Greetings,
Happy
New Year to all!
The first trading day of 2010 began with a bang.
Everything was looking up – mainly inflation. Of course, it’s only one day in a
long year. The macro-level view is still firmly in the deflationary
camp.
The US Federal government did a very “respectable” job of creating
massive amounts of new debt in 2009. They were also quite successful in getting
citizenry to enter into new debt through various programs such as “cash for
clunkers” and the “first-time homebuyers tax credit”. We’ve seen the home tax
credit extended, and revised to allow even certain current homeowners to sell
their house and enter into a fresh 30-year mortgage debt on a new
property.
Federal government debt spending is the only thing standing
between us and a full-fledged depression. Should we be congratulating our
Congress and President for attempting to spend their way out of a depression?
No – for a number of reasons. First, all new government debt is actually just
claims on our future labor. Every dollar that they spend adds one more pound to
the yoke of servitude and slavery around our necks. Second, trying to spend
ones way out of a depression won’t work.
I have often talked about
keeping at least a one-month supply of food (rotated to keep fresh) and a
one-month supply of cash-on-hand. Is this just “The Boy That Cried Wolf?” I
can only answer this way. I have studied economics for a long time, and have
created a detailed hypothesis of what is currently happening in our economy. If
this hypothesis is accurate then the one-month of supplies will work out very
well. If the hypothesis is wrong then you won’t have to go grocery shopping
quite as often. J
All I
encourage is this: Watch the credit markets. This is where the story is being
told. It’s a slow-moving train wreck, but the engines are still heading towards
each other. I don’t believe that we’ll see the start of the next downturn come
out of the US, it will probably be somewhere in Europe – although Asia is a
distinct possibility.
Watch Japan. They are the only ones openly
admitting to deflation right now: Japan
Return to ’91 GDP Gives Market Mega Risk Crisis.
We also see
Singapore reporting some very deflationary numbers for the fourth quarter of
2009: Singapore's
economy shrinks annualized 6.8% in Q4.
Great Britain is mired in
deflation: Bank
of England considering extension of quantitative easing
programme.
Even the country of Qatar is seeing credit
destruction: Central
bank stops loans to public sector. This is an attempt
to set up a monetary union in the region.
Things are changing quite
fast. Have joy in the new year, but don’t believe the government propaganda.
This recession is far from
over.
________________________________________________________
Watch
for these indexes to drop:
Chinese Shanghai Composite Index: 3,277.14
(change of 0.31% from July 20, 2009
base value of 3,266.92)
Shenzhen Stock Exchange Component Stock Index (SSE):
13,533.54 (change of 1.14% from July
20, 2009 base value of
13,381.22)
________________________________________________________
Here
are today’s numbers for the economic indicator:
1) Gold = $1,120.90
2) Dollar Index = 77.48
3) Oil =
$81.51
4) S&P 500 Index = 1,132.99
5) 3-month Treasury Bill yield =
0.05
6) 3-month OIS = 0.16
HEI = 31.53
(A value of under 100
indicates deflation, while over 100 indicates inflation – as referenced to Sept.
12, 2008…the day before Lehman Brothers collapsed)
__________________________________________________________
Here
are the numbers for the day:
Dollar Index adjusted indexes:
Dow =
(10,583.96) x (0.7748) = 8,200.45
S&P 500 = (1,132.99) x (0. 7748) =
877.84
Nasdaq = (2,308.42) x (0.7748) = 1,788.56
3-month Treasury:
0.05
2-year Treasury: 1.06
10-year Treasury: 3.82
30-year
Treasury: 4.64
2-yr vs. 10-yr Spread (Target > 273): 276 basis points – (Danger Zone)
2-yr vs.
30-yr Spread (Target > 369): 358 basis points
3-month LIBOR:
0.25
3-month EURIBOR: 0.70
3-month OIS: 0.16
TED Spread: 20
basis points
LIBOR/OIS Spread: 9 basis points
Dollar Index:
77.48
Volatility Index: 20.04
JPY-EUR Exchange Rate (Target <
115): 133.1956
JPY-GBP Exchange Rate (Target < 145):
148.7224
JPY-USD Exchange Rate (Target < 90): 92.247
USD-EUR
Exchange Rate (Target < 1.25): 1.4411
USD-CNY Exchange Rate (Target
> 7.0): 6.8273
Warmly,
Brad
Comments or questions?
brhamill@hamill.com