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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2825)7/22/2002 11:05:02 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Dollar Seen Hitting Fresh Lows

July 21, 2002 05:05 PM ET

By Javier David

NEW YORK (Reuters) - With investors laying siege to U.S. equity markets, most analysts expect the dollar to yoke its fortunes to stocks -- all but guaranteeing the euro and yen will set new multiyear highs against a bedraggled greenback.

On Friday, the dollar stepped back from a new 2-1/2 year low against Europe's common currency EUR= and dangled less than half a yen from a 17-month low against the Japanese yen at 115.70 yen JPY= , defying a 4.64 percent tumble in the Dow Jones industrial average -- which blew past its post-Sept. 11 lows -- and a 2.79 percent sell-off in the Nasdaq.

Analysts, however, are of the opinion that Friday's price action is merely delaying the inevitable.

"I have a feeling (selling) will pick up again next week, unless there's a string of surprises on the positive side, which seems to be a low probability," said Eric Nickerson, chief currency strategist at Bank of America in New York.

"I honestly don't think we're going to see a turnaround in the dollar or equities until the end of the SEC's (Securities and Exchange Commission) deadline on Aug. 14 at the earliest, and perhaps more likely after third-quarter results start coming out in October," he added.

Corporate executives at major companies have until that date to swear to the accuracy of their companies' results, though some firms may not know until after then if the SEC has a problem with their annual reports.

The coming week is data-light, with only June U.S. durable goods orders and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment data to whet the market's appetites. But because traders these days are largely ignoring economic figures, head-spinning losses in major stock gauges will largely set the tone for currency markets.

Stocks fell prey to a brutal sell-off after news of a probe into drug giant Johnson & Johnson JNJ.N and a dour forecast from Sun Microsystems Inc. SUNW.O cut into what was already frayed investor sentiment.

EURO AT A CROSSROADS

In Asian trading, Europe's common currency shot above $1.02 on Friday -- its strongest since January 2001 -- but it fell off those peaks even as U.S. stock markets slid and the U.S. notched up a record trade imbalance in May.

The country's international trade deficit had unexpectedly widened to an all-time high of $37.64 billion in May, from a revised $36.14 billion in April. America's trade deficit with Europe hit a record high at $1.2 billion during the month.

"Since the deficit is financed by foreigners (through capital flows) and not by domestic investors, it's likely to keep the dollar weaker," as long as stocks remain under pressure, said Bank of America's Nickerson.

But with European bourses performing just as poorly -- if not worse -- than their American counterparts, some market participants are becoming increasingly leery of buying euros on the back of dollar weakness.

"European consumers are less exposed to the vagaries of the equity markets than are their U.S. brethren, but they are a long way from immune," said Anne Parker-Mills, senior economist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York. She pointed out that Italian consumer confidence fell to a three-year low in July.

In the United States, next week's consumer confidence data for July is expected to remain at its weakest in eight months, according to a Reuters poll, as stock market woes are seen dampening the market's belief in a U.S. economic rebound.

JAPAN -- WILL THEY OR WON'T THEY?

The currency market's wild card will come from Japan, which for weeks has refrained from intervening in markets in order to weaken the yen, whose strength threatens to choke off an export-led recovery.

Japanese officials have led markets to think the Ministry of Finance would intervene to weaken the yen near the 115-yen level. During Asian trade, Bank of Japan Governor Masaru Hayami told a news conference there were few reasons for the dollar to fall further, while Finance Minister Masajuro Shiokawa said he was concerned about rapid currency moves.

"At the 116 level, dollar/yen is dangerously close to the average break-even level for Japanese exporters," said Robert Sinche, currency strategist at Citibank.

"The MOF is likely to address recent yen strength once the uncertainty in the U.S. subsides after the required certification of corporate financial statements by Aug. 14," he said.

On Friday, the dollar closed at $1.0118 per euro, barely changed from the prior day's finish. Against the yen it ended at 115.79, down 0.61 percent.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2825)7/22/2002 11:28:02 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE

July 21, 2002

This year's October Surprise

davidcogswell.com

Is Blair really ready to sacrifice his political career to follow Bush into a war on Irag? Or is there another 'provocation' waiting in the wings?
Bush will take Tony Blair down with him in his desperate attempt to wage a "massive assault" against Iraq. The Guardian of London reports that "Whitehall sources confirmed that Tony Blair had decided Britain must back any US assault and had ordered defence planners to begin the preparations for a new war in the Gulf."
Blair is apparently going ahead with his plan to follow Bush though he is unsure of any way to legally justify the war to his countrymen. That could be a political problem for him in Britain where war hysteria is not quite as surefire a way to induce sheeplike obedience from politicians and citizens as it seems to be in the U.S. Blair could be determining his own political demise by following Bush's desperate attempt to get the flags waving again and divert attention from his corporate crimes and those of of his best friends, and his colossal incompetence to manage the affairs of government.

