Timing & trends

Cycles – A Fuse, An Explosive And The Igniting Catalyst

Investors need to focus on the two key long term structural changes now underway which are going to ignite destructive global dislocations through early 2020. To better understand why this is going to occur we need to place them in context by first examining the major economic cycles currently underway.

HARRY DENT’S MACROECONOMIC CYCLES & DEMOGRAPHICS

This initial cycle chart is from an in-depth discussion I had with Harry Dent earlier this year. Since leaving Harvard, Harry has spent most of his adult working life  studying demographics and cycles.

An ominous tell tale is that the four cycles he most closely follows are all presently headed down or flat!

10-17-16-MATA-RISK-Harry Dent

Dent attributes this to; the demographics of the baby boom generation, their spending habits as they enter retirement and the overall falling birth rates in the developed economies.

His work suggests the cycles don’t reverse until the early ’20’s.

MARTIN ARMSTRONG’S “ECONOMIC CONFIDENCE MODEL”

Another well respected cycles analyst is Martin Armstrong who I additionally interviewed to discuss his highly regarded Economic Confidence Model. This cycle is based on a very long cycle of human history and civilization. It currently shows, according to Armstrong (see below), that economic conditions have been deteriorating since 2015.75 (Sept 2015) and will persist through to the beginning of 2020 (2020.05).

….for more on Armstrong, Kondratieff and much more go HERE

…related:

Connecting the Dots

 

 

Connecting the Dots

Despite the enduring enthusiasm in equities since the US presidential election, we continue to follow the proxy pivots in gold that has broadly led the trend in equities by approximately 4 weeks over the past 2 years. Should the relationship persist, we would guesstimate a pivot lower in equities approaches over the coming week. And while the S&P 500 has fully benefited from the unbridled capital outflows from Treasuries and safe haven assets that helped inspire fresh all-time highs across most indexes over the past 2 weeks, emerging market equities remain in lock step with gold’s leading structure that points towards another leg down after the current retracement rally exhausts. 
 
                                                   Click on all Charts For Much Larger Images
 1
2
 
That said, it would not surprise us to see US equities underperform (on a relative performance basis to EEM) on the downside, as we expect similar to last year’s dynamics going into and after the December Fed meeting, another sell-the-news reaction in the dollar manifests. A good leading indication that the dollar rally has run its course would be for gold and silver to find their respective lows over the coming week or so as the equity markets begin to turn down. We indicated below the two previous examples over the past two years of where a similar dynamic had developed. 
 
 3

The US dollar index has again broken above 100 for the fourth time in the past two years, which has closely correlated with cresting rate hike expectations of the Fed. The last time the CME Group’s Fed Fund Futures probability for this December meeting rose above 90 percent was the first week in January of this year – before global market pressures significantly reduced expectations, which very likely had a negative feedback effect on the near-term outlook for growth and hence the economic data downstream in the following months. Despite participants mood in yields and rate hikes pivoting 180 degrees since the lows in July and some marquee money managers becoming increasingly more bullish on US economic growth in the wake of a Trump victory, US markets are still at the mercy of a fragile global equilibrium that is invariably adversely affected by a much stronger US dollar and tighter financial conditions worldwide – not to mention a domestic economic expansion already historically long in the tooth. 
 
Consequently, we tend to defer to much longer-term perspectives on yields and growth that despite what the interim rally might suggest, continues to point towards a lower-for-longer market environment well into the next decade. 
 
Screen Shot 2016-11-30 at 10.24.01 PM
Screen Shot 2016-11-30 at 10.30.56 PM
 
While we do expect the current weakness in Treasuries to extend into early next year and that yields would be more supported than the dollar over the coming years as we foresee the uptrend in inflation continuing, both markets are confined by a much broader construct that we believe is not yet under a more secular persuasion or has digested and crossed the transitional divide to the next major growth cycle. This long-term outlook remains for equities as well, as 2200 on the S&P 500 was our secondary target back in January, if the market found support at the Meridian – as it did a few weeks later. And although it wasn’t our base case scenario back then, we still hold the respective extremes (both bullish and bearish) as outlier probabilities, with now considerable less upside opportunity today from a long-term historical perspective.
 
Screen Shot 2016-11-30 at 11.15.11 PM
Screen Shot 2016-11-30 at 11.20.42 PM
 
Expecting US growth will now resume a trajectory last seen during the halcyon days of the 1990’s, or that yields on the 10-year will again rise above 4 percent, is putting the cart well out in front of this horse, regardless of whether it was the Fed – or now Trump, holding out the carrot or waiving a large stick. Less we forget, we’ve been whacked plenty and have eaten trillions of bushels of carrots over the past decade with little to show for it in terms of growth. Sticks and carrots may have helped repair it, but only time will heal these wounds.
 
Although the US equity markets have enjoyed recent strength since the election, the honeymoon appears to be ending and we expect the new members of the bull brigade to have their gilded growth thesis tested as the equity markets could again become the sharp tip of the sword prodding at the sides of the Fed next year.
 
