Showing posts with label Edwin Lefèvre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edwin Lefèvre. Show all posts

Monday, June 21, 2010

What Gold’s Latest Record Prices Mean

``The struggle against gold which is one of the main concerns of all contemporary governments must not be looked upon as an isolated phenomenon. It is but one item in the gigantic process of destruction which is the mark of our time. People fight the gold standard because they want to substitute national autarky for free trade, war for peace, totalitarian government omnipotence for liberty.” Ludwig von Mises


A major trait of bullmarket is, whatever assets we sell today will climb higher tomorrow. This implies that the most regrettable course of action in a bullmarket is to sell.


And one great example would be the gold market. Gold just set a new record in terms of nominal high (see figure 1).

Figure 1: Netdania.com[1]: Gold’s Stairway To Heaven


The monthly chart reveals that gold prices have been in a bullmarket since 2000. While true enough, there have long periods of consolidation, the general trend over the last decade has been up.


And importantly, contrary to those who allege that gold functions as safehaven during recessions or during the “deflation-symptom” crisis similar to the Bear Stearns-Lehman episode of 2008, evidence has shown otherwise—gold fell during the previous two recessions of 2001 and 2008 (see black channel lines)!


Alternatively, the most recent record run only implies that the fresh milestone high, established last week, DOES NOT presage of any forthcoming market crashes or “double dip” recessions. And if gold serves as a lead indicator as previously discussed[2], then the likelihood is to see reanimated activities in global risk markets.


At the start of the year, we were told that gold wouldn’t generate investor appetite as the menace of “deflation” continues to lurk around the corner. We even read predictions stating that gold would fall back to the $800 levels[3] way until last month[4].


However, as we have always been saying--in a world of central banking, deflation is no more than a bogeyman to rationalize more inflationism, which central bankers are likely to accommodate. After all, inflation is ALL about politics. And central bankers, in spite of their supposed “independent” role, have been the main conduits in financing government expenditures. Thus all talks of “independence” are mostly demagoguery. Fact is, global banking regulations, as the Basel Accords, have all been skewed to accommodate government expenditures[5].


Of course, one major bullish factor about gold is that mainstream STILL doesn’t get it; gold isn’t just an inflation hedge, nor is it about alternative assets[6]. It’s also been starkly misguided to impute ‘conventional’ financial valuation metrics to gold when this doesn’t apply. It’s even myopic to calculate or value gold prices premised on commodity usage. And it is also faulty to appraise gold based on global mining output. Since gold isn’t being consumed, incremental additions to the above ground supplies by existing mines hardly determine the pricing model (see previous discussion[7]).


In a decadent world of fiat money, where money printing to fulfil specific political agenda have been the most convenient route resorted to by political leaders everywhere-for the simple reason that the ignorant masses hardly understands how such surreptitious redistributive activities influences their lives- gold seems to be re-establishing its role as ‘money’.


Therefore, gold’s ascendant trend in ALL currencies have simply been manifestations that demand for gold has been transforming from mere “commodity” (jewelry and industrial usage) to “money”.


Gold is being held as reserve asset not just by the central bank, but importantly by the general public. Gold’s increased function as “reservation demand” is what usually the mainstream sees as “speculation” or “speculative hoarding” or “investment demand”.


Otherwise said, money’s “store of value” is increasingly being factored into gold prices (unit of account). Hence, relative to gold pricing, this implies that reservation dynamics or the reservation model (and not consumption model) determines gold valuations or that the exchange ratio or monetary valuations relative to fiat currency applies-- where valuations are determined by the expected changes in relationship between the relative quantity of, and the demand for, gold as money vis-a-vis paper currencies.


And possibly one day, such transformation would include the deepening of “exchange demand” or gold as ‘medium of exchange’ (see previous discussion[8]). Proof of this has been the emergence of Gold ATMs in Germany[9] and in Abu Dhabi[10].


All these, of course, are ultimately dependent on the stimulus-response and action-reaction of global political leaders on the swiftly evolving political, economic and financial sphere.


And thus, periods of weaknesses, whether from recessions or from consolidations (in technical or chart lingo the “energy fields”), has served as buying windows rather than selling opportunities.


Yet for those whom have remained sceptical and or earnestly drudge to market “timing” gold’s prices, they usually end up chasing gold prices higher-- buy high and sell low.