Whitehall sources are quoted as saying, "President Bush has already made up his mind. This is going to happen. It is a given. What we are waiting for is to be told the details of how and when and where." Britain is ready to commit 20,000-30,000 troops for Bush's war. Are the British ready for this kind of commitment? Will British mothers and fathers happily send their sons off to fight a war because George Bush has "made up his mind"? About what? What is this war about? Is it just something Bush has to work out with his father, who was so sensitive about "the wimp factor" that he thought he had beat with the Gulf War, but which was brought up again when he didn't "finish the job"?

Of course it's a play for global domination based on control of energy sources. But will the Brits buy it when Blair tries to sell it to them?

In the U.S., Bush is confident he can rally people behind him and sweep his right wing cronies into office with a war. There is so much bad news now about his presidency it will require something really huge to divert attention. Besides, war is all the Bushes really know about. Junior is a one-trick pony, and he's about to go into his act again.

A year ago the administration was planning to go to war against the Taliban. All it needed was a provocation. All it had to do to get that was to relax its defense systems until the inevitable attack came on September 11.

A year ago Bush's mismanagement of the economy was pushing him into a corner. His tax cut had essentially given the treasury to his rich corporate buddies and the resulting fiscal disaster was rapidly descending on the country. The destruction of Social Security that his secretary of the treasury Paul O'Neill had called for was already assured by the removal of its financial support. His so-called approval ratings were dropping steadily and fell below 50% by September. Things were looking abysmal for the administration. The Democratic party was sharpening its talons and closing in for the kill when Bush returned from his month-long vacation in August. Then came September 11.

This year is a mid-term election year, with control of Congress at stake. The domestic situation has further degenerated. The economy is in free fall. Corporate crime is exploding through of the walls like a massive termite infestation. Working Americans, who have been abused and cheated for decades, are now losing whatever support allowed them to look away from the problem in the past. The administration is desperate for a distraction, something that will create so much noise and hysteria that no one will be able to think about the disasters its policies are bringing upon the nation.

This year the administration is planning another action, this one much more massive than last summer's plans against the Taliban. This time it will be against the Bush family's old nemesis in Iraq, and another justification would come in real handy. That means American citizens should brace themselves. There is every reason to expect another earthshaking, soul-rattling event to take place at any time, probably in September or October.

I hate to be the bearer of bad news. This is an exercise in thinking the unthinkable. I hope I am wrong, but all the signs point to it.

Brace yourself. Something's coming. Something big.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2825)7/22/2002 12:12:16 PM
From: SGJ  Respond to of 89467
 
<<<their earnings improve
but they go bankrupt
because they cannot secure rollover debt funding>>>>

You don't think they could do a big stock offering and pay it all off!? -g-



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2825)7/22/2002 12:23:01 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
'The Market Climate remains on a Warning condition here'

Sunday July 21, 2002: Hussman Hotline Update

The Market Climate remains on a Warning condition here. That said, the market has now satisfied much of the set-up to a potential bear market rally. In general, the "phases" of a bear market tend to be punctuated by bear market rallies that are often sizeable and sustained for several weeks and even months. They are not occasions for substantial risk taking, and they do not imply that stocks have investment merit, but there is enough speculative to take a modest exposure to market risk when certain conditions are present. Last week, market action provided exactly what we needed on the downside. At this point, a solid advance in market breadth within the next couple of weeks would be sufficient to shift the Market Climate to a constructive position.

Now, from the standpoint of our investment approach, it is irrelevant whether I think an advance is a bear market rally or a new bull market. I frequently refer to bull and bear markets when I talk about my opinion, but these concepts are actually irrelevant to our approach. Bull and bear markets simply don't exist in observable experience - at any given moment, the existence of one or the other is always a matter of opinion. Our exposure to market risk at any point in time depends on the prevailing, identifiable status of valuations and trend uniformity. At present, a favorable shift in the Market Climate would prompt us to remove about 40% of our hedges, leaving our fully invested portfolio of stocks about 60% hedged against the impact of market fluctuations, but having at least a modest sensitivity to market direction.

As for my opinion (which we don't trade on and neither should you), I've noted in recent updates, I don't anticipate a clean, quick end to this bear market. Many analysts are hoping for a final capitulation to clear the air and finally give way to a sustained bull market. I doubt it.

In my opinion, valuations remain too high for a durable bottom anywhere near current levels. On the basis of the S&P price/peak earnings ratio, the S&P is now at just over 16 times prior peak earnings. This may not seem so bad, given that the historical average has been about 14. The difficulty is that those prior peak earnings are increasingly suspect. Even at the bull market high, P/E ratios were by far the most generous of all valuation fundamentals. While P/E ratios were about double their historical average, ratios such as price/dividend, price/revenue, price/book, price/replacement cost ("q"), and price/GDP were easily three or more times their historical averages. In other words, while stock prices were high relative to earnings, earnings were also very high in relation to dividends, revenues and book values (this was observed as low dividend payout ratios, high profit margins and high return on equity, respectively). As recent earnings restatements are making painfully clear, those high profitability levels were not simply unsustainable, they were phony. For this reason, we continue to stress that price/earnings ratios are not a reliable basis for valuation here. And even if they were, historical bear market lows have typically occurred at less than 9 times prior peak earnings (these include not only post-1965 market cycles, but pre-1965 cycles when trend GDP growth was higher, and interest rates and inflation were lower than current levels).

