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Friday, 9/20, Market WrapUp (Granddaddy of Derivatives in Trouble)
Financial Sense Online ^ | 9/20/2002 | James J. Puplava

Posted on 09/20/2002 5:55:07 PM PDT by rohry

 
Weekday Commentary from Jim Puplava
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Nyquist Column 9/17
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Part 11 This Weekend
STORM WATCH UPDATE
Bubble Troubles
by Jim Puplava

 Friday Market Scoreboard
 September 20, 2002

 Dow Industrials 43.63 7986.02
 Dow Utilities 3.95 213.30
 Dow Transports 25.15 2184.02
 S & P 500 2.07 845.39
 Nasdaq 4.64 1221.09
 US Dollar to Yen 123.44
 US Dollar to Euro

.9819

 Gold 0.7 323.20
 Silver 0.01 4.650
 Oil 0.10 29.84
 CRB Index 1.58 226.87
 Natural Gas

0.1 3.758
09/20 09/19

Change

  HUI (Amex Gold Bugs Index)

Close
YTD
131.82 134.13 2.80
102.17%
52week High 147.82

06/03/2002

52week Low 59.86

11/26/2001

  XAU (Philadelphia Gold & Silver)

Close
YTD
75.38

75.83

0.45
38.48%
52week High 88.65

05/28/2002

52week Low 49.23

11/19/2001

All market indexes


 Market WrapUp for the Week 
Monday  l  Tuesday  l  Wednesday  l  Thursday  l  Friday

The Week in Graphs Storm Watch Geopolitical News Energy Resource Page Precious Metals Raw Materials


Friday, September 20, 2002 Market WrapUp

Rough Road of Recession Relapse
The slow painful process of adjustment has just begun. For so much of this year, many investors have held on to their stocks in the hopes that Wall Street predictions for a second-half recovery would come true. Instead of recovery, it now looks like we will see a relapse into recession. In the stock market, investors have had to suffer through a third year of losses. Instead of a bull market correction, they have had to endure the full force of a bear market that is about to enter its second deadliest phase. Since the bear market’s inception, the Dow has lost 32%. The Dow finished this week with a loss of 3.9%, bringing its year-to-date losses to over 20%. The S&P 500, down 45% from its peak, lost 5% this week. The index is down over 26% this year. The NASDAQ, which has now lost 76% from its March 2000 peak, gave back 5.5% this week. Its losses for the year are now over 37%.

3 Year Charts for Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite
Sometimes we have to look back (3 years) to look forward.

  

The markets have been pricing in a second half recovery that now looks like an illusion. For three years now, individual investors have held on while insiders and professionals have bailed out of stocks or have gone short. Wall Street has predicted a second half recovery for three consecutive years. These forecasts have all fallen short of their targets with the economy and the stock market traveling in opposite directions. This makes the current stock market extremely vulnerable due to present valuations. Current P/E multiples are 2-3 times historical averages. And you can forget all of the balderdash of a new era; there never was one, nor is there one on the immediate horizon. Dividend yields of less than 2% on the S&P 500 and a P/E multiple of around 30 indicate that this bear market has a long way to go on the downside before any meaningful rally can occur. The situation is not quite as bad for the Dow, which is double historical norms, and only offers a dividend yield of 2.34%. Companies are still sitting on hundreds of billions of impaired assets as a result of the merger and acquisition binge of the 90’s. There will be more writedowns coming over the next few quarters. In fact, it may take another few years before companies clean up their balance sheets. The highly-leveraged companies won’t survive and those that do will need years to repair all the damages of the 90’s excesses.

Granddaddy of Derivatives in Trouble
In the foreseeable future, the markets will be dealing with the unwinding of the credit bubble. The downgrade of JP Morgan Chase raises the issue of systemic risk in the financial system. Even more important for the financial system is that this giant hedge fund, which poses as a bank, is the Granddaddy of the derivatives market. JPM’s credit downgrade raises the issue of counterparty risk. Morgan plays a sizable role as a counterparty in the swaps market. In addition to its enormous derivative book of $25.9 trillion, JP Morgan now holds 52% of all derivative contracts within the banking industry and about 25% of all derivative contracts worldwide. Current estimates are that derivatives held by all financial institutions are in the $100-$110 trillion range.

This is one risky hedge fund that could implode and bring down the financial system. Another credit downgrade, or an explosion in the price of gold, could make Morgan a relic of the past. Morgan’s gold derivative book could be the Achilles heel of this blue shoe bank. JPM is a major bullion bank with a gold derivative book of $45.12 billion. Morgan holds over 60% of all gold derivatives within the banking system. It is believed that most of this gold derivative position is short gold. It may be one reason why authorities have become anxiety-prone each time the price of gold rises. Unlike paper contracts, gold can’t be printed. Morgan would be in big trouble if they had to deliver into those shorts. Gold deficits are running at an annual rate of 1,500 tonnes or more. Without gold leasing, and sales and suppression through paper gold derivative contracts, the price of bullion would be much higher.

