|
"Lying here, during all this time
after my own small fall, it has become my conviction that things mean pretty
much what we want them to mean. We'll pluck significance from the least
consequential happenstance if it suits us and happily ignore the most
flagrantly obvious symmetry between separate aspects of our lives if it
threatens some cherished prejudice or cosily comforting belief; we are blindest
to precisely whatever might be most illuminating." -- from Transition, by Iain M. Banks Still a man hears what he wants to
hear
And disregards the rest -- The Boxer, by Paul Simon "They Are Rocking Even Me" This
will be my tenth annual forecast issue. Time has flown by, and I enter a new
decade of writing Thoughts from the Frontline. And even as I write about the
high level of uncertainty of the current times, I am optimistic that at the opening
of the next decade we will look back and realize that there has been an
enormous amount of progress made. None of us will want to revisit the pleasures
of the past ten years in some nostalgic dream. I am so ready for a new decade.
And speaking of Paul Simon (above), reading the lyrics of The Boxer, one of my favorite songs from my youth, another few
words seemed to hit home:
...Now the years are rolling by me, they are rockin' even me
...I am older than I once was, and younger than I'll be, that's not unusual
...No it isn't strange, after changes upon changes, we are more or less the same At
the end of the letter I announce the dates for our annual Strategic Investment
Conference, tell you about an important conference I will be attending next
month for 9 days (a rather large chunk of time for me!), and drop a hint about why
I am going to actually buy some stocks this decade. For
new readers (and a lot of you have joined us this last year), let me quickly
tell you what it is that I really do. I basically read and think for a living.
I read a lot - hundreds of newsletters,
articles, papers, magazines, books, essays, emails etc., almost every week.
Each Friday I sit down and write about what seems to me to be the most
important ideas I have come across, often tying together concepts from multiple
sources into what becomes this letter, hoping to piece together a few parts of
the puzzle, to help us see the bigger picture. On Mondays I send readers
Outside the Box, which is an article by some other writer that I find
interesting, and I try to make sure that I disagree with more than a few of
them. We need to think, and that is one way of helping us do so. The letter started out ten years
ago as a way for me to put into writing my ideas and thoughts on what I had
read, and I sent it out to just 2,000 people. It has grown to where today it
goes to around 1.5 million people and is posted on dozens of web sites. The
letter is free. You can subscribe at www.2000wave.com
simply by giving me your email address. And feel free to forward the letter to
friends or put a link to it on your web site. And there are Chinese and Spanish
translations of the letter each week as well. 2010: A Year of Uncertainty I
read and research more for the annual forecast issue than any other letter
during the year. And having had the luxury of not writing for the last two
Fridays, I've had even more time. It seemed to me that the volume of forecasts
out this year was greater than ever. But even I was amazed when Birinyi
Associates, Inc. showed a picture of annual forecasts they had come across and
printed out. It was a stack almost two feet tall and comprising over 3,500
pages. They helpfully summarized the projections for the major investment banks
and compared them. Their work confirmed my own
reading. The projections they cited and those I have read were all over the
board and more divergent than I can ever remember. But as I read the tea
leaves, there is a lot of uncertainty and caveats with these forecasts. And too
many are based on assumptions that the future will turn out largely looking
like the past. It has been my contention for a long time that we are in a
period that looks nothing like the past, and to use backward-looking data to
project the immediate future carries the risk of being very misleading. Thus, before we get into my projections,
I think we need to take a survey of where we are. That means this annual issue
may turn into a two-week project (I generally try to stop writing at eight pages);
but if you don't know where you are, how can you figure out where you're going? This is a challenging time, and I
am going to challenge a lot of people's ideas over the next two weeks. So, as
we start, let's look at why we need to very carefully assess our belief
systems. The two quotes at the start of the letter point out how difficult it
is for us to accept an idea that challenges our belief system, or would have
negative consequences for our lives. If we are long some investment, we look
for good news that tells us our investments are going up, and gloss over the
negatives. Last month, I found out I was just
a few thousand miles from becoming executive platinum on American Airlines. I
have never attained that level, and there are some major benefits. So, the
flight which was the least expensive and gave me the required miles was a two-hour
hop to Tampa, where ironically I had been the week before. I flew back on the
same plane 30 minutes later. However, the time was put to very
good use. I read a pre-publication manuscript of a book by my good friend James
Montier, called The Little Book of
Behavioral Investing. I was asked to write the preface. I have to say that
this book will become one of those that I read at least once a year, as it just
so pointedly reminds me of all the ways we make investment (and life!) mistakes
because of the ways our brains are hard-wired. One of the real problems is that we
"hear what we want to hear." Our beliefs or personal interests lead us to
conclusions or actions that may or may not be helpful. Let's take a page
excerpt from James' book: Prisoners of Our Preconceptions "For instance, a
group of people were asked to read randomly selected studies on the
deterrent efficacy of the death sentence (and criticisms of those studies).
