Timing & trends

The Three Most Popular Articles of the Week

King-World-News-Gerald-Celente--Shocking-Swiss-Move-Only-The-Beginning-Of-A-Much-Larger-Global-Meltdown-864x400 c1. Full on Crash Alert For Major World Markets

There are various reasons, both fundamental and technical, to believe that a market crash is almost upon us. This crash will affect virtually all world markets, including and especially the big Western Markets which have thus far escaped the devastation already afflicting the developing markets. Here we are going to focus on US markets, but they will all get taken down – European markets including the UK, and Far Eastern markets such as Hong Kong and Japan” ….continue reading HERE

 

2.The Great Financial Catastrophe

“Most people are blissfully ignorant of the fact that 2007-8 was just a mild rehearsal of what we soon are going to experience.” …..continue reading HERE

 

3. The Complete Black Market Guide

From $1,300 Tiger Penis To $800K Snipers: The Complete Black Market Price Guide

Havocscope has a price list for all sorts of Black Market Goods.….continue reading HERE 

 

Bull Markets Die Epicurean

Stock Markets

We should review the items that kept us positive on the senior indexes. Actually, they are bull-market-ending events that have a lag. We’ve called them “Friends of the bull market”, which have had a brief shelf life. Both peaked in April. One was the long uptrend in the Advance/Decline line and the other was the peak in NYSE margin debt. The high in the senior indexes would be expected a few months later. Late August to early September has been our target.

This time window is supported by Shanghai’s massive blow-out accomplished in June. Historically that suggested a NY high in early September.

Considering the mounting financial pressures, will the senior indexes reach new highs?

Doesn’t matter to much as the positive time window will come and fail. Our advice has been to sell the rallies.

The line about canaries dropping like flies is a good one. At the peak of previous bull markets we have crafted some lines:

“Every bull market carries its own china shop.”

“Every bull market climbs a wall of worry and in a rush of confidence leaps over, only to find Murphy waiting.”

“Like great civilizations, bull markets are born stoic and die epicurean.”

Conditions were very stoic in the first part of 2009. Now, a contractor in LA is building a spec house hoping to sell it for $500 million. The master bedroom is 5,000 square feet.

Precious Metals

Our July 23rd edition noted that “the plunge in gold and gold stocks was generating Daily Downside Capitulations”. This was updated in the July 27th ChartWorks and the advice was that a brief trade was possible.

Gold increased from the 1080 level to 1125. HUI has rallied from 104 to 124.

Silver rose from 14.35 to 15.95 today, as SIL (silver miners) rallied from 6.32 to 7.44.

Of interest is that silver has reached its 50-Day ma. If it can’t get through and hold it it would be concerning. The concern is that credit markets have taken a turn for the worse. Under such conditions silver usually underperforms gold.

The gold/silver ratio has declined from 77 in early July to 72 and is behind the actual widening of credit spreads. It should soon turn up.

Our focus is that as general liquidity diminishes, the investment demand for gold’s unique liquidity will increase. The price in US dollars could remain steady.

In the meantime, gold’s price relative to commodities has been rising since May and as it extends it will eventually be constructive for the sector.

The last slump drove the Weekly RSI on HUI down to 21 a couple of weeks ago, which was enough to pop the rally.

However, most gold and silver stocks will be vulnerable to extended declines in the general stock markets.

Global Blow Out Hits NY

38663

 

  • Technical excesses seen with the completion of the Shanghai Bubble have hit Disney.
  • The initial plunge ended just above the 200-Day ma. It took almost 4 weeks.
  • It took Disney two days to accomplish a lesser but still dramatic break.
  • Whether in Shanghai or in New York intense speculation has similar characteristics.
  • Intense speculation and its conclusion is fungible.

ink to August 15, 2015 Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com:http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2015/08/high-grade-corporate-bonds-good-short-term-bet/

Listen to the Bob Hoye Podcast every Friday afternoon at TalkDigitalNetwork.com

 

Corporate Profits Have Peaked — And Will Tank Next Year

One of the reasons US stocks have had such a nice run is that public companies have been making a lot of money. The profit bounce from Great Recession lows was both big and fast, taking corporate earnings to record levels both in nominal terms and as a portion of GDP.

38639 a

But since 2012 profits have plateaued. And now they’re about to fall off the table, as most of the reasons for the pop are reversed out. Consider:

Wages Are Finally Rising

Between globalization and automation, corporations have been able to turn their remaining workers into virtual serfs. The next chart looks like a pretty good excuse for armed insurrection. At a minimum it’s a textbook definition of an unsustainable trend.

38639 b

As the old saying goes, that which can’t continue won’t. Wal-Mart, that quintessential wage-squeezer, is finding this out:

Wal-Mart Lowers Forecast as Pay Raises, Currency Take Toll

(Bloomberg) – Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s biggest retailer, cut its annual earnings forecast for the year, hurt by currency fluctuations and a high-profile pay bump for U.S. employees.