Insurance Premiums on The Rise
An ominous sign now emerging within the financial sector is the rise in the price of insurance in the derivatives market. This week premiums rose to $30,000 from $20,000 to cover $10 million of Fannie Mae loans. That is up from $25,000 last week. For the troubled JP Morgan, premiums rose to $95,000 this week, up from $80,000 last week and $50,000 only three months ago. Both entities disavowed any problems despite the bleeding in most segments of its business. For Fannie, delinquencies are on the rise along with defaults. In the case of JPM, it is losing money on foreign loans, corporate loans, and its trading departments profits have plummeted. In the case of the GSEs, such as Fannie and Freddie, and in the case of JP Morgan Chase, these are big entities that are too big to fail. Taking a chapter out of the book from failed policies of Japan, maybe the Fed will start monetizing their assets and in the process become their largest shareholder.

Earnings Warnings Troublesome
Other stories surfacing this week were the spate of earnings warnings coming from the likes of McDonald’s, Oracle and EDS. Analysts keep lowering estimates for pro forma earnings each quarter and companies are still managing to miss their new, lower targets. These lower expectations for lower profits have yet to be fully priced into the stock market, which tells me that this bear market has more painful adjustments ahead of it. Nobody is buying the second-half recovery, nor are they falling for the “there will be growth in the winter” fourth quarter recovery story. Pro forma profits of 22% or more for the fourth quarter may take an act of God to deliver, and God seems to be pretty occupied these days with events around the world -- a coming war being one of them.

Energy Supplies Shrinking
Other issues on the radar screen this week were the tightening supply of oil and natural gas. Natural gas prices are up 70% from this same time last year. Industry analysts expect that even with a normal winter, prices will be heading higher. Any disruption of supply or increased demand as a result of a harsh winter could send the price of natural gas soaring and present the U.S. with its second energy crisis of the new century. California’s economy would be hit hard having skated through the last crisis by experiencing warmer weather. California’s Governor Grey Davis was clueless and paralyzed as to what to do in the last energy crisis, and got lucky with a cool summer weather and a warm winter. Davis now faces a reelection bid and won't have an Enron to shift the blame. He is probably saying Hail Marys, singing Ave Marias, and making acts of contrition in hopes that God will give California a winter reprieve before the elections.

In the natural gas markets on the supply-side, production is falling. Inventories are adequate to get the US through a normal winter, but not much more. Production of natural gas is expected to be down 6-10 percent in the second half of the year. Oil inventories were down again this week by 6.4 million barrels to 292 million barrels. Oil prices are still hovering at close to $30 a barrel. It now appears that war with Iraq is inevitable. The uncertainty of war and possible supply disruptions keep oil prices high. The rush to war is based on information that Saddam may be only months away from developing nuclear weapons. Once that happens, he graduates into the big leagues. Neither the US or any other major power have ever taken action against a nuclear power. This is one of the reasons why so many states are acquiring nuclear weapons. They are less costlier to build than conventional weapons and are much more effective in their ability to kill and destroy. The nuclear club keeps growing and Saddam wants to be included. The rush to war is to prevent the dictator from acquiring these weapons, which will give him the ability, in his mind, to do great things.

Not Too Promising Next Week
Next week, outside the issue of war, we should be in full swing into the Q3 earnings pre-announcement season. The news should be bad along with slowing reports on the economy. Until the economic news gets better and markets have adjusted to the new reality (meaning lower prices), it will be difficult to get a counter-trend rally going. The technical picture looks weak. The VIX and the VIN are rising which spells more volatility ahead, but not enough to start a rally. The VIX rose to above 50 on July 23rd, which gave a strong signal that fear levels were at an extreme. The VIX and the VIN closed Friday at 44.51 and 59.01 respectively.  When these two measures rise above 40 and 60, they suggest a trading bottom is near or that volatility is about to rise sharply.

This market still has a long way to go despite the losses from the beginning of this bear market. Chart formations, when viewed on a longer-term chart for most stocks, still look like their top formations are still in the process of breaking down. So what we continue to have is a weak technical picture followed by worsening fundamentals and pricey valuations. The worst of all of these is the widespread complacency by investors both amateur and professional. Mutual fund cash balances are in the low 4 percent range and John Q is still holding on preferring to play the part of an ostrich. I’m watching mutual fund outflows. This week $4.6 billion flew out the doors of mutual funds compared to inflows of $1.8 billion the previous week. It is amazing to think of all of the portfolios that have been cut in half in this unwinding bear market and John Q is still hanging in there. The worst is yet to come.