Subjects were also asked to rate the studies in terms of the impact they had
had on their views on capital punishment and deterrence. Half of the people
were pro-death penalty and half were anti-death penalty. "Those who started with a pro-death
sentence stance thought the studies that supported capital punishment were well
argued, sound and important. They also thought that the studies that argued
against the death penalty were all deeply flawed. Those who held the opposite
point of view at the outset reached exactly the opposite conclusion. "As the psychologists concluded: 'Asked for their
final attitudes relative to the experiment's start, proponents reported they
were more in favor of capital punishment, whereas opponents reported that they
were less in favor of capital punishment.' In effect each participant's views
polarized, becoming much more extreme than before the experiment. "In another study of biased
assimilation (accepting all evidence as supporting your case) participants were
told a soldier at Abu Ghraib prison was charged with torturing prisoners. He
wanted the right to subpoena senior administration officials. He claimed he'd
been informed that the administration had suspended the Geneva Convention. "The psychologists gave different people different amounts
of evidence supporting the soldier's claims. For some, the evidence was
minimal; for others, it was overwhelming. Unfortunately the amount of evidence
was essentially irrelevant in assessing people's behavior. For 84% of the time,
it was possible to predict whether people believed the evidence was sufficient
to subpoena Donald Rumsfeld based on just three things: 1. The extent to which they liked
Republicans 2. The extent to which they liked
the US military 3. The extent to which they liked
human rights groups like Amnesty International. "Adding the evidence into the
equation allowed the researchers to increase the prediction accuracy from 84%
to 85%. Time and time again, psychologists have found that
confidence and biased assimilation perform a strange tango. It appears the
more sure people were that they have the correct view, the more they distorted new
evidence to suit their existing preference, which in turns made them even more
confident!" "We'll pluck significance from the
least consequential happenstance if it suits us and happily ignore the most
flagrantly obvious symmetry between separate aspects of our lives if it
threatens some cherished prejudice or cozily comforting belief; we are blindest
to precisely whatever might be most illuminating," wrote Ian Banks, of the
protagonist in the science fiction novel Transition
I am currently reading. (By the way, if you are a sci-fi
reader and have not yet become addicted to the writing of Banks, start with his
early work and move through the decades. He is one of the best hard sci-fi
writers alive.) Those
who are invested in the idea of a "V"-shaped recovery became excited over the
jobs report last month. Unemployment rose by only 11,000 jobs, if you did not
look at the underlying numbers or ignored the household survey. And the
consumer confidence surveys have begun to rise. The Index of Leading Economic
Indicators has now risen for six months in a row. Productivity is up. And
surveys indicate that consumer spending is up. GDP growth in the fourth quarter
looks to be in the 3%-plus range. All reasons to be bullish, if you
are looking for a reason to be bullish. If you don't examine the underlying
data, you can feel good. The problem is that when we look deeper into the data
than just the headlines, there are concerns. For instance, take the contention
that consumer spending is rising. I called Philippa Dunne at The Liscio Report. They survey the
various states about taxes, among other things. "Sales taxes are not up and the
current survey we are doing is pretty bad." She used the word "horrified" when
commenting on some of the respondees' replies at the various state tax offices.
Further, today we find that credit card lending dropped $17 billion last month,
the largest drop in history. And this was during Christmas! Savings are up. Credit is down.
