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Sunday 6 November 2011

European Union, Global Investors…We’re All Fed up with Greece!

By George Leong, B. Comm


I hate to keep coming back to Greece, but it’s turning out to be a major Greek tragedy over there. The country cannot pay back its initial $130 billion or so emergency bailout and now needs another $150 billion to pay back loans and avoid a sovereign debt default. The reality is that Greece is tanking and falling into shambles, waiting for a white knight to appear and clean up the financial crisis. The country needs to follow strict austerity measures.
I recall being in Greece in 1995 and wondering why there were so many buildings in the construction phase sitting idly with no progress. The taxi driver told me that, in Greece, all construction halts if interest rates are high, waiting for rates to decline before continuing.
Greece is a beautiful country full of history, and one that’s significant in the development of mathematics and the arts. Yet now there appears to be a Greek tragedy in the works.
After much debate and compromise, Greece was extended a second bailout package if it delivered a tough austerity program. In my view, it was a done deal, as Greece did not have another option. Stock markets rallied on the news. The uncertainty in Greece was over.
American-born Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou then shocks the global markets earlier this week after announcing that the country will need to hold a national referendum to determine if its citizens want to accept the new debt crisis bailout terms from the European Union. Papandreou is clearly trying to save his own hide.
Perhaps he should come back stateside and run for President?
Again, I’m talking of survival here for Greece. What is there to talk about? As I said the other day; imagine being on the brink of losing everything, but someone says, “Don’t worry; I have money for your debt crisis, even if you may not be able to pay it back.” Would you say no?
The European Union obviously is fed up with Greece and wants a resolution to the debt crisis. The European Union has demanded that Greece must accept the austerity measures plan in order to receive funds; otherwise, it may need to leave the European Union and go it alone. Of course, if this happens, Greece would go into default, which could lead to a financial crisis throughout the eurozone and cause havoc. Opposition parties in Greece are calling for Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou to resign and for a coalition government to accept the European Union deal. Germany and France have indicated that they are tired of the Greek stalling and want the deal done now.
In my view, it’s silly that Greece believes it has any other options left and is risking a catastrophic debt crisis and default. The debt crisis is not limited to Greece. Italy is also struggling with its own massive debt crisis and austerity measures, while Portugal wants more flexibility in the terms of its debt bailout. The demands, it seems, will not halt and Europe likely has more problems waiting down the road.
My feeling is that the risk continues to be high, as you can read about in Stocks Facing Many Hurdles Ahead.
Longer-term I continue to favor small-cap stocks. You can read why in Small-caps in a Bear Market, But Have a Long-term View
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Chinese Equities Experience Big Turnaround—Why it Might Not Last

By Mitchell Clark, B.Com


One sector of the stock market that we all know has been hammered is Chinese stocks. A large portion of all U.S.-listed Chinese stocks have dropped significantly in value due to a lack of confidence in their corporate reporting. Also occurring in the broader stock market has been a drop in the share value of well-known, respectable Chinese stocks, mirroring the trading action in the domestic Chinese equity market.

Since the beginning of October, however, there’s been a marked turnaround in Chinese stocks, especially those listed on Chinese stock exchanges. The Hang Seng Index, which is the main stock market index in Hong Kong, dropped to a low of around 16,000 early in October, then smartly reversed to its current level of around 19,500. By any account, this is an impressive turnaround, and the strength in Chinese stocks is due to expectations for monetary easing in China.
Right now, the U.S. stock market needs all the help it can get and any positive news on the Chinese economy would be very helpful. Smaller Chinese stocks trading on American stock exchanges typically take quite a while to report their quarterly earnings and many beaten-down positions will be reporting throughout November. There is an opportunity in this stock market for some bottom feeding in Chinese equities. Stock market conditions seemingly can’t get much worse for this group and there is good value out there.
Of course, a number of previously listed Chinese stocks were outright frauds in terms of their operations and financial results. Many of these companies listed by acquiring shell companies and renaming them. It’s an easier way for a company to get a U.S. stock market listing. In this market, I’d only consider the well-known Chinese stocks that have strong followings from the investment community and I’d focus on value.
Right now, I think it’s fair to conclude that stock market speculators would rather own gold over Chinese stocks. The resource trade is holding up despite all the risks out there and, while some Chinese stocks offer very low price-to-earnings ratios, the confidence issue isn’t going away anytime soon.
Chinese stocks were some fantastic wealth creators. Then they were fantastic wealth destroyers (unless you were short). It’s fair to say that Chinese stocks operate in a kind of Wild West environment, which lacks oversight and reporting regulations. The stock market knows that there are great growth stories out there; but, in today’s environment, all investors seem to want is safety and stability (see Growth & Momentum in a Market Like This? You Bet!). I don’t blame investors, considering all that’s transpired. We’re in an environment of great unknowns and this uncertainty is holding the Main Street economy back. Are we any closer to more certainty in the stock market? Right now, I’d have to say no.

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Understanding the European Crisis: Greece Is Not the Problem

By Michael Lombardi, MBA

Greece’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2010 was only $304.87 billion. The proposed Greek “bailout” by the European Union includes about $180 billion in cash and a 50% cut in Greece’s debt. This is equal to more than one year’s GDP for Greece. It’s a huge bailout. It’s free money. The Greeks would be silly not to take it…that’s why, at the end of the day, they’ll grab it with both hands.
The perceived risk is that if Greek defaults, the first member of the 17-country euro zone could be eliminated and other countries would follow. This would cause problems for the relatively new euro (an ill-conceived idea in the first place),
But the real problem is not Greece; it is Italy. The third largest economy in Europe after Germany and France belongs to Italy. According to the World Bank, Italy’s GDP in 2010 was $2.05 trillion, almost seven times bigger than Greece’s economy.
Yesterday, for the first time since September 1997, the yield on Italy’s 10-year government bond hit 6.4%. Ireland was forced to ask the European Central Bank (ECB) for a bailout when its 10-year bonds hit a yield of 6.5%. For Portugal, the magic number was seven percent.
The bottom line is that the European Union can afford a bailout of Greece and it can persuade big European banks to cut the value of their loans to Greece, because the ECB can backstop the European banks.
But, put bluntly, the European Union cannot afford a bailout of Italy. This is the real problem. If Italy defaults, major European banks could go under; the euro would collapse. We would need to bring Julius Caesar back from the dead to restore unity in the European Union.
And what’s Italy doing about their problems? Very little. The government bickers back and forth about austerity measures. The most colorful leader in the European Union, Italian Prime Minster Silvio Berlusconi, manages to continue surviving government confidence votes. Italy’s Il Sole 24 Ore newspaper ran a front-cover story yesterday saying that, despite promising an Italian “economic overhaul” to the European Union, Berlusconi arrived at the G-20 summit in Cannes yesterday “empty-handed.” What else is new?
So what does this all this risk among European Union members mean for small investors like you and me?
It means a choppy stock market for some months to come. It means the euro and European Union could eventually disappear (as I have been predicting for more than a year now). It means that gold bullion becomes even more valuable. Hold on to your gold, dear reader, it will come in very handy in 2012.
Michael’s Personal Notes:
My son says that if there is one company he would love to own, it would be Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ/SBUX).
As he explains it to me, Starbucks took something most of us use every day, coffee, and made it into a lifestyle statement. Where Apple Inc. (NASDAQ/AAPL) can only succeed by continuously introducing new products or upgrading old ones, Starbucks simply found different ways to present an old product: coffee.
In the 1950s and 1960s, if white-collar people became stressed, they would hit the bar (especially at happy hour) or they’d have a cigarette or two…or a pack.
Today, as society has become smarter and more aware of what alcohol and cigarettes can do to the body, taking a break at a Starbucks has become a safer fad.
Starbucks did one thing so many other food companies fail to do: it made the stores, the product, the service…all consistent. Walk into a Starbucks store in London, England, or Miami, Florida. They sell the same product. The stores look the same; the service is the same.
And business is booming. Starbucks reported yesterday that its fourth-quarter net income jumped 29% to $358 million (no wonder my son wants to own it). What recession? Sales at Starbucks’ U.S. stores open at least one year rose 10% in the company’s latest quarter.
Of the widely followed and widely held big American stocks, Starbucks’ stock has been one of the few to break above its previous all-time high hit in October 2007.
Would I buy Starbucks stock today? Unfortunately, no. I expect 2012 to be difficult year for the economy worldwide. And I don’t believe Starbucks will be exempt from the pullback in consumer spending I expect.
Where the Market Stands; Where it’s Headed:
The Dow Jones Industrial Average opens this morning up 4.2% for 2011.
Despite being old and tired, a bear market rally that started in March of 2009 continues to prevail today. The rally has lasted longer than most analysts had expected, including yours truly.
Stocks will continue to ride the “wall of worry” higher against the backdrop of pessimism amongst stock advisors and investors, better than expected corporate profits, easy monetary policy, and lack of investment alternatives to stocks.
What He Said:
“Investors have been put into an unfair corner. Those who invested in stocks because they got caught in the tech boom (1999) have seen their investments gone. Now, those who have leveraged heavily to play the real estate game, because it is the place to be (2005), could see the same fate as the stock market investors. Thanks again, Mr. Greenspan.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, May 27, 2005. Michael started warning about the crisis coming in the U.S. real estate market right at the peak of the boom, now widely believed to be 2005.
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Thursday 3 November 2011

Debt Crises & Economic Fragility Around the World: Is There a Better Reason to Buy Gold Right Now?