And this is especially brutal to those in constant denial of gold’s ascendancy; they have entirely missed out the rally for ideological reasons, and vent their frustrations by continually disparaging such developments. The odd thing is that this has already been a 10-year market process.


Yet since gold rise has been threefold, all errant attempts to “time” the market has resulted to lost or missed profit opportunities.


As the legendary trader Jesse Livermore expressed by Edwin Lefevre in the classic must read for any serious investors, “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator”,


``Disregarding the big swing and trying to jump in and out was fatal to me. Nobody can catch all the fluctuations. In a bull market your game is to buy and hold until you believe that the bull market is near its end. To do this you must study general conditions and not tips or special factors affecting individual stocks.[11]


In short, the best returns emanate from long term investments.



[1] Netdania.com, Forex charts

[2] See Why The Current Market Volatility Does Not Imply A Repeat Of 2008

[3] Yahoo. Finance, Gold Is "Fairly Expensive," Could Fall to $800 If Fed Moves, Midas Fund Manager Says, January 22, 2010

[4] CNN.Money, The coming gold bust

[5] See The Myth Of Risk Free Government Bonds

[6] Reuters.com, US gold sets record, ends strong as alternate asset

[7] See Gold As Our Seasonal Barometer

[8] See Financialization of Commodities: Boon Or Bane?

[9] See Creative Destruction: Electronic Payments Over Cash And Checks

[10] Financial Times Blog, Abu Dhabi’s gold ATM machine a sign of more opulence to come, May 13 2010

[11] Lefevre, Edwin, Reminiscences of a Stock Operator p.76 John Wiley and Sons

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Kentucky Derby And The Global Stock Markets

``In the stock market, as with horse racing, money makes the mare go. Monetary conditions exert an enormous influence on stock prices. Indeed the monetary climate - primarily the trend in interest rates and Federal Reserve policy - is the dominant factor.” - Martin Zweig

I used to bet on horse races. That’s why I can relate some horse racing activities to the markets.

The spectacular ‘come-from-behind’ victory by a 50 to 1 longshot, Mine That Bird, ridden by jockey Calvin Borel, in the 1st leg of the US Triple Crown, the Kentucky Derby, held at Churchill Downs at Louisville Kentucky, greatly fascinated me.

Riding into the last quarter length of the 1 ¼ mile leg, Mine That Bird was nearly at the tail end of the 20 horse pack. Jockey Borel then deftly worked his prized horse towards the middle of the pack going into the top of the stretch, elegantly sneaked into the rail for an unobstructed view and unleashed the animal’s full might towards the finish line to rack up an astounding 6-3/4 length win- a wallop! You can watch it online here.

The wonderful partnership of Jockey Borel and Mine That Bird was significantly unexpected in both the betting world (50 to 1 odds) and even in the race track itself-a pulsating come from behind triumph. And today’s electrifying actions in the marketplace seems to match the same rendition-largely unanticipated by mainstream experts and the consensus and equally the unforeseen in speed and magnitude of market movement.

So if I were a horse race bettor I would have reaped enormous dividends had I made a serendipitous bet on that highly underappreciated underdog.

Applied to the markets, it would seem like another major vindication for us, since we had been expecting this from the start of the year. Not only had we projected a general market improvement but we clearly identified a possible outcome an Asian outperformance! (see 2009: Asian Markets Could OUTPERFORM, Will “Divergences” Be A Theme for 2009?,) See figure 1.


Figure 1: US Global Investors: Asia-Latin American Outperformance

The US Global Investors have basically echoed what we have been saying all along (emphasis added), ``So far this year, emerging markets in Asia and Latin America, as represented in blue in the chart, have generally outperformed those in the Middle East/Africa, and Eastern Europe, in yellow and green respectively. Russia and Israel are exceptions. The market has rewarded better balance sheet fundamentals and smaller external and domestic leverage in Asia and Latin America.”

The Philippine benchmark, the Phisix, surged 6.58% over the week to pad its year to date gains by 19.71%. Despite the strong showing, the Phisix’s gain has been transcended by the outstanding run in Singapore (16.56%!!!), Hong Kong (12.04%!!), Taiwan (9.87%!) or even our ASEAN neighbors Thailand (7.33%) and Indonesia (7.69%).

Of course, we are nearly halfway through the year, which means we are still far away from the homestretch, where fluid real time developments may alter present actions, either by further reinforcing our view or going against it.

