Paul

"What individual caused this problem? I would put it all on the shoulders of Keynes!"
-Ron Paul

Dr. Paul was on fire in this interview.

EWI's Independent Investor eBook - FREE

The old adage says, "you are what you eat," and today we're offering you a heaping portion of brain food.
At long last, the mainstream media is beginning to question buy-and-hold investing – it's a myth that EWI's original Independent Investor eBook debunked years ago. Even the "Efficient Market Hypothesis" has come under fire from the Oracle of Omaha himself – the Independent Investor long ago exposed EMH for the fantasy it is.
Now that the mainstream has finally caught up to these myths, the Independent Investor eBook can once again put you ahead of the herd; you can understand truths today that the mainstream will catch up to someday in the future.
You'll get the most groundbreaking and eye-opening reports ever published in Elliott Wave International's 30-year history, PLUS 6 brand-new chapters (43 new pages) of specific analysis, forecasts and commentary that will help you think independently in today's tumultuous market.
Tens of thousands read the first Independent Investor, but even many of them will miss out on the important new advice the new, greatly expanded eBook imparts. Put yourself ahead of the herd for years to come – get a copy of the new 118-page Independent Investor eBook today.

About the Publisher, Elliott Wave International
Founded in 1979 by Robert R. Prechter Jr., Elliott Wave International (EWI) is the world's largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

5/12/09

EWI free week starts tomorrow

Our friends at Elliott Wave International have just announced the beginning of their wildly popular FreeWeek event, where they've thrown open the doors to some of their most popular paid services to non-subscribers for one week only.
You can access EWI’s intraday and end-of-day Forex forecasts right now through next Wednesday, May 20.
This unique opportunity only lasts a short time, so don't delay!
About the Publisher, Elliott Wave International
Founded in 1979 by Robert R. Prechter Jr., Elliott Wave International (EWI) is the world's largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

5/11/09

Gov't is borrowing 46 cents for every dollar they spend

Source: AP

The government is following Keynesian economic theories that say we can spend our way out of a recession / depression. These theories have been proven incorrect in practice and in theory. Savings is what makes up the foundation for a robust economy, not debt and deficits; not even consumer spending. Consumer spending is a byproduct of a robust economy, not something to count on to make the economy robust. But it is government spending that is the most destructive in an economy, and this is why the Great Depression lasted for 15 years compared to the depression of 1921, that lasted only one year. The government refrained from these types of interventions during the 1921 downturn.

The previous administration had pushed the budget deficit to an all-time record, but according to the AP, this administration will break that all time high by a multiple of four!

5/10/09

S&P 500 Update 5/10/09

Bottom line: The S&P is in an intermediate term uptrend against a longer term downtrend.

While we were riding those profitable short positions last year and into this year, I mentioned the mother of all bear market rallies that would likely occur before we see the worst for what we think is a secular bear market. The stock market is in that bear market rally right now.

If you are just visiting us for the first time, then you can click on "S&P 500" under labels to see the other posts for this market. The summary is that we sold the market short in May of 2008. We closed those shorts in April of 2009, and went to a cash position. We then started looking at a possible short-term bearish wedge formation, while continuing to suggest that most players stay in cash until the next clear opportunity arises. We took a couple of swings at the short-term wedge formation, but were proven wrong when the market broke above the upper trend boundary of the wedge last week.

I still think that most investors should stay in cash while we look for the next good positioning opportunity, but there are some short-term opportunities for more aggressive traders right now too. Even those holding cash right now are served by actively and objectively tracking the price trend This will help in being prepared and ready when the signal to reenter occurs.

Its always good to start from a broader degree of trend than the one your are using for your positioning in order to find the primary trend, and then work down to whatever time frame you prefer for your trading / investing activities.

Please note that all charts can be expanded by clicking on them.

