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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Pitera who wrote (5347)12/26/2001 1:21:04 PM
From: Logain Ablar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
the bpcompq is also approaching 50 (i think bull alert fwiw). I've been waiting for a pull back for over a month.



To: John Pitera who wrote (5347)12/27/2001 5:58:06 PM
From: All Mtn Ski  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33421
 
The government to the rescue!

Reports: Japan PM to Bail Out Banks
Reports: Japan's Prime Minister Plans to Inject Public Funds Into Banks to Avoid Crisis
TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's prime minister will announce plans early next year to inject public funds into the nation's ailing banks to help prevent a financial crisis, Japanese media reported Friday.

Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi described the nation's economic condition as ``very serious'' and promised measures to head off a crisis that could come as early as February or March, the national daily Asahi newspaper reported, quoting Liberal Democratic Party Secretary General Taku Yamasaki.

Koizumi, in a meeting with Yamasaki and top government spokesman Yasuo Fukuda late Thursday, said he would lay out a concrete vision for Japan's economic revival early in the new year, national broadcaster NHK said.

The world's second-largest economy has fallen into recession for the third time in a decade, unemployment stands at a record 5.4 percent and banks are saddled with massive bad debts.

Koizumi also promised to keep the economy from falling into a deflationary spiral, said the Yomiuri newspaper, Japan's largest daily.

Deflation -- or decreasing prices -- erodes corporate profits and has been blamed for pushing many Japanese companies to insolvency.

biz.yahoo.com



To: John Pitera who wrote (5347)12/27/2001 7:02:56 PM
From: Jorj X Mckie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
P&F suggesting a continuing strong USD
(though i wouldn't be surprised at a little pullback around here)

stockcharts.com

121.50 | | + | | 121.50
121.00 | | X + | | 121.00
120.50 | | X O + | | 120.50
120.00 | | X X O + | | 120.00
119.50 | | X O X 7 O + | | 119.50
119.00 | + | 6 O X O X O + | | 119.00
118.50 | O X + | X O X O X O + | | 118.50
118.00 | O X O +| X O O O + X | | 118.00
117.50 | O X O |+ 4 X X O X |High| 117.50<
117.00 | O X O | + X O X O X O X X | | 117.00
116.50 | O X X O | + X O X O X + O X O X | | 116.50
116.00 | O X O X O | + X O X O 5 X + 8 X X X O X |Avg | 116.00
115.50 | O X O X O | + X X O X O X O X + O 9 O X O X O X | | 115.50
115.00 | B X O O X| + X O X O O X O X + O X O X O X C X | | 115.00
114.50 | O X C X|O + X O X O X O + O X O X O X O | | 114.50
114.00 | O O X|O + X O O + + O X O X B |Low | 114.00
113.50 | O X|O X + X + O X O A + | | 113.50
113.00 | O |O X O X + O X O X + | | 113.00
112.50 | |O X X O X + O O X + | | 112.50
112.00 | |O X X O X O X + O X + | | 112.00
111.50 | +|O X O X O X O X + O + | | 111.50
111.00 | + |O X X O X O 3 + + | | 111.00
110.50 | + |O X O X O X + | | 110.50
110.00 | + |O X O X O X | | 110.00
109.50 | + |O X O 2 | | 109.50
109.00 | + |O X | | 109.00
108.50 | |1 | | 108.50
108.00 | | | | 108.00



To: John Pitera who wrote (5347)12/30/2001 6:26:36 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 33421
 
NYT -- Recession, Then a Boom ? Maybe Not This Time.

December 30, 2001

Recession, Then a Boom? Maybe Not This Time

By DAVID LEONHARDT

In decades past, the next step for an
American economy in recession would be
clear. It would boom.

People would start spending again, and
companies would quickly increase production,
creating hundreds of thousands of jobs and
fattening paychecks. In a quickly widening
spiral, these developments would lead to even
more spending.