Where did the rise in consumer spending come from? Remember, these are mostly
surveys and/or comparisons with a disastrous 2008. And they compare same-store
sales for chains like Best Buy, which no longer competes with the bankrupt
Circuit City, or for chains that closed stores, forcing buyers to the remaining
stores. The key to watch is sales taxes. When they are rising, consumer
spending is rising. Consumer confidence is rising, but
from truly awful levels. The levels are still well below any level in previous
recessions and certainly do not indicate a robust economic rebound. A challenged consumer confidence
survey is not surprising, given the fact that roughly 8% of the working
population is getting some form of unemployment assisance. One in eight
children in this country is living on food stamps. By the way, the total number
of people on unemployment is about 300,000 worse than most media accounts
report. The Extended (and Emergency) unemployment claims for those out of work
more than 26 weeks are not seasonally adjusted. To get the total number of
people on unemployment insurance of all kinds, you have to add the
non-seasonally adjusted number of continuing claims, which is currently about
300,000 higher than the seasonal adjustment. Here is a chart from Philippa, at www.theliscioreport.com. 
She explained, "For the week ended
12/19, 10.42 million Americans were receiving unemployment benefits, With 5.44
million Extended claims (week ended 12/19) and 4.98 million Continuing claims. "But NSA jobless claims show a far
different story. The advance number of actual initial claims under state
programs, unadjusted, totaled 645,571 in the week ending Jan. 2, an increase of
88,000 from the previous week. There were 731,958 Initial claims in the
comparable week in 2009... The advance unadjusted number for persons claiming UI
benefits in state programs totaled 5,479,110, an increase of 388,729 from the
preceding week. A year earlier, the rate was 4.0 percent and the volume was
5,317,388. "So the actual, the real benefits
paid (Initial, Continuing, and EUC claims) hit another record of 11.268 million."
(source: The Big Picture) Today's employment report was just
terrible. The headline said we lost 85,000 jobs. That is from the establishment
survey, where they call up larger businesses and ask them about their
employment. They also do a household survey, where they survey about 400,000
households. That report reveals a much worse situation. Last
month, single women who are heads of households saw their unemployment ranks
rise by a massive 127,000. The number of employed men fell by 214,000. The
total number of unemployed in the survey rose by an enormous 589,000. Those
classified as not in the work force (due to the fact that they did not look for
jobs) rose by 843,000! That now means that in 2009 3.5 million people were
dropped from the potential labor force count because they were discouraged. If you add those to the 15.3
million who are unemployed, you get a much higher unemployment number than 10%.
Getting that exact number is tricky, because if you are back in school (as some
of my friends are) you are not looking for a job but are going to want one
soon. And if the economy does rebound and jobs start to become available, then
it is likely a large number of the discouraged 3.5 million will start looking
for jobs and therefore be listed in the work force. Ironically, a recovering
economy could see the unemployment number rise. During the recovery, it will be
important to look at the total number of employed and not just at the
unemployment rate. Sidebar: As noted above, a large
number of people were dropped from the official labor force. What that means is
that even though the number of employed people fell, the unemployment rate did
not. It will be interesting to see if a lot of those people just decided that
December was not a good time to be looking, spent time with families, or
decided it was too cold to get out. How many will start looking as we get into
the new year? We could see a rise in the unemployment rate next month if a
large number do look for work. Look at the chart below from my
friend Greg Weldon. (It just hit my inbox.) It shows the percentage of people
who are participating in the work force. (www.weldononline.com)
It is sadly dropping, which means that incomes to families are dropping. The
number of people I know who are looking for work or are struggling increases
each week. It truly saddens me. 
The Statistical Recovery So
why, if the employment picture looks so bad, are we getting positive GDP
numbers? I coined the term "Statistical Recovery" last summer to describe an
economy where the statistics are positive but it certainly doesn't "feel" like
a recovery. So, how is it that we see a rise in the statistics? First, year-over-year comparisons
are looking better, since 2008 was horrific. Second, inventory levels are about
as low as they will go. In the way GDP is figured, a reduction in inventory
reduces GDP. That was a negative figure for most of this recession. Simply because
inventories not falling any more, it is easier to get a positive GDP. Second,
as I have written, there are one-time benefits for GDP from the federal stimulus.
