Saturday, September 29, 2007
Wat's ahead ? - 1st week of October.
The first cut is the deepest.
-Real estate is suffering worst decline in a generation.
-The dollar is making forty-year lows.
-The economy is soggy and may be on the verge of tanking.
Friday, September 28, 2007
FKLI (Oct): Time-Goal-Day
What matters now ..
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Setting up for a turn?
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Have a mooncake, have a thought...!
Monday, September 24, 2007
Wat's the obsession with Mouse Deer ?
According to the Sejarah Melayu, legend has it that the king, Parameswara, saw a mouse deer outwiting a dog when he was resting under the Melaka tree. He took what he saw as a good omen and decided to establish a capital for his kingdom there. Today, the mouse deer is part of modern Malacca's coat of arms. And Bank Negara used it too!
Do you'all know what a real Malaysian mouse deer (scientific name: Tragulus Napu) looks like? Well, it's about the size of a small cat.. . Hardly the ferocious or powerful kind with the capability of swinging lethal kick at a royal hunting dog into the river as described in the legend. Unless...., maybe....., Paris Hilton's Tinklebell (pic above) is involved here ! Haakk..!
Sunday, September 23, 2007
This time...they don't come in ships !
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Gold, The Dow and You.
The new all-time high in the Dow on July 17 is, if we are to take financial television’s word for it, a congratulatory and excitable thing. Somebody must be making a ton of money is the not subtle between-the-lines message. “Why aren’t you rich yet?” is another.
But if you happen to be a person who prefers to eat rather than starve, or chooses to use your vehicle to travel somewhere rather than go on foot, or even to keep your house at some reasonable temperature between, say, 60 and 80 degrees, well, you might be less than enthused about Dow 14,000. Why? Illusion.
British novelist Christopher Priest coined terms that associated the practice of stage illusions with having three parts: the setup (in which the magician describes what magic is about to happen), the turn (in which, say, an ordinary object disappears) and the prestige (in which that same object, say, reappears).
Dow 14,000? That’s the prestige. What was the setup? The Fed lowering interest rates 17 times post the 2000 equity bubble burst. And the turn? Well, that was investors the world over becoming more risk seeking en masse as a result.
But it was – and is – all a form of money illusion. The denominator has changed, in this case the value of the USD, and that is what’s given the U.S. that so noble of capitalist goals: all-time record stock market prices.
In hard assets – in real money – like Gold, the Dow is nowhere near its 2000 peak. The Dow priced in gold is down 56% from its all-time peak in 1999. And if for some reason you believe that most of the recorded history of man, in which gold was considered the only safe, reliable money, is bunk, then you will not be heartened to learn that stock prices in the form of other hard goods are equally, ahem, devalued: the S&P 500 priced in CRB index terms is down 37%; the Dow priced in Swiss franc and Euro terms is down 21% and 26% respectively from its 2000 peak. And this is to say nothing about the wipe-out of value the NDX has experienced against almost anything; no amount of denominator switching is going to bring back those Globe.com values. No illusionist – not even the cartelizing force of the Federal Reserve – can make that happen.
Understanding the illusion above makes the everyday reality of living coincide nicely with the un-reality that is modern financial journalism. When you ask yourself, “How come I don’t feel rich?”, well, now you have my answer.
Not to be diminished either is the conclusion one might draw from this reality about the relationship between, say, gold, and the value of the USD (as reflected by the DXY index). To wit: massive credit creation over the last five years coupled with massive risk-seeking investor behavior has made everything that can be quoted, traded and settled in a back office somewhere in U.S. dollars go up in price. A lot.
So if gold has gone up massively because of the very credit creation plus risk-seeking herding process I have seen, lo, these many years, what happens when one or both of those forces abate and reverse (after all, cycles do cycle)? Well, gold goes down. And that’s as unintuitive a result as most market participants are able to contemplate.
But the illusion is pervasive and the prestige utterly captivating.
Dos Gardenias.mp3.http://hatuey.blogs-de-voyage.fr/files/Dos_Gardenias.mp3
Quick fixes for bubble blowing in the wind?
Does the Fed feel it is necessary to manipulate the 'free' markets and beat the shorts over the head to do its bidding? The long bond market is already speaking: long rates are rising as the vigilantes mount up and circle the wagons of these Architects of Excess, these Emperors of Credit.
The question is can the Emperor afford his new clothes? What's under the kimono? What will an unwind of the Yen Carry look like in all its naked splendor? What will the world look like with OPEC pegging crude to the Euro?
With the S&P testing the low bar of the signal day from July 20 sell signal (the low of that day was 1529), we will get to see if in fact this is a grand test of the highs. We will get to see after expiration if this is a bearish test of a test. pattern. In other words, the July peak tested the all time March 2000 high and this move may be a test of that test sixty days later.
