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Sunday, January 29, 2012

ARGUING WITH THE MARKET

I figured out early in my career that arguing with the market more often than not ends up costing one money. If you are one of those people who are unable to change your mind, this business will almost certainly chew you up and spit you out. Never has that been more true than today.

Folks, we are in the middle of an ongoing currency war. That is creating investing conditions unlike anything most of us have ever seen before. There's a reason why very few money managers have been able to make any profits over the last year and most of them have lost money. That reason is an ever-changing investing environment.


As most of you probably already know my investing strategy is based around cycles, sentiment, a long-term bull market in precious metals, and a dash of technical analysis thrown in to help spot entry and exit points. Those tools give me a rough outline of what to expect going forward. I then place my trades based on the best odds for success. However, none of that excuses me of the responsibility to change my mind if the market tells me my expectations are wrong. It is precisely the ability to reverse direction 180° that enabled us to generate a 25% plus gain in the model portfolio during the last six months, despite being in a market that has confounded most professional money managers. Additionally, our portfolio has always been unleveraged with never more than 75% of capital invested at any one time. 
I daresay that, on a risk-adjusted basis, the SMT model portfolio has outperformed probably 99% of the money managers in the world.

As an example let's use my recent expectation for 2012 to be one of the worst years in history. First off,  let me explain how I came to that expectation. To begin with, the dollar's three year cycle low was due to bottom in the spring of 2011. And indeed, it actually did bottom in May of 2011. Further, the stock market's four year cycle low is due to bottom in the fall of 2012. 



Since most bear markets tend to last about 1 1/2 - 2 1/2 years it was reasonable to expect that the next bear market would begin as the dollar started to rally out of its three year cycle low. Low and behold what happened in May as the dollar cycle bottomed? That's right, the stock market started to collapse as deflationary forces began to push the dollar higher and asset prices down. Everything was unfolding exactly as our cycles tool had suggested it would.



However, in late November the markets started to deviate from our expectations. As the dollar continued to rally stocks began to decouple from the strong dollar. At this point one could either stubbornly hold on to their bearish outlook and lose money, or they could accept that the market was doing something different than what they expected, change their mind, and deal with reality as it is, instead of how they wished it to be. 



The fact that the S&P wasn't doing what it should have been doing was the main reason I've been warning (pleading really) with traders not to sell short. This market should have begun the move down into a daily cycle low two weeks ago. The fact that it refuses to move down into that overdue correction is sending a strong message that something else is going on.

The inability to change one's mind when the market tells you that you are wrong is one of the toughest habits to break, but one that is absolutely necessary if you are going to make money in this business. For whatever evolutionary reason, human beings have a very hard time admitting when they are wrong, and an even harder time reversing their thinking 180° even after they know they're wrong. For the vast majority of traders it is less painful to lose money than it is to admit an error and reverse a trade.

In my previous post I went over my expectation for gold to move down into its daily cycle low along with the stock market. This should have corresponded with the dollar rallying out of its cycle low. On Wednesday morning everything was set up perfectly for this to unfold. Gold had formed a swing high and was beginning the move down into its daily cycle low, stocks were in the process of reversing back down through the coil, and the dollar had bounced off of the 50 day moving average and was holding strongly above support at 80, clearly in the process of putting in a cycle bottom.



However, as you can see from the chart all of that changed Wednesday afternoon on the Fed statement. The stock market reversed the early-morning weakness, closing strongly. Gold reversed dramatically, closing up over $40, and the dollar collapsed back down through 80 negating what would have almost certainly been a powerful rally out of that cycle bottom. One could either ignore what had just happened, thus exacerbating losing trades, or they could recognize that something fundamentally changed that afternoon and quickly get on the right side of the market.

That is exactly what we did. When the dollar reversed and gold started to rally we immediately bit the bullet on our long UUP trade, took a small loss, and reentered GDX. None of our tools (cycles, sentiment, or technicals) were predicting this. However, that still doesn't give us an excuse to ignore what had happened and quickly make the correct adjustment.


Bernanke didn't actually confirm QE3 Wednesday afternoon, but the market obviously perceived the Fed statement as a guarantee that QE3 is in the works. That has the potential to break the dollar's rally out of its three year cycle low and derail the expected move by stocks down into a four year cycle low later this year.