But the rules for recoveries may well be
different today — not because of Sept. 11, but
because of fundamental changes in the
economy. Even after a year-end flurry of good
news on home sales, consumer confidence and
jobless claims, the recovery likely to start in
2002 could be far weaker than those in other
years that have followed downturns.

A limited rebound would have a broad impact
on the way people live and businesses
function, whether because unemployment
stays high, corporate earnings continue to be
sluggish or the stock market is slow to
rebound. It could also shape much of the
political debate leading into the midterm
Congressional elections.

The most basic change is that recessions are
less common today than they were in the
1950's, 60's and 70's. The service sector,
which is less prone to volatile swings than the
manufacturing sector, has grown rapidly, and
the Federal Reserve appears more adept at
managing the economy.

But when downturns are infrequent — roughly
once a decade, rather than twice — the
often-overlooked price is that the ensuing
recoveries are neither sharp nor simple.
"Because we get smaller downs," said Van
Jolissaint, the corporate economist at
DaimlerChrysler (news/quote), "we also get
smaller ups."

The last three decades have included the long
downturn of the mid-1970's, the double- dip
recession of the early 80's and the short recession and weak recovery of the
early 90's. Only severe downturns, like the second one in the early 80's, have
produced rebounds as robust as those of earlier decades.

Not since 1970 has a strong recovery followed a brief recession — and it is just
such a sequence that would be necessary for the coming year to be a prosperous
one.

Since 1980, the nation's number of jobs rose just 3 percent, on average, in the
two years after a recession. From the 1950's through the 70's, the average
increase was 7 percent.

In the old days, the American economy would slow to a crawl whenever
consumers and companies decided they could squeeze a bit more life out of
products and machines they already owned. When people began shopping again,
factories cranked up quickly to meet the demand.

Today, technology allows factory stockpiles, and the spending swings they
create, to be smaller. Service businesses, which need smaller inventories, make
up a bigger share of the economy. And many tasks once done by the federal
government have moved to the states, which often cut budgets just as a recovery
begins.


The trade-off is a good one over all, most economists say. A more stable
economy allows companies and households to plan better for the future, making
them more efficient. And volatility brings economic pain by making people
constantly anxious about losing their jobs.

Of course, arguments still rage about just how small the next upswing will be,
but the terms of the debate reflect the new realities.

Even Wall Street forecasters, who regularly err on the side of optimism, do not
expect the coming year to resemble the recoveries of decades past. Most predict
that the economy will accelerate only gradually. Its best performance will be in
the year's final quarter, when it will grow 3.9 percent, at an inflation-adjusted
annual rate, according to an average of dozens of forecasts compiled by Blue
Chip Economic Indicators, a newsletter.

In past decades, although the economy did not seem as strong as it is today,
growth often reached 8 percent and higher in the wake of even mild recessions.

The two different messages coming from the Fed recently highlight the contrast.
Alan Greenspan, the Fed chairman, has continued to trumpet corporate America's
adoption of new technologies, which he says have increased productivity and will
lift the long-term growth rate. Other Fed officials share that opinion, but many
have also said recently that they expect the recovery to be slow.

Indeed, the slow recovery of the early 90's, rather than seeming to be an
aberration, has become the reference point for the argument now confronting
economists.

On one side of the debate is the cash crowd — those who believe that the
trillions of dollars recently injected into the economy will cause demand to surge
soon for everything from clothing to workers. Pointing to the Fed's many
interest-rate cuts, the tax cut of last summer and gasoline prices that remain
lower than they were 5, 10 or 20 years ago, the cash crowd says the economy
will do better in the next few years than it did in the early 90's.

"The economy is awash in a sea of liquidity," said David Littmann, the chief
economist at Comerica Bank in Detroit, who counts himself an optimist. He is
joined by many investors and, based on their public statements, Bush
administration officials.

"People aren't comfortable with an unusual amount of cash, and the economy
will be jump-started by the liquidity," Mr. Littmann said.