Speaking of 60 months, it occurs to me that the S&P may be tracing out a mirror image foldback. In July 2002 the S&P waterfalled into a climatic low which was tested in early October of 2002. Once again that low was tested in March of 2003 before the market began to trend in earnest. So, is the July 2007 blowoff a mirror image of the capitulation in July 2002? Is the index testing its high right here, right now as it tested its low in October 2002?
The chart above shows a live angle from the March low cuts through the early August spike and Wednesdays high at coincidentally 1529, the level of the July 20 sell signal.
On Wednesday, the S&P tagged the June “Orthodox High” of 1540 (A). I say Orthodox High because the July high (B) was a false breakout. Note how a Live Angle from the March 14 low (C) through the August 8 high (D) also comes in at Wednesday’s high. On Wednesday the S&P closed at the 1529 level after testing 1540. 1540 was what I call the orthodox high which occurred on June 1. Why? Because the July high proved to be a false breakout.
Interestingly, 360 degrees (Gann's Square of Nine Chart) up from the 1371 print low in August is 1523. On Thursday, the index closed below 1523. With this morning's strength, it appears 1523 will once again be tested and it will be interesting to see if this level can be captured on a weekly closing basis today.
Either the market is tracing out a valid test of the high or brave new world of asset bubble blowing is upon us. I would try to be patient and see what happens with the first pullback on the dailies and the first turndown of the Weekly Swing Chart before reacting to the flickering red and green and becoming too scenario-ized.
The key level for a test when the sellers show up is the 1505 area where the Monthly Swing Chart turned up. 90 degrees down from 1540 is 1501 which coincides with this level. 90 degrees down from the aforementioned 1523 is 1485 which is the level of the June lows and the breakdown pivot for the summer swoon. So, you can see how the geometry of the market maintains itself even in the midst of extreme volatility. The message of the Square of Nine chart then appears to be that any break of 1500 spells trouble which is confirmed by a break of 1485.
Bazooka Ben is trying to pull a financial rabbit out of a hat, but can more quick fixes be multiplied by more synthetic credit divided by leverage? One pill makes you larger, one pill makes you small. Go ask Goldilock when she's ten feet tall.
Fragile.mp3.http://www.nusys.co.kr/Sound/[Sting]Fragile.mp3
Thursday, September 20, 2007
FKLI (Sept): Time-Goal-Day.
21-9-07
24-9-07 (45-days from 21-6-07)
26-9-07
The simple things.mp3. http://www.ednawadeproject.com/George_Duke_-_The_Simple_Things.mp3
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Thanks Bernie....! You'r the man ! Wowh !!!
"One shot, one kill.."
Louie Louie.mp3. http://ia301108.us.archive.org/0/items/gd88-04-22.aud.wiley.16070.sbeok.shnf/gd88-04-22d2t03_64kb.mp3
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Wat's ahead in this tense week ..?
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Goldilock in rehab ?
"Tried to run, tried to hide, Break on through to the other side..."- THE DOORS.
Will oil and gold keep the Fed on hold? Will an approach by the S&P towards 1500 keep Ben in a Box?
Oil has broken through $80. Gold has broken through $700. Let's all buy stocks in anticipation of a Fed Funds rate cut because obviously there's no inflation!
Will such a rate cut cause stocks to break on through to the other side back above 1500?Will oil and gold keep the Fed on hold? Will an approach by the S&P towards 1500 keep Ben in a Box? Is Thursday's close over its 50dma for the second time, albeit marginally, a second mouse move through this key moving average, or, will the index once again be turned back as it was on September 4th?
Many time the beginning of a new month sees the high or low in an index for the month. Did September 4th, in the least sanguine of market months, define such a high? An hourly chart of the S&P shows five waves up to test the breakaway gap from September 4.
Clearly a break of 1480ish will snap a short term trendline. The bulls would love to see a strong Friday/weekly close, which is the sign of the bull. But given the slippage this morning in the futures it appears that buy programs put on to keep the bears at bay prior to the holiday on Thursday will not do the trick into the weekend.
Because of the position of the market, and the breakdown level of the June lows having been well tested, any break of the aforementioned short term channel especially on the weekly close suggest Monday could be hard down. I still expect stock indices to see another leg down into October as most declines play out over three months.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Time-Goal-Day for FKLI. (for this week)
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
The Fed Should Give Me a Sandwich.
"As a result, I respectfully disagree with Mr. Forbes' appeal for a 100 basis point cut in the Fed Funds target rate, and would instead lean more toward a sandwich."