By George Leong, B. Comm



I find it absolutely laughable how Prime Minister George Papandreou needs to hold a national referendum to determine if the country’s citizens want to accept another $150 billion or so in emergency capital in order to repay Greece’s initial bailout from its debt crisis. I mean, we are talking of survival here for Greece. What is there to discuss? Let me put it this way: can you imagine being on the brink of losing everything, but someone pops up and says, “Don’t worry; I have money for you, even if you may not be able to pay it back?”
What really is disturbing is that the vote may not happen until early 2012 despite the European Union members now telling Greece that there will be no changes to its budget cuts and it needs to happen or no money will be advanced and the country will default. The uncertainty will impact the stock market until there is a concrete and workable resolution.
In addition, the one-year Italian bond surged nearly 50% to yield 5.17%, as worries mount that the country could default. Yields relate to risk and rise to compensate for buying higher-risk debt. Bonds in Germany offer much less yield—a reflection of the lower relative risk.
My feeling is that gold continues to be the place you need to have capital given the market risk. After the failure to hold above $1,900, the metal has struggled to find direction on the charts and has traded with little sense of direction at around $1,600 to $1,700.
Besides Europe, don’t forget the crippling debt levels and deficits in America. The powerful U.S. economic engine continues to show breaks and is stalling at this most critical time for the country.
We are also seeing some economic fragility in the BRICS countries. Brazil, India, and China are seeing some stalling in their economies and stock markets.
Buying has been driven by a combination of speculative trading in physical gold, gold ETFs, and buying as a safe haven investment.
Lombardi Financial initially turned bullish in 2002-2003 and has remained so ever since. Although at times the bullion has had a rough ride, prices have turned around significantly after first breaking above $400.00. We believe the spot price of gold will take a run at $2,000 by 2012 should the global economies and risk continue.
The simple truth is that gold is a trustworthy and realistic investment instrument that should be in every investor’s portfolio. Gold’s traditional role as a safe haven has made it the underdog in the world markets. It is an investment that people turn to only when stock or bond markets aren’t performing well, or when monetary policies are running amok. Yet, there is a sense that gold may be increasingly seen as a credible and realistic investment vehicle and not just as a safe-haven instrument for parking capital.
In the current climate, gold represents the best bet, while silver continues to be a trading commodity based on the economic recovery and demand for electronics and industrial applications.
My advice to you is to buy a mixture of exploration-stage miners along with small to large producers. Under this scenario, you can play both the potential aggressive gains of exploration stocks and the steady returns of the large producers. The SPDR Gold Trust ETF (GLD) is worth a look.
I think Europe is a mess and you can read my comments in my recent article, Europe: It Needs to Get Its Act Together.
And with Black Friday in a few weeks, retailers are hoping for buyers, but it will not be easy. You can read about this in Former Retail Superstar Struggling in Weak Market.


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Is There a Better Reason to Buy Gold Right Now?

Central Bank and Inflation—the Top New Fundamentals for Gold Stocks

By Mitchell Clark, B.Com


So the stock market is gyrating and this is the new norm. All equities can’t escape the prevailing trading action in the stock market, but the one sector that continues to have above-average potential is precious metals; gold stocks in particular. Not all gold stocks are doing well in this market, but there’s a lot that are, and they are smaller players that have their own growth stories. If I were a stock market
speculator focused on only one industry group, it would be on gold investments. The outlook is that good within the industry.
The best news for the spot price of gold and individual gold stocks isn’t the European debt crisis; it’s the fact that central banks are buying gold bars again. For years, the central banks of mature economies have been selling off their gold holdings for the simple reason that the assets didn’t generate any rate of return while sitting in the vaults. Now that there’s so much uncertainty in the marketplace and U.S. dollar leadership has lessened, many countries are quietly creating new stockpiles.
We’ve talked about a number of growing gold producers in this column (see Everything Gold Is Turning Into Some Serious Green). I watch dozens of gold stocks at once, and I’d stick with those trading near their 52-week highs. I’d rather try to buy gold stocks high, with the hope of selling at a higher price later, than try to buy low. If a gold stock isn’t doing well now, then it’s less likely to do so later. This isn’t the case for the rest of the stock market, but the gold sector in particular.
The stock market has already rewarded many gold investments, but the spot price of the commodity has so much upside potential going forward that the business model for established producers is very good. There is a lot of risk in the global economy and core inflation rates in mature economies are going up. If the stock market does nothing over the next six months, it’s my prediction that gold stocks will be some of the best performers, following the spot price as it slowly ticks higher.
For speculators in the sector, you want to choose from gold stocks that offer an attractive package—an established miner with growing production, ongoing exploration, declining cash costs, etc. With so much uncertainty in the world and the stock market, exposure to some gold investments is a must in this market. There isn’t any rush to consider much else.