On the other side is the overhang crowd — those who say that all that money
will not be enough to counter the structural imbalances in the economy. These
worriers say that many businesses still have more equipment than they can use
profitably and that consumers, who cut spending far less this year than in
previous downturns and still have high debt levels, may not raise their spending
much in coming months.

"This is a major, long-term balance-sheet adjustment that is long overdue," said
David A. Levy, chairman of the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center in Mount Kisco,
N.Y. His concerns are shared by academic economists who rely on history as a
predictor and by many executives, whose profits continue to fall amid sluggish
sales and stagnant prices.

You cannot store a haircut. That fact goes a long way toward explaining why the
nature of the business cycle appears to have changed.

When an economy slows, and households and companies start to reduce their
spending, they often cut back most on manufactured goods. A family gets by
with a creaky washing machine for a year more than it had planned. A business,
expecting future sales to be slow, uses up the goods sitting in its warehouse.

Many services are harder to do without. Consumers cannot keep extra plumbers'
visits on hand or postpone spending on child care. College tuition, doctor bills
and car repairs cannot be put off.

On the other hand, when good times seem to return, people do not get a few
haircuts at a time. They might buy a new television, however, or, if they run a
company, decide to build a factory.

The implications for the economy are obvious: The service sector does not
shrink, or grow, as fast as the manufacturing sector. And the service sector now
accounts for about 80 percent of all jobs in the United States, up from 60 percent
in 1960, as a result of the country's higher wealth and the move of
manufacturing jobs to other countries.

The manufacturers that have remained in the United States, and the retailers
selling their and others' products, have also been able to decrease the size of their
own stockpiles. Many — most famously Wal- Mart — have used enormous
computer databases to match inventory and sales levels more accurately.

The technology industry itself plays a role. Its products last a shorter time than,
say, a car, and its factories need less time to build up or wind down. "It's just a
much shorter production cycle," said Robert Gordon, an economist at
Northwestern University. "We will get an inventory bounce-back in 2002, but
technology has less of an inventory cycle."

Even during the most optimistic days of the late 1990's, overall inventory levels
remained about 10 percent lower than they did during the 1980's, relative to
sales, according to Economy.com, a consulting firm in West Chester, Pa.

"By tying everyone together, technology has given everyone the same information
at the same time," said William S. Stavropoulos, the chairman of Dow Chemical
(news/quote). "You're not always looking back, saying, `I wish I did this.' "

That lack of regret means that fewer companies are drastically increasing or
cutting production in an effort to catch up with a trend they think they might be
missing. As a result, economists say, the economy makes fewer sharp turns.

The thinning of inventories can still cause economic pain, as it has this year,
when companies reduced their stockpiles by $55 billion, erasing a similar buildup
in 2000, according to Goldman, Sachs. But given the size of the boom, analysts
say the swing would have been even bigger in the past and might have produced
a bigger rebound, too.


As it is, the rebuilding of inventories will add to economic growth next year,
forecasters say, but it will probably have to swim against the tide of lower state
and local government spending.

As the federal government has shrunk over the last decade, states have become
responsible for a larger portion of public spending. Unlike Congress, which can
approve deficit spending to soften a recession's impact, most state legislatures
are required by their constitutions not to spend more than they take in. Because
tax receipts have fallen in the recession, many states will cut programs and
employees next year.

"The states are not in the business of supporting the economy," said Peter Temin,
an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "They are in the
business of balancing their budgets."

Add it all up, and the consensus forecast is for less economic growth in 2002
than in any year of the decade-long expansion, according to Blue Chip Economic
Indicators.

As much of a change as that would be from recoveries of some recent decades,
it would not be entirely new. From the Civil War to World War II, huge increases
in investment — in housing, railroads and other infrastructure — were often
followed by busts or uneven recoveries. Today, some economists believe that a
slow recovery is just what the country needs to return to healthy growth down
the line.