The next phase of the downturn is the white-knuckle phase that should shake the remaining apples off the trees. It will take some kind of event, of which there are numerous candidates to choose from, that may provide the final impetus. A war, a financial collapse, a derivative implosion of a hedge fund or major money center bank such as JP Morgan, or a terrorist attack, should do the job. Of course we still have Saddam who is capable of surprising us all. Add up all of the evidence and it isn’t hard to reach some very definite conclusions. At the risk of sounding repetitive, this bear market has a long ways to go. A long ways before the next countertrend rally, and a long, long way before the bear market exhausts itself and a new bull market emerges.

Overseas Markets
European stocks had their biggest weekly loss in nine weeks as economic reports showed a recovery is faltering. Insurers plunged as Swiss Life followed rivals and said it will raise money by selling shares. Today the Stoxx 50 rose 0.2% to 2387.82, although they dropped 6.5% this week and on Thursday closed at its lowest level since October 1997. Four out of the eight major European markets were up during today’s trading.

Asian stocks fell after U.S. home and job reports suggested that growth in the region's largest export market may be slowing. Kyocera Corp. and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. led the decline. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average lost 2% to 9481.08.

Treasury Markets
Long government bonds traded lower, with fixed-income securities again taking their cues from the stock market. The 10-year Treasury note slipped 1/32 to yield 3.78% while the 30-year government bond slid 21/32 to yield 4.745%.

Next week's calendar heats up, with leading indicators, consumer confidence, new and existing home sales, durable goods orders and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index due out. Additionally, the Fed will meet to decide on interest rates Tuesday.

© Copyright Jim Puplava, September 20, 2002



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial
KEYWORDS: economics; investing; stockmarket
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"This is one risky hedge fund that could implode and bring down the financial system. Another credit downgrade, or an explosion in the price of gold, could make Morgan a relic of the past. Morgan’s gold derivative book could be the Achilles heel of this blue shoe bank."
1 posted on 09/20/2002 5:55:08 PM PDT by rohry
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To: sinkspur; bvw; Tauzero; robnoel; kezekiel; ChadGore; Harley - Mississippi; Dukie; Matchett-PI; ...
Market WrapUp is delivered....
2 posted on 09/20/2002 5:56:57 PM PDT by rohry
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To: rohry
This week $4.6 billion flew out the doors of mutual funds

It is going to snowball. The mutuals will have to sell into an already weak market.

Richard W.

3 posted on 09/20/2002 6:14:00 PM PDT by arete
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To: AF_Blue
Ping!
4 posted on 09/20/2002 6:31:38 PM PDT by TruthNtegrity
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To: rohry
bump for later
5 posted on 09/20/2002 6:40:42 PM PDT by tsomer
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To: rohry
If we are going to worry, we should worry about the below as well.

money.cnn.com/2002/09/19/news/economy/imf_dollar.reut/index.htm

"IMF says U.S. dollar overvalued

Global lender says global trade imbalances have left the U.S. dollar overvalued, asks for reforms.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Global trade imbalances have left the U.S. dollar overvalued, are unsustainable and call for prompt reforms in the United States, Europe and Japan, a new International Monetary Fund report said.

"With the U.S. current account deficit remaining in the range of 4 percent of GDP, an historical record, there is continuing concern that the dollar may be overvalued," the IMF said in its semiannual World Economic Outlook, issued Wednesday.

But the risk to the global economy goes beyond the U.S. position alone. The report said the imbalances between nations with surpluses, notably the euro area and Japan, and deficit countries like the United States, have "risen to levels almost never seen in industrial countries in the post-war era."

Perhaps more worrying, the IMF research suggested the situation could worsen in the coming years and concluded that the existing imbalances were unlikely to be viable.

It also said the possibility of a disorderly correction cannot be ruled out -- something that could produce a sharp correction in exchange rates among major currencies and a steep decline in global economic activity..."

6 posted on 09/20/2002 6:49:38 PM PDT by shrinkermd
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To: rohry
Thanks Rohry.....

"the Achilles heel of this blue shoe bank." ...what the heck is a blue shoe bank?...is he referring to the bank's pedigree as in Morgans, Rockefellers and Park Ave?......I always heard it was blue stocking or silk stocking...also on the above derivatives chart what is the "notional amount"...does that mean the actual amount?....Warren Buffett referred to derivatives as sewage...from the chart it looks like the septic tank needs pumping out....

Good luck to everybody!! Stonewalls

7 posted on 09/20/2002 6:56:17 PM PDT by STONEWALLS
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To: rohry
Hi Rohry. Checking in after a long absence. Hope your vacation was enjoyable.