Roughly 90% of the 2.2% growth in GDP in the third quarter was attributable to the
stimulus, and we will see a similar affect in the 4th-quarter
numbers and at least through the first half of next year. A reduction in imports is also a
positive for GDP. Ee are buying less "stuff" from abroad, so that helps statistically. Martin Feldstein, one of the great
economists of our time, was quoted last week as saying that the recession is
not over. Indeed, it you look at past recessions, it is not all that unusual
(8 out of 11 times) for there to be positive GDP quarters in the midst of an
ongoing recession. The Great Experiment So this is the backdrop as we look
into the future. Unemployment is rising and is likely to remain stubbornly high
(over 10%) for some time, except for the few months this coming summer when the
Labor Department will hire hundreds of thousands of temporary census workers.
The savings rate is rising, and consumer spending is at the very least challenged.
The stimulus starts to drop sharply in the latter half of the year. States,
counties, and cities are short about $260 billion and will either have to cut
services (and thus jobs) or increase taxes. Housing is likely to get weaker, as
there are large numbers of defaults coming because of mortgage-rate resets this
year and next (more on that in a few weeks). Valuations on stocks are in the
high range, and do not portend well for long-term returns. Further - and this is the
most important item to me - Congress is likely to allow the Bush tax cuts
to expire and to add insult to injury with some form of large tax increase for
heath care. Between the local, state, and federal tax increases, we could see a
massive increase in taxes of perhaps $500 billion in a $13-trillion economy, or
about 4% of GDP. Think about that for a moment. It
is likely we will begin 2011 with close to 10% unemployment, if not higher.
Christina Romer's work shows that tax cuts have a three-times benefit to GDP.
Tax increases presumably have a similar negative effect. (Ms. Romer, by the
way, is President Obama's Chairwoman of the Council of Economic Advisors. This
is not a partisan idea.) This is the great experiment to
which we are going to be subjected. There are those who agree with Art Laffer
and company that tax cuts are a positive for the economy (that would include
your humble analyst). And there are those who contend that the economy did just
fine in the Clinton years before the Bush tax cuts and that we will do just as
well if we take them away. And further, taxing the rich a little more is not
really going to change their behavior. My contention is that if such a tax
increase is enacted all at once, the economy will at a minimum dip back into a
nasty recession. If I am wrong, then I will have to abandon one of my long-cherished
beliefs. I will have to stop arguing that tax cuts are as important as I think.
Right now, when I read the data and studies, they confirm my tax-cutting bias.
But I have to be willing to change my mind if The Great Experiment proves me
wrong. But if you think unemployment is
high now, you will really not like what happens if we dip back into recession.
It could go a lot higher. They are truly risking a great deal if they decide to
pursue this experiment. Thus, I am faced with a great deal
of uncertainty as I look into the future with my forecasts - and we will
get into the bulk of the actual forecasts next week. I almost titled this letter
"The Year of Waiting," because there are so many important developments we are
waiting on. Will they actually raise taxes in such a soft economy, or will
cooler heads prevail and the increases be postponed, or at least phased in over
4-5 years? What will the health-care bill look like? There are so many things
that could significantly change any predictions. As I have written for years, the
stock market drops an average of over 40% during a recession. If we go into a
recession in 2011, it is highly unlikely that there will be an exception to the
bear market rule. But this market seemingly wants to go higher. Smart people
like my partner Steve Blumenthal argue with me that the technicals say we could
go a lot higher in the short term. And he may very well be (and probably is) right. This is a trader's market. It is
not time to buy and hold large indexes or high-beta stocks and expect to be
made whole over the next ten years. Hope is not a strategy. But waiting for the
"shoe to drop" is frustrating, I know. However, that is the situation we find
ourselves in. We will go into this next week, but
the current environment is quite different than 1982, when the last bull market
started. Rates were falling; they are now likely to rise over time. Taxes were
going down. Valuations were at historical lows, not high and rising. Inflation
was coming down. And on and on. The current environment is not one in which
bull markets are born. Whither the Fed? The
futures market is pricing in rate hikes from the Fed beginning this fall. I
highly doubt a politicized Fed will hike rates with unemployment over 10%, ahead
of a November election. We are going to have a very easy monetary policy for
longer than most observers think. The
Fed has painted itself into a very tough corner. Raising rates in a high-unemployment
environment is risky. Bernanke knows what happened in 1937 and does not want a
repeat. But by keeping rates too low for too long, they risk an asset bubble or
