
NOW
OR NEVER FOR THE BEARS?
by Gary
Tanashian
biiwii.com
January 1, 2007
It is looking like a case of "now or never" for the bears with "now" defined as anywhere from the first trading day of 2007 through the next several weeks. As you know, in an example of trying to find a needle in a financial market hay stack, on December 16, I wrote a piece calling for a near-term visit by the Dow to 13,007 in conjunction with the gold price holding support at 605, giving a 21.5 Dow-Gold ratio, a blow-off top in stocks and a solid basis for the next leg up in the gold complex in its secular bull market (in nominal terms as well as measured in Dow paper). That analysis is likely to miss its mark as gold is looking strong here and now and does not appear interested in fulfilling the chart objective located at 21.5 ounces per Dow unit. We remain long the GLD gold bullion fund as well as several miners, including major producers Goldcorp (GG), Kinross (KGC) and Goldfields (GFI) and several smaller miners such as AZK, mentioned previously in this analysis. In my view, fundamentals and technicals are lined up nicely for this sector for all the reasons mentioned here on the blog so often over the last many weeks.


Where things really look interesting however is in the broad market
indices. Most of you are aware of the poor performance of the Dow
Transports since mid-November which has provided a Dow Theory
non-confirmation. Also, the NDX (see chart), which tends to lead the
broad market, appears to be rolling over after relative weakness
compared to the Dow and SPX. Note though that at around 1750 NDX has
some strong support. Until that support is broken solidly, the bears are
definitely not
in business.
Which brings me to a broader measure of the market, the S&P 500 (see
chart). We appear to be setting up for one of two near term outcomes. 1)
The NDX could find support at 1750 and turn higher toward the double top
resistance at around 1825, which would likely trigger some blow-off
fireworks in the broad market and bring our Dow 13,007 target into play.
Or 2) the NDX could fail support amid much fanfare and signal a much
needed and awaited correction. In that event I have noted some likely
retrace targets (see SPX levels noted). I believe it would actually be
healthier for the bulls in 2007 if a hard correction were to visit the
markets near term. A blow off, while euphoric in the short term would
likely create a major top of some sort and possibly an epic shorting
opportunity because in a market driven by liquidity in the form of carry
trades (Yen is front and center currently) and central bank credit
(debt) creation, it's a game of "all or nothing" as a friend
used to say. No, it is best for the bulls to get a much needed
correction over with before carrying on the pretense that this is a long
term healthy market.
Our ongoing analysis of the bond market and particularly the yield curve
shows rates being pulled higher and liquidity being drained from some
segments of what we, or at least I, know as FrankenMarket. Goldilocks
was given a bounce in her step due to the housing slow-down and
commodity corrections as Wall Street and the financial media, which
simply love a good story, spun a
nice best of all worlds scenario. The Fed remained firm, yet the
globally connected bond market (trading partners buying US treasury debt
with proceeds of American consumer purchases on credit) and the ever
accommodating BOJ became ever more permissive and constructive for the
inflation economy. Some liquidity dynamics appear to be changing as I
type, with the yield curve having established a fledgling uptrend and
the gold/silver ratio having broken resistance at 48 and established a
short-term uptrend, which was noted as a key in the December 16th piece.
As for the BOJ, if you ever find out what they are thinking, please drop
me an email and clue me in.
To summarize the above, I look for either a near term blow off in stocks
and most other assets along with a notable decline in the US Dollar
toward the closely watched 80 level. This would prompt higher interest
rates which would eventually put a stop to the Goldilocks foolishness.
Or alternatively, the numerous bearish divergences in many markets
fulfill themselves in the form of strong and downright scary
corrections. This could eventually lead to new highs across many asset
classes down the road as monetary policy makers, fully aware of the
cards this house is built with, panic yet again with the idea of not
letting any domino's start to fall. I believe the bears have an
opportunity coming in the near term. The question is, will it be the
opportunity of a lifetime or merely a nice trade?
Aside from the gold stocks mentioned above, other relevant stocks (ETF's)
to this piece are SPY, DIA, QQQQ, IEF and TLT. No recommendations are
implied regarding any security mentioned, nor are we recommending any
particular market stance, ie, long or short. Please see Terms &
Conditions located here: http://www.biiwii.com/about.htm
© 2007 Gary Tanashian
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