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New Fundamentals for Gold Stocks

Why Stocks Will Rise as the Economy Deteriorates Further

By Michael Lombardi, MBA

“Michael, you write about the stock market rising in the weeks ahead and actually ending 2011 higher than it started (see Stock Market: Where it Will End 2011), but on the other hand you often write about the pathetic state of the U.S. economy. How can they differ so much?”
The above is an important question we often receive here at PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL from our readers.
The stock market and the economy…they are two very different phenomena that can often go in the opposite direction in the short term, but that eventually meet in the long term.
Yes, the stock market is a leading indicator of the economy. But in the short term, the job of a bear market and a bull market is to mislead investors as to the real direction of the markets. No bull market goes straight up; no bear market goes straight down. There are peaks and valleys on the way up and on the way down. However, in the long-term, the stock market does lead the economy.
Just look at October 2007. The bear market we are presently in started that month. Stocks came down steadily starting in October 2007, but the U.S. economy was doing fine at the time. By the end of 2008 though, the U.S. economy was well entrenched in the worst recession since the Great Depression.
Stock bull markets tend to move in long cycles of about 20 years in duration. A bear market has a shorter cycle, about five to 10 years, as a bear market tends to deal with the excesses of a preceding bull market more quickly. In a nutshell, greed takes a long time to build up. Fear comes quickly.
Let’s move to today, the markets and the economy.
If you are a long-time reader, you know my opinion about the stock market. We are in Phase II of secular bear market that will move stocks higher, as investors get the false sense that the economy is doing better and stocks are the place to be again. At this very moment, most stock advisors and investors are still very bearish. Hence, I believe this bear market rally will continue to ride “the wall of worry” higher.
Of all the things the stock market has going for it (strong corporate earnings, lots of pessimism out there), the lack of investment alternatives to the stock market is key. When the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury is two percent and the dividend yield on the Dow Jones Industrial Average is 2.5%, stocks are attractive.
But, in the long-term, the economy has severe structural problems. I write about them daily here in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL. The Fed has kept the economy alive the past two to three years by aggressively increasing the money supply. This can’t go on forever.
At some point, the stock market will fall victim to higher interest rates brought about by rapid inflation and Phase III of the bear market will suddenly be upon us. That’s what the 10-year bull market in gold has been all about. At that point, the bear market in stocks and the economy will converge again, just like they did in 2008.

Michael’s Personal Notes:


Yesterday, after the Federal Reserve concluded its regularly scheduled two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting, Ben Bernanke said the Fed may look at buying more mortgage-backed securities, if the economic situation warranted, loosen up the housing market.
In my humble opinion, the Fed needs to stop forgiving the sins of the past, stop expanding its balance sheet, and start tightening.
Look at the Fed’s actions to date:
-- It has kept short-term interest rates down for years and has told us that the Federal Funds Rate will stay near or at zero until mid-2013…short-term interest rates to stay at zero for two more years!
-- The Fed has purchased $2.3 trillion in debt, including government treasuries in the period from December 2008 to June 2011 (two rounds of quantitative easing).
-- Swapped $400 billion of its short-term securities holdings for long-term debt in order to lower long-term interest rates.
In doing the above, the Fed has significantly increased the money supply. A total of $2.3 trillion has been added to the Fed’s balance sheet. That doesn’t happen without money being created. And the more money created, the less the U.S. dollar buys, the more inflation rises (see Economic Analysis: And Then Came Rapid Inflation), the higher the price of gold bullion goes.
Yesterday, the Fed told us much of what we already know: the economy is growing slower than originally thought; unemployment in the U.S. will remain high; and the European debt crisis is a risk for America.
What the Fed didn’t tell us is that, given its inclination to buy more mortgage-backed securities should the economy weaken further (which it will), another round of quantitative easing is in the cards. In a recent Bloomberg survey of economists, 69% of those surveyed said the Fed will embark on QE3 in 2012.
The government already owns Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, who jointly own or guarantee half the residential mortgages in the U.S. With the Fed buying more mortgage-backed securities, the government and Fed will get more entrenched in the residential housing mortgage market.
I doubt George Washington ever envisioned a time when the government would own guaranteed loans on homes. This is not what the government was set up to do. It’s this type of Keynesian economics that have gone too far, for too long, and that continue to plunge our country into record debt. It’s also a wonder why gold isn’t trading at $2,000 an ounce today (see Answered: Can I Still Make Money Buying Gold Now?).

Where the Market Stands; Where it’s Headed:

I continue with the belief that we are in bear market rally that started in March 2009. Phase I of the bear market brought stocks down to a 12-year low on March 9, 2009. Phase II of the bear market, which we are presently in, is a rally within the confines of a bear market. This rally could last three to four years. The purpose of this bear market rally is to lure investors back into the “safety of stocks.”
Phase III of the bear market will bring stocks back down to where the bear market originally bottomed; in this case, 6,440 on the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Enjoy the current stock market rally while it lasts!

What He Said:

“Interest rates at a 40-year low: The Fed has made borrowing as easy as possible, resulting in a huge appetite for loans and mortgages. We are nearing a debt crisis.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, April 8, 2004. “We will wish Greenspan never brought rates down so low as to entice so many consumers to have such big mortgages.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, April 27, 2004. Michael first started warning about the negative repercussions of Greenspan’s low-interest-rate policy when the Fed first dropped interest rates to one percent in 2004.