"The best thing is actually to go through a process where you're going to have
some sluggish growth, working off these imbalances," said Mr. Levy of the
forecasting center. "The worst thing that could happen is if we somehow got
another boom going now."

Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company



To: John Pitera who wrote (5347)1/2/2002 10:35:46 AM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33421
 
I would like your take on this when you have a moment, I'm having a tough time making sense of it....A bond "crash" and it goes pretty much unreported? <g>

Hope you had a Happy Holiday...

Bond Crash Harbingers Severe Economic Crisis
Clif Droke
The Bear Market Report
January 1, 2002

The recent sell-off in the U.S. government bond market provides an early warning that a crisis of far greater magnitude will befall investors in 2002. More than anything else, the recent severe decline in bond prices and the long-term drop in interest rates proves beyond a doubt that the U.S. economy is undergoing a severe deflation and should sufficiently dispel any argument that inflation will soon rear its head.

The steep decline in March bond futures is only the beginning for what should be a very bad year for bond investors as the cycles and chart patterns all suggest falling prices throughout 2002. But the crashing bond market will influence far more than just bond investors' portfolios; the sell-off in Treasuries represents thebeginning of a massive, large-scale repudiation of U.S. government debt that will have an impact on the entire country. Moreover, the collapsing bond market suggests that the very foundation of the U.S. government is cracking and on the verge of imploding from the monstrous weight of its debts.

The long-term decline in U.S. interest rates and the recent drop in bond prices is as instructive as it is premonitory. There is no greater instrument for measuring economic inflation and deflation than the interest rate. Even gold itself for all of its latent qualities and intrinsic value cannot measure deflation and inflation quite so accurately as the interest rate, especially considering gold's tendency to go against the general current during hyper-deflation and explode in value. An extremely low rate of interest essentially proves that deflation has been underway for some time, for it reflects the falling demand for loans in the face of a shrinking money supply.

Properly defined, the interest rate is the cost of borrowing money. But more than that, the rate of interest reflects the demand for borrowing money. A low rate of interest is a product of low demand for borrowing money; a high rate of interest reflects high demand for loans. "But," someone protests, "would not a high interest rate, such as the double-digit rates the U.S. experienced in the late '70s, deter many from contracting debt obligations?" Answer: Not if the rate of inflation keeps ahead of the rate of interest, as it did during the latter half of the 1970s.

During the late '70s it was financially prudent to make investments on borrowed money as the money supply was being inflated at a rapid pace and money was easily available. Loans could be paid off with cheap dollars and many fortunes were made during this time of inflation by borrowing money and paying off those loans with debased dollars.

Today an opposite condition exists to that of two decades ago. For now we are the opposite end of the K-wave spectrum where deflationary pressures dominate and the money supply is rapidly drying up. This is shown in overall tendency toward falling prices and interest rates. As the used car salesman must lower prices on automobiles in order to attract buyers in a slow market, so too must banks lower rates of interest in order to "sell" loans to businessmen and consumers. Deflation produces falling prices, rents and rates, and this is a phenomenon that we must get accustomed to in the months and years ahead. To get a true sense of the extent of inflation or deflation in a broad economy we must repair to the bond market and survey the going rates of interest on debts. Consider the following current rates on U.S. Treasuries: 3-month, 1.6%; 6-month, 1.71%; 2-year, 3.06%; 5-year, 4.34%; 10-year, 5.04%; 30-year, 5.48%. When was the last time you saw interest rates this low? These rates positively scream "Deflation!"

One prominent financial analyst has suggested that the coming years of severe deflation will produce extremely high interest rates on most government bonds. To argue this, however, would completely nullify any claim that deflation could exist, for as we have already established, a very low rate of interest can only occur in an economy where the money supply is shrinking (viz., deflation) and where the demand for taking on debt obligations is correspondingly low. After all, even with attractively low rates of interest, who would be foolish enough to go into debt at a time of general depression when the odds of being able to repay the principle on the loan are low.