4
5
6
 
 

War Cycles Ramping Up Again …

Screen Shot 2016-11-30 at 6.35.44 AM“the war cycles are increasing in intensity each and every year for the next four to five years. They are going to alter everything you thought you knew about the economy … about the markets … about politics and politicians … foreign affairs and more”

I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving weekend with family and friends. I did!

But now, it’s back to work. It’s back to protecting and growing your wealth. And that’s more important than ever!

The chief reason — and I’ll keep harping on this until I’m blue in the face — is the ramping up of the war cycles. They’ve been ramping up since late 2013.

Now they are already wreaking havoc in Washington. They already caused Britain to Brexit. And now Italy could be next, followed by France. Then Spain. Greece, and more.

They overthrow Hillary here in the U.S. with its anti-establishment undertone, just as I predicted they would.

And the war cycles are increasing in intensity each and every year for the next four to five years. They are going to alter everything you thought you knew about the economy … about the markets … about politics and politicians … foreign affairs and more.

If you are not careful and open-minded, they are going to destroy your wealth.

Let’s get something straight. I am not a pessimist. I am not an “end of the world” type analyst. I am simply a historian, steeped in how governments and markets are cyclical in nature, and how those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past.

 

The war cycles are real. They are documented and scientifically proven and based on over 14,000 wars spanning 5,000 years of civilization. I have studied them in great detail. They are ramping up big time and they will have a profound impact on everything.

What is behind the war cycles? What drives society and the world to enter turbulent times?

There are two forces: The private economy and the public sector, government.

In the best of times, when the interests of the private and public sectors are aligned, you get as close a partnership as you can get between the private and public sectors.

There’s good economic growth. There’s cooperation. There’s rising employment, little or no inflation, increased productivity. And most of all, accepting the status quo amongst our leaders.

But in the worst of times, when the underlying economy goes into a bust period, as it has been doing since the year 2000 — you get a divide between the public and the private sectors. A divide that only gets worse with time.

It may seem that their interests are still aligned. After all, both the government and the private sector want the economy to get back on track, employment to rise again and everything to be A-OK.

But in bad economic times, the self-interest of government rises to the top.

Seeing diminished revenues and unable to curtail spending, governments start to go broke. As they go broke, they turn against their citizens and seek more ways to soak money from them while at the same time cutting and even reneging on promises.

Think India. Now banning the use of large bills. Think Europe. Limits on ATM withdrawals and more.

Meanwhile, central banks try to paper over the mess, printing money with reckless abandon.

As the tensions mount between the public and private sectors, protests erupt. There are tax revolts. Riots in the streets. Secession movements. Civil strife.

Between nations, governments battle their own self-interests, with currency wars, protectionism, trade barriers, capital controls, and more.

Religious battles intensify. And if leaders don’t act appropriately — which they almost never do — all hell can break loose, leading to domestic and international conflict.

Front and center is none other than your wealth. The purchasing power of your money. The life of hard work you devoted to your family and its financial security. Your liberties. Your privacy.

For in the end, bankrupt governments want to grab your money to make themselves whole.

They engage in propaganda and desperate socialist moves to spread the wealth in some utopian vision of the world that is really nothing more than grabbing everyone’s wealth to feed a monster that is going belly up.

Think of the British and the American revolution. The original Tea Party and “no taxation without representation.” Think of the French Revolution. The fall of Rome and Byzantium.

In each and every one of those instances, and countless others, government crossed the line and invaded the private sector first, confiscating wealth to pay for its mistakes to desperately try and survive.

In times like those — the single best thing you can do is to think independently.

Question everything governments say and do. They will be acting entirely out of self-interest. They will deceive you, lie to you, all the while they are reaching into your back pocket to grab what they think is theirs.

Fortunately, today we have a slew of liquid markets where you can protect yourself and even grow your money. But again, it all depends on your ability to think for yourself.

Think it would be any different if Hillary won? No, it wouldn’t be. All of this is written in stone being played out before your very eyes.

Best wishes, stay safe and well,

Larry

 

Marc Faber The Global Economy Is Entering An Epic Slump

 

UnknownPlus – Marc Faber: Current era of negative rates “a historic first”

Seeing how the real standard of living took a plunge after the worldwide financial crisis, it is unsurprising that the public has voted for Brexit or elected Donald Trump as President of the United States, investment guru Marc Faber said at the International CEE Investment Conference, organised by CFA Society Poland and CFA Institute last weekend. Faber expressed concern over negative interest rates, admitting he was at a loss as to what could bring the era of negative rates to an end. Another topic on the conference agenda was the growing role of politics in the global economy, and how the proliferation of political ideologies is increasingly becoming a cause for concern even to rating agencies when it comes to upgrading or downgrading a particular country. 
read more @http://www.portfolio.hu/en/economy/marc_faber_current_era_of_negative_rates_a_historic_first.32147.html

Up Down or Sideways?

Featured guest Paul Beattie of BT Global’s fund has doubled the performance of the TSE since inception in 2006. He joins Mike to help chart a path for investors through the turbulence of the coming months.

….also from Michael: The Latest From The Anti-Capitalist Crowd

Screen Shot 2016-11-26 at 1.09.20 PM