two. And the federal fiscal deficit of over $1.5 trillion is not making their
situation any easier. The
Fed has announced it is ending many of their various and sundry programs in the
first quarter. They have essentially been the mortgage market. What will happen
to rates? I think that is one of the reasons why Geithner has essentially
lifted any limit on explicit guarantees for Fannie and Freddie. It will be seen
as higher-paying government debt. It will also cost you, Mr. and Ms. Taxpayer,
hundreds of billions in increased deficits, as they are telling those entities
to eat the losses from large numbers of loan modifications. This is outrageous
on so many levels. Congress should at least have to approve this. It's
getting close to my eight pages, so let me end by saying that, as we face the
next crisis - and we will (there is always another crisis) - we will
find we have not fixed the causes of the last one. We still have banks too big
to fail, we have not put the credit default swaps on an exchange, we have not
reinstated Glass-Steagall, Barney Frank's bill (which was not the one that came
out of committee) now makes it exceedingly more difficult to short stocks, we
keep in power the same people who missed the problems the last time, and the
list of bad policies bought (typo intended) to you by bank lobbyists grows ever
longer. If the current bill looks like it was written by the bank lobby, that's
because it was. But it means we will have to face the same problems all over again.
But that is another story for another day. Next week we look at the dollar and
other currencies, gold, commodities, bonds, emerging markets, and more. London, Monte Carlo, Zurich, and Stocks Tomorrow
I head to Santa Barbara for the annual business planning session with my
partners at Altegris Investments. Let me quickly note that our annual Strategic
Investment Conference will be April 22-24 in La Jolla. The speaker lineup is
powerful. Already committed are David Rosenberg, Dr. Lacy Hunt, Dr. Niall
Ferguson, and George Friedman, as well as your humble analyst. We are talking
with several other equally exciting speakers. This conference sells out every
year, and you do not want to miss it. We will have an announcement soon. Secondly,
I am going to go to the Singularity University's 9-day Executive Program from
February 26 through March 6. As for how I feel about it, the fact that I would
devote nine days to it basically says it all. They have a very powerful faculty
brief a rather small group about how the future of a variety of technologies
will impact all aspects of business and the economy. It is not cheap, at
$15,000, but I think it will be worth my time. They have had more applications
than they have slots, but they have said they will give my readers special
preference (as far as possible). You can go to www.singularityu.org and click on the
link to the conference to find out more. I have been told who some of my fellow
attendees will be, and let me say that the list is impressive. I am really
looking forward to it. Hope to see some of you there. I
will be in London January 20-23, then a few days in Monte Carlo, and then
Zurich and Geneva mid-week. I do have some times open, and will be speaking in
London with my European partners, Absolute Return Partners. Drop me a note if
you would like to meet, and I will see what we can do. Finally, next Monday's Outside the
Box will be very unusual. I have not bought a stock for over ten years,
preferring managers and funds. But starting in the next few weeks, I am going
to begin buying stocks in a particular asset class, and intend to accumulate a
portfolio over the next five years. Even in the face of what I think will be a
recession. If you are interested in my thinking on this, be sure and read the
letter. I am so ready for 2010 and the next
decade! As I look back, every decade has been better for me, and I think this
decade will keep that trend intact. As Tiffani comes back from maternity leave
(kind of), we have a lot of ideas for ways to serve you better. And we are
going to be looking for suggestions. We are excited. I am going to the Cowboys game
tomorrow night, and hope we can beat our post-season jinx. This is going to be
a very busy year for me, but I have to admit I am having more fun than I ever
had. Thank you for being a part of it all. Your more optimistic than this letter sounds analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
If you would like to reproduce any of John Mauldin's E-Letters you must include the source of your quote and an email address (John@FrontlineThoughts.com) Please write to info@FrontlineThoughts.com and inform us of any reproductions. Please include where and when the copy will be reproduced.
John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.
Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA
registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a
Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered
with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave
Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments
cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings
with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return
Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor's services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.
PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.
|