Some point out that the past four years have been times of unprecedented inflation with respect to credit, and this is true. There is a distinction, of course, between money and credit and while the general money supply has been contracting on a rate of change basis for several years, the availability of consumer credit in recent years has virtually exploded. This accounts for the "abnormally high" interest rates on credit cards in recent years.

While the bank rate of interest has fluctuated in the low single digits in the past four years, interest rates on most bank credit card has been as high as 18%! Some have suggested that this is a form of usury on the part of banks issuing the cards, and while this may be true in some respects, it reflects more than anything else the vociferous demand for consumer credit in recent years. In short, the high interest rate on credit cards has been a response to high demand and not, as some suppose, a purely arbitrary number concocted in the minds of the bankers issuing the loans. But even rates on credit cards are rapidly falling as consumers lose interest in borrowing money and are intent on trying to get out of debt. Banks seem to be bending over backwards with appeals to suddenly debt-conscious consumers to resume the frenzied installment buying of the late 1990s. But as we shall see, those heady days of unlimited installment buying are forever over. One observer has made the following comments, which summarize very well the current thinking on Wall Street concerning the bond market, "Treasury bond futures just had one of the biggest one-month collapses in United States history. Bonds should be going up when rates drop, not down. That could be major foreign selling of all U.S. Dollar-denominated assets but whatever it is, it is not good for stock prices. If bonds must be liquidated at any price then stocks will be next." This comment underscores a common belief within the financial community that there is a inverse correlation, or a "coupling," between bond prices and inflation rates. But in reality no such correlation exists, only a seeming one.

There is nothing quite so fearful as a bond market collapse because of what it implies. As fearful a specter as a crashing stock market presents, it simply does not compare with the utter ruin brought about by a debt market implosion. When stock prices collapse, as they did in the early 1930s, there is always the hope that the country will survive the ensuing business depression and emerge prosperous once again in time, provided that the government remains sound. But when a country's bonds collapse it means the government itself is unsound and bond holders no longer view with trust and confidence the government's guarantee to pay back their principal with interest. A bond market sell-off is essentially a repudiation of a Government's debt by the debt holders themselves.

Gold will perform extraordinarily well in the deflationary years ahead. In fact, even as stocks, bonds, currencies and most commodities are falling victim to deflation, gold will be practically the sole beneficiary of runaway deflation as gold prices will begin to take off this year. Gold will soar as we near the K-wave deflationary bottom in the middle of the decade. Franklin Sanders of "The Moneychanger" newsletter correctly points out that "Gold and Silver are not commodities like all other commodities. They are money by their nature. However vociferously tyrants and inflationists may scream that gold and silver have been "officially demonetized," their monetary essence remains." He goes on to point out the discoveries made by Roy Jastram in his books "The Gold Constant" and "Silver the Restless Metal" that gold and silver both tend to appreciate in value during times of extreme deflation much more so than in times of extreme inflation. For instance, Jastram demonstrates that in Great Britain at various times over a 200-year period between 1658-1933, when times of economic deflation prevailed, the purchasing power of gold rose by an average of 94.2%. During the deflation of 1920-1933, the purchasing power of gold rose by an astonishing 251%. During the present unprecedented deflation gold should perform even more admirably. For at no other time in U.S. history has a 55-year K-Wave peaked along with a 120-year economic "Master Cycle," thus falling hard simultaneously in the later portion of the present decade.

The ideal financial safe haven this time around, far from being the bond market, is the yellow metal.

Clif Droke
January 1, 2002

Clif Droke is the editor of the weekly Bear Market Report, a combined forecast and analysis of U.S. stocks and indices and international precious metals stocks, and is the author of numerous books on trading and technical analysis (most recently Gann Simplified, published by Traders Library).



To: John Pitera who wrote (5347)1/2/2002 5:07:27 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33421
 
3 incorrect its / it's in a single post ... and you will get a response from me !

it's means : it is (or -- it has)

it's is not used to imply the possession of "it"

its implies the possession of "it"

Jon.