The company now expects profit of $4.40 to $4.70 a share this fiscal year, which runs through January, according to a statement on Tuesday. Wal-Mart had previously forecast earnings of as much as $5.05 a share. Wal-Mart also posted second-quarter earnings that missed analysts’ estimates. Profit amounted to $1.08 a share in the period, excluding some items, the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company said. Analysts had expected profit of $1.12 a share, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Wal-Mart shares fell as much as 3.3 percent to $69.55 in New York, the biggest decline since May 19. The stock had already slid 16 percent this year through Monday’s close.

Wal-Mart announced plans in February to raise wages to at least $9 an hour this year and $10 by 2016, along with a related effort to improve training and bolster hours. The move will reduce profit by 24 cents a share, Wal-Mart said on Tuesday. That includes an 8-cent hit in the fiscal third quarter, which runs through October. Wal-Mart had previously said the effort would cost 20 cents this year.

The Dollar Is Just Too Damn Strong

It’s up by 20% – 30% against most other currencies since 2013, raising the effective price of US exports and lowering the value of income from overseas corporate divisions (which come in the form of depreciating currencies like the euro and yen). The impact:

Here’s How Much the Strong Dollar Hurts American Companies

(Bloomberg) – American companies had a rough start to 2015 as they watched profits from overseas subsidiaries slide.

Exactly how much blame should we assign to the currency markets? Two economists at the Federal Reserve have an idea.

U.S. corporate profits fell about 1.4 percent in the fourth quarter last year before plummeting 5.2 percent in the first quarter this year, partly driven by a plunge in the amount American companies’ foreign affiliates earned. Of the decline in overseas subsidiary profits caused by the appreciating currency and cheaper oil imports, about a third probably came specifically from the greenback, Carol Bertaut and Nitish Sinha wrote in a post this month.

Fed policy makers have voiced concern about the strong dollar’s drag on exports, both in Federal Open Market Committee minutesand in speeches (the FOMC will release a new policy statement at 2 p.m. on Wednesday). It’s a major point of concern for monetary policy-watchers as Fed officials debate when to go ahead with the first interest rate increase since 2006.

China Has Stopped Buying Our Stuff

China tripled its debt post-2009 and spent most of the proceeds on infrastructure like roads and airports. US corporations got a big piece of this business, either by selling raw materials and technology to Chinese builders, or doing the work themselves. Now that bubble has burst, leaving lower commodity prices and excess capacity in its wake:

China’s Woes Echo in U.S. Earnings

(Wall Street Journal) – With the U.S. recession behind them and the European fiscal crisis fading, American companies are grappling with a new threat: China’s economic blues.

In quarterly conference calls, U.S. executives recited a litany of pain, from mild to severe, resulting from a slowdown in China’s economy, the world’s second-largest.

Engine-maker Cummins Inc., for example, said demand for excavators in China fell 34% in the second quarter from a year ago with no signs of improvement. For such companies as WeyerhaeuserCo., less construction in China means logs and lumber pile up in the U.S., pushing down prices.

“China was weak in the quarter, and we expect it to be weak as we move forward,” Robyn Denholm, chief financial officer of Juniper Networks Inc., told investors. China pulled down the networking-gear maker’s Asia-Pacific revenues by 3% from the prior quarter; without China, they would have risen 11%.

It comes at a tough time for U.S. businesses. Overall, companies in the S&P 500 index are on track to eke out a 1.2% increase in second-quarter earnings, according to data from Thomson Reuters. That is the slowest growth since fall 2012.

The modest earnings growth was recorded on a 3.5% decline in revenues–the biggest drop in nearly six years–suggesting that much of the profit gain is from cost-cutting, buybacks or other maneuvers, rather than increased sales.

The slowdown in China was evident last quarter in everything from business flights to elevator sales to car purchases. Rockwell CollinsInc. said the flight-services industry has seen international business-jet flights fall 10% this year, largely in and out of China, Russia and the Middle East. DuPont Co., which makes temperature-resistant materials for components in the automotive industry, lowered its growth forecast for the Chinese auto industry in the second half of the year to between 2% and 3%, from past rates of 5% or higher.

Add it all up, and US corporations are looking at another year of falling revenues and much lower earnings at a time when a lot of stocks are priced for, if not perfection, at least high-single-digit growth.

And none of these headwinds are going away. US workers have just begun to redress the past decade’s injustices, and now that higher minimum wage laws have been proven to be political winners, a whole generation of would-be mayors and governors will be pushing them.

China has done exactly nothing to bring its finances back into balance so will either see a 2016 crash or bail out its banks and builders and drift into a Japanese-style lost decade. Either way, its days of sucking up all the world’s extra oil, coal and earth movers are over.

And with the rest of the world in various stages of decline, crisis or chaos while the Fed seems to sincerely want higher domestic interest rates, the dollar isn’t poised to retrace the past year’s spike. Just the opposite.

So it’s a safe bet that US corporations will, in the aggregate, be less profitable next year than this year and — to the extent that earnings dictate market cap — a lot less valuable.

Silver Cycle Low – Now

The price of silver has been crushed during the last four years.  Prices are ready to reverse.  We will know soon enough after the High-Frequency-Traders have their way with prices for paper silver and gold on the CME.  But consider:

Casey Research:  Top 7 Reasons I’m Buying Silver Now

Gary Savage has declared that “Gold is Now a Buy.”

