Editor’s Rant:
Over the past few weeks
I have made references to a couple of somewhat disappointing
period in US history, 1931 and 1973, suggesting current
conditions are likely to play out similar to one or the other.
It is not an attractive outlook, but my job is to call it like
I see it. I can offer some good news. The reality
of the current 1.25 month inventory to sales ratio is a huge
obstacle to significant and or sustained economic collapse. The
economy can’t slow down too much or we will run out of
everything.
That is the good news.
The problem of energy prices remains and their undeniable link
to inflation remains a tectonic constant. When energy prices
jump big time, as they have, inflation follows. The Saudis
rebuffed Bush on oil talks. It seems they like the higher
prices, and seem content to be the authors of another chapter
of global inflation. The last time they drove oil prices higher
was 1973 – 1974, and it wasn’t pretty. The point I am driving
towards we appear a lot closer to 1973 than 1931. Bernanke
won’t make the mistakes the Fed made in the 30’s, but energy,
the Saudis, and oil “Investors” seem content to let things play
out that are well beyond Bernanke’s control.
A possibility:
The next 18 – 24 months:
(This is what I see, not what I want.)
I see Barack Obama as
the next President with John Edwards as his running mate. With
that the Democrats will have the Whitehouse, House, and Senate.
The stimulus package will help the economy creating a well
embraced illusion of improvement going into the fourth quarter.
By the time the election is over the consensus will be the
recession risk is behind us. Everyone will buy into this
expectation including the Fed, which will quickly shift to a
rate raising mode to strengthen the dollar and curtail a by
then persistent inflation worry. Obama & the Democrats will
allow the Bush Tax Cuts to expire.
In 2009 it will become obvious the perception of economic
strength over the second half of 2008 was premature. But it is
too late. The Fed will already be raising interest rates while
the Government is raising taxes against a much weaker than
believed economy. Historically a proven combination that is
toxic to economic health.
To make matters worse, while oil prices should peak and break
before the end of 2008, consumers will see little relief at the
pump as refiners allow crack spreads to overshoot to the upside
thus balancing out their current deficit.
The Spring-Summer home selling season will create an illusion
of recovery in home sales, which will quickly be embraced as
signaling “the bottom.” But it will prove only to be a seasonal
uptick.
These factors will conspire to make people feel like
things have improved significantly when they haven’t.
With a little luck, I
will be wrong on this one, but for now, this is my forward
looking path.
Here is the Deal:
Oil Prices still rule.
The run higher persists and it is killing the consumer.
Energy and Tech are the only sectors leading
the market higher. When energy breaks, where will the money go
next?
The Technical story.
Last, a little seasonality.
With expiration behind us, the potential for
the current rally effort to stall is wide open. The current
apathetic strength can persist for a while longer. The problem
is that when rallies of poor technical quality fail, they tend
to fail with measurable spectacle. This one should be no
different.
June 7 remains a key longer-term cycle date.
If prices turn lower this week, focus on the 7th for
a low.
I have also included a set of charts that show
the Dow’s performance on a 10-year Decade cycle basis for the
past 100 years.
Have a great week.
Jim Patterson
|