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Why Stocks Will Rise

Wednesday 2 November 2011

Market Risk: Why Upside Moves Will Not Be Easy

By George Leong, B. Comm


October was one of the best months for the stock market in history in spite of the market risk. Everyone was buying and it didn’t matter if it was technology, industrial, or some new never-heard-before-technology. Everything went up, which is why we are now facing some selling pressure.
Up we go, down we go. Traders are currently jittery following the strong October. The month ended on a ghoulish note on Halloween. November looks like it will also begin sour, with a jump in market risk.
European stocks got hammered. The FTSE 100 moved down over three percent, while other key European bourses plummeted as much as five percent. The selling was driven by a major surprise when the Greek Prime Minister said the country’s new bailout plan resulting from the debt crisis would have to pass a national referendum—adding more market risk and unknowns to the European and global situations. The reality is that there are revolts on the streets of Athens, as people are fighting to safeguard their previous benefits and lifestyles. I mean, why would you not fight to protect a cushy job with early retirement?
But, as I have said on numerous times in the past, Greece is not the only country in trouble. The other members of PIGS also add to the market risk. Speculation is swirling that Italy may be vulnerable to default. The country is undergoing their own austerity strategy, but I expect some surprises to pop up and this will prop up the market risk.
There is also the renewed concern towards the slowing in Asia, as China’s factory activity declined to its lowest level since February 2009. The economic weakness in Europe is negatively impacting exports in China and other Asian countries and adds to market risk.
Going back to the U.S., the key stock indices have each breached their respective 200-day moving average (MA), while the S&P 500 has moved back into the red for the year.
The downside break is worrisome and could point to more weakness to surface on the charts, especially if the non-farm jobs reading this Friday are poor, as many expect them to be.
On the plus side, based on the seasonal trends, market risk may decline, as the months from November to April have resulted in the biggest gains for the DOW and S&P 500 in the past, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac.
Technology has been better, with stocks advancing in eight months from November to June.
So, while there are the market risk and volatility, if you trade the historical patterns, ride the gains, but make sure you also take some money off the table.
I continue to recommend using put options or buying short-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs) as an offset to the weakness. It’s easy and cost-effective as a hedge.
Just take a look at the various indices that closely reflect your holdings or put options on individual stocks that you have a large position in. Index Puts include the SPY (S&P 500), QQQ (NASDAQ), or IWM (Russell 2000).
Take a look at what I had previously said about the global economy stalling in Stocks Facing Many Hurdles Ahead.
An area that has been under some pressure, but which I really like longer-term, is China’s travel sector; you can read about it in China’s Travel Market: Why It’s an Attractive Chance for Investment.

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The Only Way the Stock Market Breakout Will Hold

By Mitchell Clark, B.Com


I continue to be dumbfounded by the actions of Greek politicians. Just when more certainty was returning to currency and stock markets, they screw it up again. Make no mistake; today’s stock market woes are largely due to the European debt crisis. I’m totally unimpressed by how this is being handled.
The stock market did a great job breaking out of its correction trading range. The question is, can the breakout hold? If Greece would get its act together, then this is a stock market that wants to go higher.
Everyone knows that corporate earnings tend to be managed by companies and Wall Street analysts. But corporate earnings have been decidedly strong this quarter and all throughout the year. I’m certain the stock market would be a lot higher today if it wasn’t for Europe’s sovereign debt crisis.
We’ve seen very solid corporate earnings from the technology sector, basic materials, healthcare, and industrial goods. Stock market investors revised their corporate earnings expectations lower going into 2012 and this is setting up the stock market for a new advance, providing that the debt crisis or some other shock doesn’t take place. It’s a tricky time to be a stock market investor—with the age of austerity comes a great unknown. There will be growth in the future, but will it be like it was before? It’s tough to imagine Main Street corporate earnings taking off without a new up cycle in the real estate market.
The current stock market is well set up for a decent rally. Valuations are reasonable, visibility for corporate earnings is mostly solid and there is lots of cash sitting on the sidelines. The key going forward will be renewed certainty on the European debt crisis and renewed spending from consumers. With confidence comes hope and with new hope for the future comes renewed consumer spending.
One thing that’s seems quite unlikely, however, is a speedy return to normal economic growth rates. We’re still coming off a major period of debt-fueled excess and both Main Street and Wall Street (banks in particular) are trying to establish a new normal for operations (see All Global Investment Risks Point to a Steady Dollar & Mediocrity in Stocks & Metals). I have to say that, if it weren’t for emerging markets, interest rates being low, and a weaker U.S. dollar, corporate earnings would not be so robust. Policy-wise, the Federal Reserve is making progress domestically. It’s Europe that’s holding things back.
The stock market was due for a little rest after such a strong breakout, but the Greek news was a real surprise. The expectation for the fourth quarter is for another round of solid corporate earnings and, accordingly, the breakout should hold. Any return below 1,200 on the S&P 500 Index would not be good technically. The stock market is muddling through the tough times. It’s time now for Greece to get its act together.

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Stock Market Got You Nervous? S&P 500 Says Smooth Sailing

By Michael Lombardi, MBA

Yes, I know all the news today is about the audacity of a Greece Referendum on getting free money (I talk about that in “Michael’s Personal Notes” below), but there are two stock market-related important news items I want to share with my readers first.
The third quarter ended September 30, 2011, marks the 11th straight quarter that the corporate earnings of the S&P 500 have beat analyst expectations.
Abby Cohen, senior U.S. investment strategist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE/GS) said yesterday that the S&P 500 is trading at a 33% discount to past periods of similar inflation. I’m not one to put much faith in the forecasts or statements of other analysts, but we need to put into context what Cohen is saying relative to corporate earnings at the S&P 500.
The S&P 500 is trading at 14.9 times current corporate earnings; not cheap, but not expensive either. However, the S&P 500 is trading at only 12 times estimated earnings for the 12 months ahead. With the S&P 500 beating analyst’s corporate earnings expectation 100% of the time over the past 11 quarters, achieving estimated earnings in the current quarter and the next three quarters of 2012 is not a stretch.
Dear reader; this is what I’m saying to you about stocks, as we enter the final two trading months of 2011:
The S&P 500 is priced at 12 times future earnings, an historic bargain. The dividend yield for the S&P 500 is presently 2.2%, better than what you can get on a 10-year U.S. Treasury (I’d rather own the S&P 500 than a 10-year U.S. Treasury for the next 10 years).
No, stocks are not a screaming bargain. But when you look at the interest rate environment today, when you look at the alternative investments to the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average, you realize that stocks are not a bad place to be, especially when the S&P 500 continues to surprise analysts and investors with corporate earnings that consistently beat estimates.
Please, don’t let the daily gyrations of the stock market influence you. Historically, stocks are undervalued compared to their corporate earnings and the present interest rate environment. Bullishness does not prevail amongst stock advisors and investors; in fact, bearishness does (see Forget the Economy: These Companies Are Still Earning Big Money).
These big daily losses and gains for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average are a way for active traders to make a lot of money. While I realize it’s nerve-wracking to see the value of your investment portfolio fluctuate so much on a daily basis; but remember the more the daily markets fluctuate, the more money the day traders make. Traders want markets that move one percent to two percent a day!
For investors like you and me, there is very little evidence that the bear market rally that started in March of 2009 is over (see Strong Corporate Earnings and the Bear Market: How it Will Play Out).
Michael’s Personal Notes:
All the financial news this morning and yesterday was focused on the Greek Prime Minister’s idea for Greece to have a referendum on the Europe Union’s financial rescue package.
It’s a good thing.
The euro, my dear reader, is in jeopardy. When I travel to Europe each year (twice so far in 2011), I can’t understand how 17 countries, all with different goals and aspirations, can share the same fiat currency. It’s quite unbelievable how economically rich and poor countries share the same money.
Italy’s primary goal these days is to increase tourism. Germany’s goal, from what I can see, is to become the leading economic growth engine of Europe, with the headquarters of all the major European manufacturers (think cars) located in Germany.
The obvious is the obvious. Under the pressure of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, European banks agreed to take a 50% haircut off the value of their loans to Greece. Merkel and Sarkozy spearheaded an unprecedented European Union bailout of Greece.
And what does the Greek Prime Minister do? He throws a big wrench in the plans: he wants his people to vote on it! He wants his people to vote on getting free money!
While frowned upon by equity analysts and the media, a Greek referendum is sheer genius.
Here’s what a Greek referendum on the proposed European Union’s bailout of Greece does: it signals that democracy is important in Greece, it solidifies the Greek Prime Minister’s popularity (Andreas Papandreou’s popularity among voters plunged after he introduced so many austerity measures), and it confirms that Greece wants to be part of the euro currency. And that is what it’s all about…making sure the euro survives.
Greece has a sweetheart of a deal: Greece will receive about $180 billion and enjoy a 50% write-down in the value of its debt. It literally is free money. The Greek voters are not stupid. They know the severe repercussions if Greece doesn’t accept the European Union-led bailout. What this vote really does is strengthen the euro, something that will make the Chinese “lenders of last resort” very happy.

Where the Market Stands; Where it’s Headed:


Nice way to start a month…
The Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 297 points in its first trading day of November. For the record, the Dow Jones Industrials gained 12.5% in October…one of its best months on record. In October, the stock market rebounded from the severely oversold level I had been writing about the past few weeks.
No, the bear market rally in stocks that began on March 9, 2009, is not over. The stock market doesn’t roll over and collapse when stock advisors are bearish and when investors are so worried about the economy and the stock market.
We are still in a Phase II bear market. During this phase, the stock market moves higher during a rally that can last three to four years. The purpose of the rally is to bring stock market investors back into stocks with the false sense that the economy is recovering.

