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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
October 15, 2008
Hoping There's Hope:
This is the first all-encompassing global dislocation of contemporary
finance, impacting virtually all economies, markets and asset classes.
The media is now all over the "Wall Street" and "banking" crisis. I am
of the view, however, that the collapse of the hedge fund industry has
moved to the forefront – that it is now at the epicenter of global
market upheaval. To watch silver lose more than 20% of its value today
in intraday trading; to see the collapse in energy prices; to see the
entire commodities complex absolutely routed; to view global currency
markets in complete disarray, with double-digit intraday drops in the
Brazilian real and Mexican peso; to witness major currencies such as the
Australian and Canadian dollars suffer precipitous declines; for
benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields to surge 62 bps in three days; to see
Brazilian dollar bond yields jump almost 200 bps in four sessions; for
global equities indices to suffer rapid double-digit drops throughout
both the developed and "emerging" markets; to witness a 1,000 point
intraday swing in the DJIA. All the favorite trades are blowing up, and
the leveraged speculating community is in a panic de-leveraging.
There is no doubt that markets are in the midst of an unprecedented
liquidation of positions across virtually all asset classes and a
vicious unwind of a multitude of investment and trading strategies. The
Massive Pool of Global Speculative Finance is being drained. Investors
and speculators alike are desperate to flee risk. Having watched the
ballooning of the hedge fund industry over the past few years in
absolute awe, I can say today that an industry collapse would entail the
sale (voluntary and forced by the margin clerk) and unwind of literally
Trillions of positions. It has been history’s most spectacular
speculative Bubble and, especially over the past few years, it became
very much global in nature and infiltrated virtually all asset classes.
This Bubble is in a full-fledged collapse – entailing unprecedented
liquidations - and it’s taking global markets down with it.
The situation is dire, as is now commonly recognized. The media is in a
tizzy, and Wall Street makes for an easy and generally deserving
villain. I fear the rapidly mounting anger. But I guess for this evening
there is something about coming home after a distressing week and
spending time with my little four month old baby. My wife and I gave our
smiling and laughing little guy a bath and I just kissed them goodnight.
I just don’t have it in me right now to analyze and to write gloom. I’d
rather Hope there is Hope.
Perhaps things will stabilize once the hedge fund liquidations run their
course. Treasury (TARP) purchases will commence soon. Fannie and Freddie
will be aggressively expanding their market purchases. The Fed is now
buying commercial paper, and the Fed and Treasury are working to resolve
the dislocation in the "repo" market. Across the globe, governments are
in full crisis management mode. There appears universal resolve to
bolster financial sectors and stem the collapse. And there were actually
some positive indications of stabilization in our Credit system late in
the week.
I also hold out Hope that the Trillions of reserves held by global
central bankers will provide some buffer to stem financial system
collapse. In particular, I am Hoping that China, India, Russia, Brazil
and the Middle East have today sufficient reserves to somehow avoid a
‘90s style financial and economic meltdown. I am Hoping that demand from
China, India, Asia and Latin America will help offset inevitable
economic downturns in the U.S. and Britain and, hopefully to a lesser
extent, Europe. I am hoping that the collapse in energy and commodities
prices is more a reflection of acute financial market dislocation rather
than a harbinger of synchronized global economic upheaval. I am hoping
there is more substance to the dollar’s rally than simply an unwind of
bearish dollar bets. And I am hoping that with large capital infusions
our deeply impaired banking system will retain the capacity to finance a
much less robust but at least functioning U.S. economy. I really Hope
everything is not as dire as it appears.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |