Friday, November 13, 2009

The mother-of-all bounces

Last November I posted on the mother-of-all-crashes Through a couple of graphs I detailed why the Australian and US sharemarkets were falling at a faster rate than the great sharemarket crashes of 1929. After the post, the Aussie market drifted sideways for a few months before falling even lower to below 3100 (March 09), for a total peak to trough fall of 55 per cent.

Now, a year on from that post, we have witnessed, perhaps, the mother-of-all (dead cat?) bounces, in an 8 month period from mid-March 2009 to mid-October 2009, the All Ords has rebounded some 56 per cent from the trough (see chart below).

Chart 1: All Ords - crash and bounce
The rise or fall of the All Ords is largely attributed to the big 4 Australian Banks and BHP. The big four banks account for 21.47% of the All Ords, while BHP accounts for 10.15%. If you compare the chart below (Financials Index) with chart 1, they are a mirror image of each other.

Chart 2: The Big 4 banks led the All Ords crash, and now the recovery. Notice the % fall and % rise similar proportions to Chart 1 (XAO)
No other area in the Australian economy has done as well as the Big 4 Australian Banks. They now have combined market capitalisations which exceed the pre-GFC crash. Through help of the Government, they have increased their monopolistic position in lending. For reasons unknown, the Australian Government and ACCC allowed Westpac to buy St George Bank (no. 5 bank), and Commonwealth Bank to buy BankWest. In early September 2009, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority figures reported that the big four lenders captured almost 100 percent of the $7 billion in new mortgages written in July 2009, squeezing the small lenders out of the mortgage market. Before last year's funding freeze in global markets, the big four banks' share of new mortgages was running at about 60 per cent. Some day soon, just like in the US, we will be having the “too big to fail” debate in Australia. The Australian banks are sitting on the mother-of-all housing bubbles, which is staying upright for now due to unprecedented net migration and government stimulus intervention (see further below). Give it a couple of years, the Great Australian Housing Ponzi Scheme will eventually run out of buyers.

Like the Aussie market, most world markets have bounced, including the Dow Jones (US). As the following chart demonstrates the length and magnitude of this bear market bounce is unprecedented when compared to the Great Depression bear market rallies.

Chart 3: Depression-era bear market rallies (Dow Jones)
source: Chart of the Day

The three charts above give us a clue about the state of the world economy (and I would argue, the state of the US-centric monetary system). Extreme volatility is in full swing.

USD-AUD Exchange Rate

No better example of extreme volatility in the system is the USD-AUD exchange rate.

Chart 4: In 16 months the AUD has gone from almost parity with the USD, crashing 39%, and now rebounding 56% from the lows at 60 cents
So what has changed?

Nothing, nothing has changed. The fundamentals are still broken. The US is still trading insolvent and an aging population will ensure most Western Countries will pursue a path of monetisation (going into more debt) to pay for the welfare state. What has changed is two things:

Inflation and Timing


During the GFC we were constantly told of deflation (decreasing prices). However, during this time I argued that inflation was and will remain our greatest concern. In the middle of the GFC (June 08), Australia's money supply growth was at 23 percent (annualised), the highest rate since the mid 1970s. I ask.. is it any wonder that it appears Australia is such a buoyant economy right now? We inflated our way through the GFC. Another angle is that we populated our way through the GFC (see chart below). If you add more citizens to the economy, there is greater demand on food, housing and general consumption. Add Government "free" handouts, and the warm fuzzy experience we feel aobut our "resilient" economy was all-but inevitable. To the contrary, I believe this is making a bad situation worse, at least for the long run. The artificial wealth effect continues.

Chart 5: Inflate and populate out of financial crisis! Australia net migration since 1860. You would think there was a gold rush on...source: ABC News, Alan Kohler, 23 Sept 2009

The other difference at play here is timing. During the GFC, the All Ords, Dow Jones and even world trade (click to see charts) were declining at a faster rate than what they did during the 1929 crash. The rate of fall was just unsustainable. It's the law of the markets... or like bouncing a tennis ball. If you bounce it hard on the ground, its going to bounce back to some extend. In market terms, this is called a dead cat bounce (however some stocks fall and just don't bounce...). Timing is everything. For instance BHP was almost $50 per share prior to the GFC crash, than fell to $21 seven months later. Same company, and arguably the fundamentals of BHP were stronger than ever. The difference is market mood. Perceptions of value change over time.

Dow-Gold Ratio still falling

One of the key indicators I keep an eye on is the gold-dow ratio. When we price the world sharemarkets against gold, the downward trend is still well intact. Historically the Dow-Gold Ratio goes to below 1 when gold becomes very expensive relative to the sharemarket (Dow). There is still a long way to go... Gold is very cheap at US$1,100 oz!

Chart 6: What bounce?
source: Chart of the Day

Money can be made in all market conditions. Volatility in the markets in the last two years is telling us something is happening. Short-term it may appear that everything is back to normal. This couldn't be further from the truth. Measuring the share market and housing markets (and other debt-based markets) in terms of a tangible good (ie. gold) tells a very clear non-volatile storey. The long-term fundamentals have not changed, but arguably getting worse year by year, as Government and banks continue to fuel the fire with more fuel (inflation).

Cheers
Scott

(feel free to comment!)