What He Said:

I’ve been pushing gold bullion and gold shares for over a year now. Bank in January 2002, I personally started buying gold shares.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, December 13, 2002. Gold bullion was trading under $300.00 an ounce when Michael first started recommending gold-related investments. Many gold stocks recommended in Michael’s advisories have experienced spectacular gains.
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Tuesday 1 November 2011

You Profited Big on the Stock Market Rally…Now What?

By George Leong, B. Comm




Listen up folks, stock markets have had a great run advancing in five straight weeks and breaking away from or near to bear market status. There may be more upside moves ahead of us should the economy continue to improve, but you also need to be careful.

You have probably made some nice profits on your investment portfolio, so my advice to you is to take some profits off the table. I’m seeing some incredible euphoria amongst the bulls, but I do not believe stocks can continue to rally without some sort of market adjustment. I have discussed this belief numerous times in past commentaries.
If the economy doesn’t deliver jobs this week, your investment portfolio could retrench. The key now is to protect your profits by adopting strong risk management to protect your hard-earned capital. The last thing you want is to watch your gains disappear.
One of my favorite strategies I like personally to protect an investment portfolio is the use of put options as a defensive hedge.
Under this scenario, investors may be somewhat bearish or uncertain and want to protect the current gains against a downside move in the stock or the market with the use of index put options. By doing so, you are hedging your investment portfolio.
For those of you not familiar with options, a buyer of a put option contract buys the right, but not the obligation, to sell a specific number of the underlying instrument at the strike or exercise price for a specified length of time until the expiry date of the contract. After the expiry date, the particular option expires worthless and any responsibility is eliminated.
The buyer of the put option pays a premium to the writer of the option, who gets compensated for assuming the risk of exercise. The writer of the put option is obligated to buy the stock from the holder of the put should it be exercised by the expiry date.
For the writer of the put option, the amount of premium received for assuming the risk is generally directly correlated to the volatility of the stock and market. The more volatile the stock, the higher the premium paid for the option. And low volatility translates into lower premiums.
You can buy puts for stocks and sectors. If your investment portfolio is heavy in technology, you can buy puts on the NASDAQ. Or let’s say your investment portfolio has benefited from the run-up in gold and silver to record historical highs; a good strategy may be to buy put options on The Philadelphia Gold & Silver Index, which tracks 10 major gold and silver stocks.
If your investment portfolio is heavily weighted in technology, you can buy put options in PowerShares ETFs (NASDAQA/QQQQ), a heavily traded put used for defensive purposes.
It’s that easy. Just take a look at the various indices that closely reflect your holdings or put options on individual stocks that you may have a large position in.
In this market, safety is the key and your investment portfolio will benefit from it.
An area that I continue to like given the strength of metals is that of mining stocks. You can read about it in Why You Might Want to Look at Buying the Miners, where I list three examples of interesting mining stocks.
One of my favorite technology stocks continues to be Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ/AAPL), which you can read about in Apple Is Shining Bright…RIM Not So Much.

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Invest in Real Estate & Gold

It’s Still a Bear Market, But Not in Gold Stocks

By Mitchell Clark, B.Com




The top stocks in this market are large-cap, higher-dividend-paying companies with strong international operations. For speculators, gold stocks remain some of the best stocks in this stock market. The big companies have the cash and the economies of scale (to withstand the shocks to fundamentals and the stock market) and gold stocks have some of the best potential for capital gains, because these are the companies that are generating the most growth. The days of Internet stock market high flyers and software monopolies are over. You can trade the stock market, the futures market or you can invest in the real economy. And I’m not talking mom and pop shops on Main Street—I’m talking about the only real thing that counts in today’s global economy, and that’s natural resources.

The commodity price cycle and gold stocks have been experiencing the same price correction as the stock market. But, any reasonable economic analysis suggests that, with so much debt in the world and governments trying to grow their economies with reduced interest rates and printing money, the next major reckoning is about to be unleashed. We’re already seeing core inflation rates going up around the world and, as economies recover; there will be growing scarcity in a basket of raw materials. This is why gold stocks are poised for another major upward price trend—the fundamentals for the spot price of gold are actually getting better (see Precious Metals Sector Deal-making Padding Investor Wallets).

You might not think about it, but the stock market is still in a long-term bear market. I don’t care what the definition of a bear market is; the stock market is still below its value in early 2000—that to me is a bear market. But what have come alive during the last 11 years are commodities and specifically the prices of gold and gold stocks. With all the risks around the world, including the European debt crisis, I don’t see the price of gold as being expensive at all. In fact, it isn’t as adjusted for inflation.

This is why I’m so bullish on precious metals, gold stocks in particular, and agriculture. All the debt and increasing money supplies will come back to haunt the global economy in the form of inflation. What economic growth we can generate now might just evaporate under the auspices of central banks trying to contain the very inflation that they created. That’s why gold stocks are sitting pretty. They already have the cash, the fundamentals and the growing demand for their commodity. It’s a new upward price cycle that’s about to begin.