Using a simple and pure trendfollowing methodology, we can put 13 and 40 week moving averages over a weekly bar chart and see that the market is technically still in a downtrend. In other words, the faster 13 week moving average is below the slower 40 week moving average. This represents the primary trend. Given that the primary trend is down, a trend following trader or investor using the intermediate or secondary trend would ignore trading signals to the upside and only take signals to sell the market short.




The chart above is daily bar chart, and therefore represents the intermediate or secondary price trend. On this chart we see four moving averages; the 200, 50, 20 and 10 day averages. The 10 and 20 represent the intermediate term trend, while the 200 day and 50 day are another way to look at the long term trend.

Clearly, the faster 10day MA is above the slower 20day MA, therefore the S&P is objectively in an intermediate term uptrend.

Any market analysis is incomplete and even incompetent if it excludes objective indication of what would result in its conclusions being incorrect. This is the market after all, and its job is to fool us. The intermediate term trend will no longer be pointed up if the 10day MA falls below the 20day MA.

Now that we have looked at things from purely a trend following approach, lets see what the Elliott Waves have to say about the current situation. Trend following keeps you in the right direction of the major trends. Trend following also tells you when to get out of an old trend or incorrect position, while Elliott Wave analysis helps those interested in doing so anticipate the actual areas where those trends are most likely to reverse. If you want to know how and why the Elliott Wave Principle can do this, and why it is the best way to truly understand the market, then read the book linked here.


After you have read the book linked above, you will know what the numerical and alphabetical labels mean in the chart above. Simply put, with specificity, rules and guidelines aside, the prevailing trend moves in a five wave structure, while the counter trends move in three wave corrective structures. This is due to the wiring in our Limbic System that causes herding behavior. These patterns happen in multiple time frames and fractal scales.

On the weekly chart above, the S&P 500 index has moved down in a very clear five wave structure. This means the trend at the degree represented is down. Next we see the beginnings of a movement against this downtrend. The counter trends that are made up of three wave structures are always labeled alphabetically. I have drawn lines showing what a basic corrective pattern would look like in the price trend. If correct, the S&P 500 is in wave (A) of [2] right now, following [2] would be a massive stock market decline that will be labeled [3] when complete. Wave [2] could last for months, given the length of time taken to complete wave [1] down.

Based on the Elliott model shown on the weekly chart above, we would be incorrect if prices broke below the current market lows of 666.79 (I know, weird place for the market to put in a low!). We can narrow the parameters down more than that though.


After prices broke above what I thought was a probable bearish wedge pattern, I had to go back to the drawing board and try to figure out what was going on at the intermediate to short term levels. The daily chart above shows my Elliott labeling as of this weekend that works to try and answer that question.

Before we get into that though, lets establish a trailing stop for any aggressive traders who are trading this pattern by going long the market right now. The red moving average on the chart above is a 20 day moving average of the lows. Most the moving averages you see me use are of the closing prices. Since we are trying to ride a trend here, and since we do not want to over analyze (analysis paralysis), but rather catch a wave and ride it, I try to come up with simple trend respective approaches even when using predictive methods like the Elliott Wave Principle. A moving average of the closing price of the last 20 bars would be to tight against price to avoid incorrect signals. Because we have already established that this is an intermediate term uptrend, a moving average of the last 20 days' lows provides for us a fairly tight trailing stop that still has room for even an aggressive trade to breath. Many charting packages allow you to build custom moving averages, but even a spreadsheet would work. Just change the average everyday to include the most recent intraday low price levels for the past 20 days, and there is your trailing stop. Think of it as surfing a market wave and forget what the most of the talking heads on business TV are saying. If prices break below the 20day MA OF THE LOWS, then we will be back to a cash position.

Now, that we know where our stop is, lets look a little closer at the very short term and the Elliott count within wave (A) of [2]. After counting the current waves using charts of various time frames, I was able to draw out the model shown above. This model has prices reaching towards the 1000 level before pulling back for wave (B) of [2]. If prices break below the trailing stop we have established before completing a structure similar to the model, then our first assumption will be that wave (B) of [2] is underway.

5/7/09

Outside Reversal Day in the S&P 500

After moving up to test two different resistance trend lines -one drawn against current highs and one drawn against previous pattern lows -the S&P 500 has registered an outside reversal day. This is potentially a short-term bearish pattern.

Outside reversal days are when the current daily bar's high and low range lies outside that of the previous daily bar, with a close both in the opposite direction of the trend and near the extreme of that end of the range. Outside reversals represent a price pattern signal rather than a true trend following type of signal. It simply raises the possibility that the current price trend is ending or correcting.

(click on charts for a larger view)

In all honesty, the signal would be better if the close was below the entire range of the previous day. but, we still have an outside range and a close fairly close to the low.

The pattern indication will be incorrect if: prices move back up above today's high of 929.58 before first producing a short-term downtrend.

We also want to watch the lower trend line of the proposed wedge pattern. Prices should break below that lower trend line if the current upwards trend is indeed entering into a significant short to intermediate-term correction.

Today's type of market pattern / signal works best and is most reliable when there are other factors pointing to the same conclusion. In this case, we have the price reaction at resistance trend lines. We also have a price pattern than can still be classified as a upwards wedge (usually bearish), and we have some momentum or velocity divergence that has been forming as shown by the MACD histogram in the above chart. In addition to all of this, we can look at volume on the Dow Jones Industrial index in the chart below to see that volume has indeed been significantly contracting during the recent uptrend.


Ultimately, the reality is that the intermediate-term trend in prices is currently up. While we must respect that, we also should look for signs the trend ending. Today's action offers one of those signs. The 10 day moving average is above the 20. The 20 day moving average is above the 50 day MA. Prices are also above the 50 day MA, but are below the 200 day. The 50 day MA is below the 200 day. In other words, we have been in a bear market rally. Investors who sold the market short along with us last year and then closed those positions earlier this year are probably best to stay neutral in cash right now. More assertive traders will obviously have additional opportunities to the long and short side, and hopefully posts like this one are helpful to those individuals as well.

Currently, I do not believe there is significant indication that the overall bear market rally is complete. As shown in previous posts, the most probable case based on Elliott Wave and long-term trend analysis is that we are still in a secular (years) bear market. Within that bear, we are currently in an intermediate term bull run. Within that bull run, there are indications of technical (i.e. supply and demand for the index itself) weakness.

48 hours left to get Free access to Global Market Analysis

There are only 48 hours left to get more than 100 pages of free analysis and forecasts on every major world market from Elliott Wave International.
EWI is giving away one month of its most popular global analysis publication, a 120-page "little black book" of investment insights called Global Market Perspective, which includes EWI's three regional publications:
  • The U.S. Elliott Wave Financial Forecast ($19/month value)
  • The European Elliott Wave Financial Forecast ($29/month value)
  • The Asian-Pacific Elliott Wave Financial Forecast ($31/month value)
PLUS, the 120-page book includes analysis culled straight from EWI's professional-grade Specialty Services, each of which is valued at $199/month. This means you also get analysis and forecasts for the following global markets:
  • World stock markets (China, Japan, Korea, U.S, France, Britain and more)
  • Global interest rates (Australia, Europe, Japan, U.S.)
  • International currency relationships (U.S. Dollar, Euro rates, Swiss Francs, Japanese Yen and more)
  • Metals and Energy (Crude Oil, Gold, Silver, Natural Gas)
  • And so much more!
It’s not too late to take advantage of this special offer! Act now before it expires Friday!
Learn how to get your free 120 pages of global analysis here

Disclaimer:

Please note that the information published on this site is not official trading or investing advice. This site is for entertainment purposes and discussion. At no time is this site or its author making specific recommendations for any specific person. At no time may a reader be justified in inferring that any such advice is intended. Investing carries risk of losses, including the possibility to lose more than initial margin funds.