If Bernanke can break the dollar rally and get the dollar moving south again there is no way we are going to experience a deflationary bear market this year. In this scenario 2012 would be the beginning of an inflationary period, culminating in a dollar crisis at the next three year cycle low, due in late 2014. If this is what is about to unfold then we need to alter our expectations from a deflationary bear market to an inflationary bull market. 



The four year cycle low for stocks, instead of occurring in late 2012 would probably get stretched out to late 2014. And the recession we should experience this year will be pushed out to 2013/2014 once inflation raises high enough to poison the economy.

The big question now is; did Bernanke break the dollar rally? Confirmation will come once the dollar finds its daily cycle low, and if the rally out of that low fails to move to new highs and rolls over quickly forming a new pattern of lower lows and lower highs.




If this scenario plays out then we can jettison the deflationary bear market hypothesis and begin positioning for the inflationary scenario which should culminate with a dollar crisis in late 2014. This scenario also has the potential to drive the bubble phase of the gold bull market.

A lot is riding on the dollar right now.

3 comments:

  1. G Man,

    I get the impression you were standing in the witness box taking cross examination from the unrelenting prosecution.No need to save face here or explain your actions or predictions. After all its a free blog. Those that dont appreciate your work and approach are not worth responding to. As I've said before...no-one is 100% perfect. Everyone needs to take blame for their own actions/inactions.

    You raise a BIG question abt Benny breaking the dollar...and therefore dictating the direction of the stock market. Will he or wont he ?
    I have an even bigger question.
    What caused the dollar's rally out of the 3 yr cycle low last year?
    AND then what caused its reversal in a very short time frame this year.
    Remembering these are not "normal" markets. By normal I mean that price discovery being achieved through market forces.

    Currencies are manipulated to suit their respective governments.
    I would add that the USD appreciation for the 2H11 was a factor of EURO debt issues and the fear factor/safe haven strategy combined with a high dose of expected ECB printing... AND coincidently the expiration of QEII/ non reappearance of QEIII.
    If by deduction then .. the dollars' falling over into 2012-2014(via further debasement)...would precipitate an inflationary "bull" market in stocks.... then arent you just saying that markets are manipulated too? (using the inverse correlation as demonstrated in your charts and knowing how currencies move).If true then markets are not as predictable as one would or could assume under Cycles / TA / EWT or any other chosen methodology. I'm not saying your chosen career hasnt got legs , but would say you certainly have your work cut out for you.

    Its also a pre-requisite to engender stimulatory actions..by way of forcing investors (and it is coercion) to seek risk. Seeking risk and increasing velocity are understood to be the key ingredients to creating inflation via the so called "wealth effect".

    However, I understand that the FED has a target now for INFLATION as measured by the CPCE @ 2 %. This is the holy grail for investing for the next 3 yrs. But its also a very dangerous blunt instrument.

    As for predictions...you are almost setting yourself up for attack again.
    Deflationary scenario for stronger dollar, inflationary scenario for weaker dollar....based on......

    One thing is perfectly clear to me...no-one knows what the future will foretell...an hyperinflationary depression or a deflationary depression or whatever!!! Not one person to date has been capable of producing sufficient evidence or plausible argument of either of those scenarios with absolute certainty.
    What may seem possible, can and more than likely will, turn very quickly.

    I like to keep in mind the agenda of the FED when assessing the path of the USD (et all major currencies)and markets in general.
    "Areas of GREY" are removed when you understand their ulterior motives.

    To me its almost as if what the FED (and perhaps you can throw in ECB and PBOC) want and are striving for, is what seems like a "Goldilocks" economy. One where their currency doesnt move too far out of kilter with the other's and the inflation rate is kept within "desired" levels. So things arent too hot nor too cold....but just right.

    Watching the dollar too closely will not tell you the real story. We may very well be at the beginning of a very long period of uncertainty. Uncertainty brings the undesirable "saving not spending" "going to cash and not investing" mentality.

    When nothing becomes clear and the term "value" loses its real meaning, it is senseless to be arguing the potential and the consequences of the dollar collapsing, as it will still be measured in the context in which it is stated and for that matter so too is everything else.

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  2. I still have a hard time understanding why the markets took it as such a surprise that Benny the Printer would maintain interest rates at low levels. After all, we are not only in a currency war, but also an election year.
    So, what you call "arguing with the market" might just be viewed as "having a big question mark in mind".

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  3. Thank you for your explanation of the events which unfolded. This is turning out to be, for me, an excellent learning experience. Much appreciated!

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