Gold stocks are like any other stock market sector—they trade as a group. Most investors tend to associate their gold investments apart from their main stock market portfolio. I can’t predict where the spot price of gold is going to go, but all the global policy action that’s been going on since the subprime mortgage meltdown leads me believe that gold stocks will be the stock market’s major outperforming sector over the next several years.

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Penny Stocks, Stock Market Advice, Economic Analysis, Investing In Real Estate and Gold

Why We Can’t Have a Sustained Economic Recovery

By Michael Lombardi, MBA


Things are looking up for the economy again. Unfortunately, things are not always as they seem.

The U.S. Commerce Department said that the U.S. economy grew at 2.5% in the third quarter—the fastest pace in a year. Moody’s Investor Services last week raised the corporate ratings of both Ford Motor Company (NYSE/F) and General Motors Company (NYSE/GM), an indication that the car companies are doing better as well. All of a sudden, people are feeling good about the U.S. economy again.

But it was only this summer that analysts were calling for a second U.S. recession. Some economists said we were already in a recession. The numbers being released on the economy beg to differ. Or do they?

Fickle…that’s the word I use to describe today’s modern economists. The stock market starts heading down (as it did this past August) and all of a sudden we are headed for a recession. The stock market gets close to new high (as we are now), and the economists say we’ve turned the corner and are out of the recession.

What’s the truth? How do we make sense of all these numbers to make the right decision for our investment portfolios and for our businesses?

I’ll get right to the point, my dear reader. We cannot have a sustained economic recovery without a recovery in the real estate market (see Without This Fixed, the Economy Cannot Recover). Job growth in the U.S. will not happen unless the construction industry, housing industry and real estate market in general come back. And, from all sides, we can see that the housing market is far from a recovery.

Consider these facts about the real estate market:

The median price of a new U.S. home fell 10% in September 2011 from September 2010, the biggest drop in two years.

The median price of a resale home, which makes up 94% of the real estate market, fell 3.5% in September 2011 from September 2010.

Cash deals account for 30% of all home resale transactions in the U.S.

The Dow Jones U.S. Home Construction Index, an index comprised of the largest U.S. homebuilder stocks and a great leading indicator of the real estate market, is still down 80% from its 2007 high—the worst performance of all Dow Jones sub-indices

Now here’s the scary part about the real estate market: According to Bloomberg, there are 11 million homes in the U.S. where the mortgages are higher than the value of the homes.

Until we have a recovery in the real estate market, which could be years off, we can’t have a bankable economic recovery. That’s the bottom line. And that’s why we simply continue to be in a bear market rally—a period in which the stock market moves higher as the bear completes its Phase II cycle of luring investors back into the stock market before stock prices fall again.

New Cycle of Rising Interest Rates Closer Than We Think

If there is one thing that keeps me up at night, it is this simple question:

What will happen to the U.S. economy when interest rates start to rise?

The U.S. economy is ever so sensitive, likely the most sensitive it has been since World War II. The Federal Reserve has done an excellent job at keeping us away from a second Great Depression. The Fed has kept short-term interest rates near zero for years. The Fed has bought U.S. Treasuries (an unheard of action) and is trying to keep long-term interest rates down by buying long-term securities.

But we must face the facts: after a 25- to 30-year down cycle in interest rates, the unprecedented expansion of the U.S. money supply will create inflation. This is what the 10-year bull market in gold bullion has all been about. And, as inflation sets in, interest rates will rise (see The Economy? Stocks? This Is a Bigger Risk).

And herein lies the biggest problem with the economy.

The U.S. real estate market is already in trouble (read my lead story for today). If interest rates start to rise, the proverbial final “nail in the coffin” will have been delivered to the already-hurting real estate market.

My historical studies show that interest rates move in 20- to 30-year cycles, either up or down. Given the record increase in the money supply and record increase in the national debt, rising inflation will be the catalyst that leads to higher interest rates.

There is no doubt in my mind that interest rates will start a new 20- to 30-year up-cycle. It is only a matter of when it starts…and it might be earlier than most of today’s economists think.

Where the Market Stands; Where it’s Headed:


Last trading day of the month and it looks like October is going to go out with a bang! What a difference a month makes. We started out October close to 10,400 on the Dow Jones Industrial Average. We are closing the month around the 12,000 level. But, despite the market recent run-up, pessimism still reigns with stock advisors, investors, and consumers.

We are in Phase II of a secular bear market. This phase of the bear market will move stock prices higher, as the bear convinces investors that stocks are a safe investment again. Phase II of bear market rallies can last three to four years. This bear market rally has lasted 32 months thus far and shows no signs of abating.

What He Said:

“A Stock Market’s Obituary: It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. After a strong and courageous battle, the Dow Jones fell victim to a credit crisis and finally succumbed on Friday, October 3, 2008, when it fell decisively below the mid-point between its 2002 low and its 2007 high.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, October 6, 2008. From October 6, 2008 to November 27, 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced one of its biggest two-month losses in history.
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