The Fed Should Cut Interest Rates by 100 Basis Points
Stevie Forbes : "I believe the U.S. Federal Reserve should cut their key interest rate, now at 5.25 percent, by 100 basis points when it meets Sept. 18 to solve this ongoing liquidity crisis."
Floaters !
On top of the increasing costs in the bond markets, the banks are having to pay millions in extra charges to borrow in the shorter term money markets, where interbank rates have risen sharply since July, the FT noted.
Like the U.S. Federal Reserve, they are all waiting to see which dead bodies float to the surface in financial results that are reported next week.
Commercial Papers.
CP is short-term debt maturing in 270 days or less, used by corporations primarily to finance inventory or manage working capital. Almost 20% of the short-term money market loans issued by European banks are due to mature between September 11 and September 19.
The inability of much of this paper to mature and be re-sold will force the world's major banks to assume the liabilities onto their balance sheets, the Times says. That has the net effect of removing from availablity cash that banks would have used to make loans.
Why is this happening? According to the Times, many of the off-balance-sheet structured investment vehicles (SIVs) set up by the banks were borrowed in the form of asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP). And this accounts for a large portion, almost half, of the CP rollovers.
ABCP is a form of senior secured, short-term, low-cost borrowing available to companies that could not otherwise directly borrow in the commercial paper markets.
The bottom line is that the banks are now hoarding cash and have stopped lending to each other. This has created a liquidity freeze. Or, as Paul Mortimer-Lee, global head of market economics at BNP Paribas in London puts it for the Times, “It is both a liquidity and a capital crisis.”
A thought for " 9-11 ".
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Where were or are you in the chart ?
1. JUST AN OCCURRENCE - " I don't believe this, this is just a correction of a bear trend!"
2, "This is good level to sell. Don't miss it. The market is easy to play, sell high."
3, DISBELIEF - "Something must be wrong, market should reversal soon. This is not justified!"
4, "Market has topped, things are still bad. You see, the market is trending down now!"
5, EUPHORIA - "This is crazy, I guess it has to go much higher. Many companies will announce better earnings and many secured big projects. Future looks very, very promising!"
a. OPTIMISM - "We are just having a 'healthy' technical correction. Good chance to buy some more."
A. "Correction more severe than expected, but nothing is wrong with the economy."
B. "See I told you, the market has bottomed! There is really nothing wrong, earnings still good. Buy more!"
C. RESIGNATION - "Forget it! The market is crazy! Too low to sell. Why did I get involved! I shouldn't have listen to you in the first place!"
Vertigo.mp3. http://www.99x.com/station/programs/mashups/mashups/new/U2%20VS%20Way%20Out%20West%20-%20Vertigo.mp3
Saturday, September 8, 2007
Wat the..!
Listen to this. Now, who is copying who? Someone must have been a Hawaiian songs fan back then!
http://www.waikiki-islanders.com/assets/multimedia/mp3/Paradise%20Isle/14%20Mamula%20Moon.mp3
Artist: Felix Mendelssohn & His Hawaiian Serenaders
album: Paradise Isle
God or Nature ?- The Divine Ratio.
A tenor's farewell..
Thursday, September 6, 2007
49-55 !
-A break of a Necktie of the 200/20 day moving averages would seem to confirm that notion, even if this level holds for a day or so.
-But, caveat emptor as the last two weeks may have been the eye of the hurricane and the calm before the storm: the current period aligns cyclically with what Gann called a panic zone which is 49 (7 squared) to 55 (Fibonacci) days from a peak.
-Sept 11 is a solar eclipse which is the most powerful of astronomic/cyclical influences and it will be interesting to see if its power is exerted on the 6th anniversary of 9/11.
-This is the time frame in which many crashes in history have played out including 1929 an 1987.
Where's the juice ?
Monday, September 3, 2007
Wat you need to know.. and wat it means!
1. What Did Bernanke Say?
Speaking at the Kansas City Fed's annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke reassured financial markets that the "Bernanke Put" remains in place, ready to limit damage to consumer spending and economic growth from a deepening housing recession.
2. What is the Primary Concern?
-Having done that, here are some important takeaways that we see.
-First, remember all that stuff about subprime mortgage issues being "well contained"? Well, that was wrong.
-"The financial turbulence we have seen had its immediate origins in the problems in the subprime mortgage market, but the effects have been felt in the broader mortgage market and in financial markets more generally, with potential consequences for the performance of the overall economy," Bernanke said.
-What happens when risk aversion grows?
-The velocity of money slows.
-In other words, the key engine of the economic growth begins to sputter.
-"More generally, investors may have become less willing to assume risk," Bernanke noted.
Of course, the role of the Federal Reserve as it is seen from within, is to push risk assumption without letting it get too carried away.