Adam Hamilton    Gold’s Artificial Lows

Richard Russell:  Buy Physical Silver Ahead of the Coming Chaos

Gold Sentiment Reaches 2nd Most Negative Level in 25 Years

 

  • The US Dollar peaked in March and has been slipping lower since then.
  • Gold peaked four years ago. Silver peaked four years and three months ago.  Both are due for a rebound.

 

Is there anything specific regarding silver, or is it just “hope and change?”  Yes!

Daily charts (not shown):  Silver hit its low about 2 weeks ago and has weakly rallied since then.  Most oscillators show that silver prices are deeply oversold and that momentum has turned upward.

Weekly charts (not shown):  Silver prices have closed higher for the last two weeks, and like the daily charts, oscillators are oversold and turning higher.

Anything more?  Yes!  Long term cycles indicate that silver has finally made a major bottom.  I have little faith in short term cycles because prices are so easily manipulated by HF-Traders, but longer cycles are more difficult to manipulate, and more meaningful.  When longer cycles align with other confirming evidence, it is significant.

Note the following chart showing monthly silver prices back 25 years to 1990.  All major lows in silver prices have been indicated by two long cycles – 82 months and 123 months (82 months times 1.5).  The red vertical lines show the 82 month cycles and the green vertical lines show the 123 month cycles.

Z-silver-lows

Monthly Silver Lows      82 Month Cycle Lows

March 1995                    Jan. 1995

Nov. 2001                      Nov. 2001

Oct. 2008                       Sept. 2008

July 2015                       July 2015  –  Now

***

Monthly Silver Lows      123 Month Cycle Lows

Jan. 1993                       Jan. 1993

Oct. 2002 (by a few cents)  May 2003

June 2013                      July 2013

We could discuss whether the cycles are relevant or not, or if they should be 82 and 123 months, or less or more, but I see the following:

 

  • When two cycles can point to every major low since 1993, they have value.
  • The 82 month cycles point to a low in July or August of 2015 – NOW.
  • Daily, Weekly, and Monthly oscillators indicate over-sold conditions and that the silver (and gold) market is due to rally. These confirm a silver cycle low for July – August 2015.
  • At other 82 month cycle lows prices have rallied a little or a lot depending on other factors, so a cycle low is NOT a guarantee of substantially higher prices ahead.
  • But given the last seven years of QE, ZIRP, other monetary manipulations, substantially increasing investment demand for silver, and insane debt levels that inevitably will increase further, it looks like a major low has been reached in silver.

 

By the way, the next MAJOR silver lows, based on the 82 month and 123 month cycles are due about mid-2022 and late 2023.

What about cycle highs?  I see a 94 month cycle in silver highs that might be significant.  Note the silver highs in January 1980, 1987, 1995, 2003-04, and 2011.  The next high cycle, based on this progression, is due approximately 2019.

Z-silver-highs

Assume that:

  1. A major LOW in silver has occurred in July 2015 or will occur soon.
  2. A potential cycle HIGH in silver is due in approximately 4 years.
  3. War cycles indicate a substantial increase in global conflicts for the next five years. (Larry Edelson and war cycles)  Consumer price inflation, higher silver and gold prices, increasing debt, and increasing war cycles trend together.
  4. In the long term, silver prices trend with US national debt, which we can all agree will continue to grow much larger.
  5. Silver lows are due in 7 – 8 years, which allows considerable time for prices to spike higher in 2019 – 2020 before they drop into cycle lows in 2022-23.
  6. There are many reasons for silver to rally substantially from here and possibly two for silver prices to stagnate or continue to fall – global deflation and recession/depressions via crashing economies. But, do you believe that central banks and governments will not fight deflation and recession with every “printing press” available?  In that scenario, I think money supply and debt will accelerate higher along with silver prices.

 

CONCLUSIONS:

 

  • Silver is at or very near an intermediate bottom and an 82 month cycle low.
  • Long term cycles indicate another high is due in about four years – plenty of time for silver to rally far higher.
  • Fiscal policy and monetary policy – spend and “print” – support much higher prices for silver.
  • Even global recession and global deflation are likely to force much more QE and “money printing” to bail out banks, the economy, and governments, and that will push silver prices higher.
  • Stack silver and trust that your governments and central banks will devalue their currencies, which they do so effectively.

 

Gary Christenson

The Deviant Investor

The Three Most Popular Articles of the Week

1. Top 6 Myths Driving Oil Prices Down

“Earlier in the year I documented half a dozen media reports which turned out to be 100 percent false. Now I expose another half dozen in just the past few weeks. “….continue reading HERE

 

2. People’s Bank of China Freaks Out….

“The PBOC’s freak-out came after all heck had already broken loose in China over the weekend” …..continue reading HERE

 

3. Canada 6-City Housing & the Plunge-O-Meter

The chart below tracks the dollar and percentage losses from the peak and projects when prices might find support. The other chart shows the average detached housing prices for the six largest Canadian cities HERE 

1474775