In the July 22 issue of Barron's magazine, there is an excellent interview with Jeremy Grantham (who I've long viewed as one of the outstanding value investors in the country). Grantham notes "There could indeed be important rallies, but before the smoke really clears, it's very likely we will overrun to a level below 700 on the S&P and below 1100 on Nasdaq. It's very scary. The overrun is something of a terra incognita. There is no methodology to calculate how much it will overrun. I can calculate how much it will correct to fair value because we have a pretty good read on fair value. We know that has always happened. But the degree of overrun in the market is always different. The only thing you can say with some statistical backing is that there is a strong tendency for the degree of overrun on the downside to be related to the degree of overrun on the upside." This is one of the few articles I've seen that gets it right. Be careful as you read it though. Grantham's point is not that stocks are likely to decline relentlessly. Rather, the point is that the ultimate trough of this bear market may be much lower than widely believed. Nothing in his argument rules out the possibility of strong, intermittent bear market rallies along the way.

There is another reason why I suspect the market is not in the process of setting a durable bear market low: The bad news is not yet out. I continue to expect substantial debt problems and economic disappointments. I've noted for several months now that analysts have failed to allow for the possibility that the economy - and particularly consumer spending growth - may deteriorate rather than improve in coming quarters. These risks are underscored by factors such as the record current account deficit, increasing credit card charge-off rates, a marked slowdown in bank lending (despite Fed easings), and a plunging dollar (see recent issues of Hussman Investment Research & Insight for more detail behind these concerns). A durable bear market low is likely to occur only after these problems are widely recognized, and widely expected to worsen. At good bear market lows, investors lose their ability to imagine that economic conditions will improve, just as investors lost their ability at the 1999-2000 peak to imagine that conditions could deteriorate.

So in my opinion (I can't stress that word enough), this bear market probably has much further to go, and it will probably require a period of months (perhaps even a couple of years), not days or weeks, for the aftermath of the speculative, capital investment, and credit bubble of recent years to be fully expressed. In the meantime, the market is likely to generate a substantial number of false starts and bear market rallies. Some of these will generate sufficiently favorable market action to warrant a modest exposure to market risk. This sort of opportunity may arise in the next week or two, but we do not yet have such evidence at present.

As for next week, I have no short-term forecast, as usual. Nor do we need one. But for the sake of pure idle curiousity, here are some of my thoughts. I've often noted that market crashes are typically preceded by fairly relentless distribution and a very bad late-week decline, which we've certainly seen. So Monday could certainly involve a serious plunge. NYSE Chairman Richard Grasso also notes "Mondays following Friday declines have always been difficult and I suspect tomorrow will be no different." The Reuters Business Report warns "expect no reprieve."

While the bad Friday, bad Monday combination is typical, my "intuition" actually runs contrary to these expectations here. That intuition goes something like this. Too many investors seem to be primed for a "capitulation" (or a set of Lowry's 90% days - see some of my June updates on this) in order to signal an "all clear." I also suspect that the shorts are waiting for one more ugly plunge before they cover their shorts ("Why leave money on the table?") That, in my mind, creates a potential order imbalance rushing to the buy side if the market fails to quickly follow through on Friday's decline. After all, unless investors are acutely aware of lingering valuation and debt issues (and I'm convinced that they are not) it's still possible to look at this market and ask "Are things really that bad?" And the last thing either the bulls or the shorts want is to miss the opportunity to get in at the "bottom."

Meanwhile, I used to have good results anticipating Fed moves by asking the question "What would a thoughtful economist do?" But as Greenspan was abducted by aliens and replaced with a pod-person in 1998, I've since had good results by asking the question "What would a panic-stricken, reactionary, populist, New Era devotee do if he had no concern for anything but the immediate gratification of crisis-avoidance, regardless of long-term economic consequences?" On that basis, there's an outside chance that the Fed will announce a surprise rate cut on Monday morning. The best point for such a rate cut would be very close to the market opening. Again, that's not an expectation, but it is a possibility.

In short, both a crash and an immediate rally are possible here. My intuition (which doesn't even rise to the status of opinion) is that a hard rally is more likely, but in any event, we don't trade on such speculation. We are fully hedged here. If the market can generate action sufficient to shift the Market Climate to a favorable status, we'll lift about 40% of our hedges, leaving our portfolio mostly but not fully hedged. We've done a few interesting things to allow for the possibility of lifting our hedges, but I'm going to pass on describing them since we never comment on individual positions as we're putting them in place.

In any event, the Market Climate remains on a Warning condition for now. We're prepared for the possibility of a favorable shift in the Market Climate in the next week or two, but that remains a possibility at present. We don't need any forecasts here. We'll shift our position when and if the Market Climate shifts.

hussman.com