-"Some increase in the premiums that investors require to take risk is probably a healthy development on the whole, as these premiums have been exceptionally low for some time," Bernanke acknowledged. "However, in this episode, the shift in risk attitudes has interacted with heightened concerns about credit risks and uncertainty about how to evaluate those risks to create significant market stress."
-In other words, risk aversion has spilled over into credit markets generally, which threatens the whole economy.
3. Anti-Deflation Round 1: Coordinated Fiscal and Monetary Response.
- On Friday, President Bush just concluded a speech announcing the first stage of Federal help for subprime borrowers.
-This is not a "bail out" of borrowers and speculators President Bush said.
-Indeed it is not.
-Bush will "let" the Federal Housing Administration guarantee loans for subprime borrowers, allowing them the avoid foreclosure and refinance at more favorable rates, but as with all things there is a price.
-In other words, the move is to help guarantee payments to lenders.
-The irony?
-The fiscal response illustrates what is really going on behind the guise of "bad" subprime lending.
-Nobody wants these homes because they aren't worth what was paid for them.
-The borrowers would rather walk away than service the outrageous debt to value ratio.
-And the last thing the lenders want are homes that they are unable to sell.
-What about financial markets? Shouldn't they go down if they are really on their way toward a full scale deflationary credit crisis?
-Remember, the end of this credit cycle is a series of events, not a defined process. What do we mean by that?
-If we do fall into a full-scale deflation, it will eventually look like this: Stocks decline, interest rates move lower, bonds move higher, yet the dollar goes up.
-Only dollars can pay down debt, so they become more valuable.
-That is why the dollar can go up if deflation is at hand even though the central bank will be trying to fight it by lowering the cost of borrowing money.
-But by that time, deflation will be front page news and, almost by definition, any fiscal and monetary response will be too little and too late.
-But this is a long-term series of events, not a domino process, and we are just now entering the first round of policy actions.
-That makes it difficult to understand why markets may continue to go up for a while.
-Narratives are linear by design.
-Scenes are set, characters identified and defined, actions unfold over time in steps that lead toward a resolution.
-Unfortunately, while narrative is convenient in helping us understand things, it is useless in predicting how things unfold. Why?
-Because history does not unfold in a linear manner.
-Man, in retrospect, it all seems so clear. Have you ever thought that? I have.
-But why? Why does everything seem so clear in retrospect?
-Because we are hardwired to recount events in linear narrative fashion... even events that do not unfold in a linear manner!
-In other words, our need for linear narrative colors our perception of history.
-Linear narratives unfold in steps, the output proportionate to the input.
-The Federal Reserve Chairman lowers interest rates, the first a surprise 50 basis point cut, for example.
-The stock market rallies.
-Money is less expensive, so people borrow and put that money back into the stock market, or in houses.
-It certainly seems that way.
-However in reality, in non-linear systems, the output is not directly proportional to the input.
-So it's not the case that if, say, the Fed does X, a proportional outcome will follow, or if the Fed and politicans implement Y, a series of proportionate outcomes will follow.
-On the one hand, this is why it is so very easy to sit back and laugh at the predictions of economists and market strategists.
-Ha ha, the one prediction that is sure to be guaranteed proven correct?
-That their predictions will most likely be wrong.
-But this is not about "predicting" deflation.
-It's about discussing the most probable outcome of central banks continuing policies of attempting to maintain continued credit expansion.
-As long as credit expansion and demand for credit continues at an accelerating pace, the appearance of prosperity continues as asset prices increase.
-The one thing we do know, is that this credit expansion has a price.
-It must one day be repaid.
-How that day arrives is anyone's guess.
-But the longer it is delayed, the more painful it will ultimately be.
Sunday, September 2, 2007
Where's Mr.Right (foreign, of course!) for Ms.P?
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Smooth sailing...
Trading the financial markets for profits is akin to competing in Formula One racing. If you have the most technologically advance car, any mishaps can only be due to your own lack of control, judgement and incompetence.
A champion driver smooths out the course by anticipating, when to accelerate, when to slowdown. Whereas, a novice or fool bounces from kerb to kerb (like that in a video game) until he either learns the circuit or crash.
The spectators who have little knowledge or the skills involved, watch on, never realizing the work and effort a champion must go through in fulfilling his ambitions. Anyone should realise this. Hard work, common sense, sharp observation skills and undying dedications are the answers.
The rules and mood of the game are ever changing, we must adapt to each new environment if we are to succeed. Every course is a little different, constant pressure is upon us at all times. We must learn from the past.
Breath.mp3. http://hemsidor.torget.se/users/m/MP3or/prodigy-track2.mp3