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The Richland Report 6/1/05


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#1 TTHQ Staff

TTHQ Staff

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Posted 07 June 2005 - 11:21 AM

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The Short-Term Outlook: Toe-dancing on the edge of a Volcano.

Wednesday's unexpectedly strong rally continued the volatile and choppy "Middle Part" (McClellan Oscillator above the Zero Line) topping action of the overall market which began over a month ago in mid-April. The "hot" hedge-fund money, frantically chasing the techs in search of growth at any cost, has resulted in the Nasdaq and NDX outperforming the Big Board stocks percentage-wise. But the sudden spurt in silver, coupled with a shortage of warehouse stocks in the Comex, has led to a short squeeze, delays, and "fails" (failure-to-deliver), accompanied by margin calls on unfortunate silver shorts, along with similar woes that have befallen bond shorts among the hedge funds. These and derivative problems may very well affect the financial survival of a number of hedge funds. We'll try to muffle our sobs.

Meanwhile, back on our telephone mutual fund switch Hotlines, the frequency of market direction change -- intra-day as well as inter-day -- led us yesterday to abandon our 50% short position in the S&P 500 clone funds, and seek the solace and safety of the sidelines in cash, where, slightly bloodied and a tiny bit bent by whipsaws, but as yet unbowed, we await a better shorting opportunity entry. We're retaining for the present our 50% long position in the Rydex Precious Metals Fund, thanks to the strength of the silver mining stocks.

Comments & Updates on Recommended Stocks:

Telestone Technologies (TST-Amex) continues to drift at around 4.80/share on light volume, in the absence of news from the Chinese government regarding the new 3G for broadband telecom, which will mean HUGE growth for TST. But it may be a while -- even until year-end -- no one really knows.

Guinor Gold Corporation (GNR-Toronto) AN UPDATE: Word has just been received that the requisite signatures from the Indonesian Government rejecting that government's purchase of the Kelian plant and mill, have been obtained. This allows the pre-arranged purchase from Rio Tinto Zinc (RTZ) by Guinor of the Kelian plant and mill to proceed ahead of the June 4th deadline for the financing arrangements. This good news for Guinor shareholders, on top of the successfully-completed Bank Feasibility Study, is due to the efforts of Guinor top management, Messrs. Trevor Schultz and John Barker, who are to be commended for bringing the financing and purchase arrangements off on time and on schedule. We await with interest word of their further plans for this rising star of an upcoming mid-tier production company in the gold mining firmament. Web site www.guinor.com.


Long-Term Outlook

As we look at the investment and economic “Big Picture”, we see what we consider to be three significant major changes that, with relatively little fanfare, are currently taking place, or have taken place over the past two years. We believe these changes are so important that they will, to a greater or lesser extent, affect the financial well-being of every American, as well as millions of others throughout the world. As such, we want to again call your attention to them, despite some redundancies and repetitions from prior issues which that may entail, and for which we apologise. The three are --

(1) The transition from primary secular bull market to primary secular bear market :
(2) The transition in investor preference from one asset class (paper financial instruments) to tangibles; and
(3) The transition from the Plateau Period of the fourth U.S. Kondratieff Wave, to stock market and economic decline, recession/depression, and war.

Let’s briefly address these three changes by the numbers.

(1) After 16 years of arguably the longest and strongest secular primary bull stock market in U.S. history, which at its peak saw record over-valuation measurements, in 2000 we began a primary secular bear market.

Beginning in 1982, within the context of a secular bull market uptrend channel, we saw every 3-5 years (averaging 4-4 1/2 years) a cyclical bear market correction low (1982, 1987, 1990, 1994, and 1998). Now, the primary secular bear market downtrend channel will see volatile cyclical bear market rallies, each of which will doubtless be proclaimed as the “beginning of a new bull market” by Wall Street and the financial media. However, the longer-term trend is now down. Down is faster. It’s a traders’, as opposed to long-term buy-and-hold investors’, market. A “Buy The Dips” mentality must be replaced by a “Sell the Rallies” mantra. Market timing, once scorned, is now all-important, while stock selection remains more vital than ever.

This primary secular bear market is likely destined to end no earlier than 2006, with a regression to historic fundamental bear market average valuation norms (10P/Es) in popular market indices probably roughly two-thirds lower than present ones -- i.e., 3650 DJIA, 365 S&P 500. Interestingly enough, from a technical standpoint, measured move objectives on the large head & shoulder tops of both the S&P 500 and the DJIA yield very close to the same downside objectives technically, as do the fundamental historic average bear market norm P/E’s.

(2) Recently, approximately every twenty years has seen a gradual but tectonic shift in asset class preference by investors, from the class they perceive as overvalued, to the one they consider undervalued.

In the early 1940’s, with the DJIA at 100, stocks were seen as being on the bargain table. There was a shift out of tangible assets and cash into paper financial assets. But in the early 1960’s with the Dow at 1000, the shift was back out of paper and into tangibles -- commodities, real estate and collectibles - old autos, coins and stamps, rare books, jewelry, objects d’art, paintings, sculpture - BARRON’S contained a section each week on antiques.