On WSW this evening, an fund manger with Swiss bank Julius Baer advised leaving equities - even international - saying the valuations are still too high.

George Soros on tape said many more participants must leave the market before it will have bottomed.

Check your FR mail, my FRiend


8 posted on 09/20/2002 7:09:27 PM PDT by Dukie
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To: rohry
John Q is still holding on

My friend has told me to stop sending him CSCO prices. He continues to buy on a payment plan and he will not sell. He won't sell no matter what. How many people like him are out there? How does this affect the aggregate market psychology? His "VIX" is zero, I can tell you that.

The price of CSCO will have to be cut in half and earnings will have to double to get the P/E down to 12. But on Yahoo it says earnings are predicted to more than double (0.25->0.57). That means the stock will have to fall to $7 to be considered cheap, assuming P/E of 12 is cheap.

My question is: if he and others like him never sell out, the market will never reach a bottom, nor will it rise, it will just languish forever while my friend keeps waiting for the long run. Is he just ruining it for the rest of us?

9 posted on 09/20/2002 7:31:06 PM PDT by palmer
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To: palmer
bump for later
10 posted on 09/20/2002 7:32:11 PM PDT by Unknown Freeper
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To: rohry
BTTT
11 posted on 09/20/2002 7:35:29 PM PDT by Gritty
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To: palmer
I would think that if there isn't enough money going in, people looking to make small profits per share on stocks will just keep taking money out, when stocks go up just a few pennies per share.
12 posted on 09/20/2002 7:37:05 PM PDT by grania
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To: grania
As an amateur trader I have done that. But now I am 100% cash. On the other hand my 401K still has money in stocks and now that I have just finished criticizing my friend, I am doing the same thing: just letting it sit there and lose value year after year.

Each time I consider bailing out I look at a few facts: (1) my 401 is heavily weighted to money market because I started with a conservative weighting. (2) I have watched the market slide a large percentage and it doesn't seem worth the time and effort to bail now.

So my question remains, how will the market bottom out if lazy people like me never sell?

13 posted on 09/20/2002 7:47:09 PM PDT by palmer
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To: shrinkermd
Perhaps more worrying, the IMF research suggested the situation could worsen in the coming years and concluded that the existing imbalances were unlikely to be viable.

Hmmm...that sounds like thats one more good reason to get yourself out of debt! At least thats the way I'm reading it.

14 posted on 09/20/2002 8:06:21 PM PDT by BureaucratusMaximus
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To: rohry
Without liquidity pumped in via tax cuts and fiscal prudence by the government, deflation ala Japan is perhaps unavoidable. But since these actions are not in the interests of the US congress, perhaps the dynamics of failure need to take their course. Unfortunately, those that will feel the pain are the innocent bystanders, such as those approaching retirement.
15 posted on 09/20/2002 8:24:08 PM PDT by lds23
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To: palmer
I heard a couple of days ago that Bush is considering a larger stock loss deduction on tax returns. It seems 75% of Americans have had losses in 401 Ks. There were a couple of other proposals but I don't remember what they were.
16 posted on 09/20/2002 8:47:14 PM PDT by tubebender
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To: tubebender
I heard a couple of days ago that Bush is considering a larger stock loss deduction on tax returns. It seems 75% of Americans have had losses in 401 Ks

Wouldn't a tax deduction only apply to losses outside of retirement plans, and only kick in if stocks were sold at a loss? I can't see how that would help those who lost value in 401Ks or other retirement plans.

17 posted on 09/20/2002 8:59:12 PM PDT by grania
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To: palmer
So my question remains, how will the market bottom out if lazy people like me never sell?

The price of the stock is the last price someone paid per share. So, if people were only willing to pay a really small amount of money for stocks, the value of your stock would keep going down while it sat there.

It's like anything else you own and might decide to sell. Shares of stock only translate to cash if someone is willing to buy them.

18 posted on 09/20/2002 9:05:26 PM PDT by grania
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To: palmer
Is he just ruining it for the rest of us?

Probably continuing to buy equities at this time isn't the most conservative thing to do. If someone wants to hold what he has already, even though stock certificates are down in the paper towel valuation range, fine, someday the companies that survive will come back. Whether your friend and others who think that way are delaying the final bottom or something like that, well, earnings reports have more effect.

19 posted on 09/20/2002 9:20:15 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: tubebender
Re #16

That would be another way of doing tax cut, I guess. But if the potential deduction is bigger than whatever current income you have, does IRS give you a tax refund to make up the difference ? Do you happen to know the details ?

20 posted on 09/20/2002 10:10:05 PM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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