But by 1982, real estate and many collectibles were viewed as overpriced by investors, whereas stocks were considered cheap -- we recall seeing the S&P 500 price/earnings ratio briefly at 7 that year. (Incidental-ly, colleague Peter Eliades [Stockmarket Cycles, (800) 888-4351] reminds us that there appears to be a 20-year cycle in stock lows which, logically enough, coincides with those years, with one theoretically due this year, 2002.)

Today, however, with the S&P 500 P/E still well above 30, and despite a 76% decline in the Nasdaq Index and Wall Street analyst’s propaganda to the contrary, stocks are not perceived as “cheap”, nor are bonds with their miniscule yields. And while certain types of real estate -- housing, for example -- are looked upon as overpriced in many parts of the country, several commodities during the past few years were selling at price levels last seen during the Great Depression.

These, plus the activities at Sotheby’s, Tiffany’s, and the recent popularity of “Antiques Road Show” on television, indicate to us that another shift in investor preference is now under way, out of overvalued paper financial instruments, the symbols of “things”, and into the tangible “things” themselves, probably including gold and silver in their various forms. These are likely to become future “investments of choice”.

(3) Kondratieff is alive and well. The obscure Russian agricultural economist, who authored “Long Wave” theory during the Stalinist era, was sent to the Gulag because his theory of a long (54-70 year) economic cycle in the United States conflicted with Communist dogma, which held that the capitalistic system was inherently self-destructive. But his theory, despite detractors, has proved remarkable prescient.

We are now in the fourth Kondratieff Wave cycle in the United States. Just as occurred in the third cycle in 1929, we have seen the simultaneous collapse (albeit largely unrecognized and unacknowledged as yet) of both the stock market and the economy in the year 2000.

That involved a consequent “falling off the back edge” of the “Plateau Period”, when everything seemed on the surface to be doing well, but beneath the surface things were rotten and deteriorating. What an apt description of recent conditions, and remarkably, those of each of the three prior Plateau Periods, in this country!

If events follow the three previous Kondratieff Waves, a deflationary recession, which we feel we are currently headed into, will be followed by an inflationary depression. Politicians, pressed during a recession with no jobs to be had, and people out of work clamoring the government to “do something”, know nothing else to do but urge the Fed to open the money spigots and flood the banks with money. Fruitless, because there are no credit-worthy borrowers! But all that currency, money and credit finds its way inexorably and inevitably into the system, and you have the classic definition of inflation -- too much money chasing too few goods and services. The dollar becomes toilet paper, and gold and silver, and mining stocks, rise in price.

It’s happened before -- remember “wheelbarrow inflation” in Weimar Germany ? Students of our own history will acknowledge the American Revolution and the Continental Dollar, which was eventually redeemed in gold at two cents on the dollar, leading to the expression, “Not worth a Continental”, still heard today (the post-Plateau Period of the first Long Wave in this country.) Those of us from the South recall stories of our aunts, uncles and grandparents of the bitter days of Reconstruction (the second Long Wave in the U.S.) I still have framed on my office wall Confederate dollars and bonds, once valuable as are our own today, then worthless as a result of the Lost Cause. Southern women.who lost their sons and husbands during that war survived by selling their heirlooms of gold and silver - rings, jewelry, etc. Think similar adversity can’t strike again ? It may be different, but if it has happened before, it could happen again. Pray not.

If history follows suit, the depression will be followed in turn by a war -- a strongly-felt, very patriotic Trough War, so-called because it ocurs at the trough, or bottom, of the Kondratieff economic cycle.

Books could be, and some have been, written on each of these three changes. These Reports to you afford us neither the time nor space to devote to them the in-depth discussions they deserve. Rather, our purpose is simply to alert you to these major underlying investment and economic trend shifts, so that you will recognize and understand them as you see evidence that they are occurring.

What is some of that evidence that you and I are currently hearing and observing?

Layoffs -- for example, Schwab laying off 10% of its workforce. If that’s happening to one of the largest discount brokers, what does it mean for the brokerage industry? Alcatel announces a mammoth layoff . . .

General Electric announces it is combining its appliance and lighting divisions to reduce costs and over- head. What does that tell you? They have no aggregate pricing power -- their ability to raise prices is non-existent. They have to combine divisions, close facilities, fire people. Same with Boeing and the fuselage facility in Renton, Washington -- will it be mothballed? How many other factory closures have we seen?

Banner front-page right 2-column headline in the “Personal Journal” section in the Tuesday September 10 Wall Street Journal -- “FORECLOSURES HIT RECORD LEVELS”. Subheads read, Trouble on the Home Front” and “More Homeowners Fall Behind On Mortgages, Stoking Concerns About Housing Market”.

Wal-Mart and others issuing earnings warnings, or failing to make their numbers - EDS, IBM, Morgan Stanley, Emerson Electric, Illinois Tool Works, Charlotte Russe - and Enron, Worldcom, Global Crossing.

It is in this environment that we must not only, as the Bible says, “...live, move, and have our being”, but also buy and sell, trade and invest, very, very carefully -- and hopefully, profitably.

Good luck, and may God bless you and yours!

Kennedy Gammage
The Richland Report
P.O. Box 222, La Jolla, CA 92038
(858)-459-2611 - FAX (858)-459-2612