But almost every indicator has now turned towards a possible fulfillment of our yearend expectations, including my last technical yardstick: the 200-day moving averages, which have become evident in a majority of Asian markets [see Asian Markets: Crossing the Bull Market Rubicon?]!

Moreover, 2010 is the Philippine Presidential election year which has been cyclically strong over the years [as discussed in Focusing On The Future: the Phisix and the Philippine Presidential Cycle].

So general market improvement PLUS next year’s Presidential honeymoon argues for more upside for the Phisix going towards the post elections in 2011.

Of course, like every trend, there will always be intermittent bumps. But what would matter would be the general or the primary trend.

Nonetheless, if the Phisix does end the year above 2,500, we may expect a full recovery (Phisix 3,800) by the end of 2010 or even an attempt at the 5,000.

Horse Racing In the Domestic Market, Noises Over Signals

And even the domestic horse racing mentality has left the starting gates! See figure 2

Figure 2: PSE’s Bull Market Breadth The Advance Decline Ratio, Traded Issues

Where your favorite sell side and mainstream analysts will constantly bombard you with the drivel that stocks are driven by “fundamentals e.g. earnings”, we have argued based on Edwin Lefèvre’s premise from his classic “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator”, ``In a bear market all stocks go down and in a bull market they go up...I speak in a general sense. But the average man doesn’t wish to be told that it is a bull or bear market. What he desires is to be told specifically which particular stock to buy or sell. He wants to get something for nothing.”

Mr. Lefèvre, who in behalf of the legendary trader Mr. Jesse L. Livermore, wrote from an empirical standpoint of how markets generally operated.

Nevertheless, we found that his underlying observations have been backed by theory from Mr. Fritz Machlup of the Austrian School of Economics that inflationary policies has had greater impact to stock prices as discussed in Are Stock Market Prices Driven By Earnings or Inflation? and in Phisix: The Case For A Bull Run. This is most pronounced in the Philippine Stock Exchange whose market has been “underdeveloped”.

Notice that the bullish breadth in the Phisix has now been established as seen from the substantial improvement in the advance decline spread (more incidence of positive spread-see left pane), which means today’s market has seen more advancing issues against declining issues. This week, advancers outnumbered decliners by nearly 2.5 to 1.

To add, the number of traded issues (right pane) has conspicuously picked up (red arrow). This translates to the marked broadening of gains in listed issues in the Philippine Stock Exchange.

In other words, as we predicted, even the second and third tier issues have joined the roster of advances. Incidentally, the top 10 gainers over the past sessions appears have been dominated by “speculative” stocks rather than blue chips or Phisix component issues.

In the rapidly shaping “rising tide lifts all boats” environment, which includes “shell” companies, does this landscape then extrapolate to an abrupt shift in earnings expectations to simultaneously turn positive?? The obvious answer is NO. The answer why this phenomenon has been happening is mainly about the percolation of the inflationary driven speculative spirits.

This simply reveals how the world operates.

While truth is a rational subject of interest by anyone or by everyone, it’s always about truth in the way people opt to see or expect them to be, no matter how skewed their version of truth is. As Jeffrey Tucker on a blog article A Tribute to Jack Kemp wonderfully expressed, ``In this world, no matter how firm your credentials, no matter how much capital you have built up over the years, no matter how much press you have received in the past, once you start saying things outside the mainstream, or the mainstream shifts below your feet, you are suddenly a nonperson”.

Being a nonperson is not the issue here. Aside, I am also NOT saying that I have grasped the monopoly of mundane truths. But from the market’s perspective, where there has been little evidence of correlation-causation from so called micro-fundamental driven markets (especially evident in the Philippine setting), the conventional mindset have been apparently molded by mainstream practitioner’s fanatic devotion to peddling noises based on false premises as seen on their literatures, which have only increased the public’s risk profiles.

And poor understanding of markets consequently prompts for wrong impressions and lackluster participation from the general public.

For us, what is crucial is for everyone to comprehend on the evolving market cycles in order to weigh on the risks prospects from which determines our survivability and profit opportunities.

And this requires us to operate under the understanding of the fundamental truisms of winnowing noises from signals, than one based on charades.


Sunday, January 25, 2009

Are Stock Market Prices Driven By Earnings or Inflation?

``All political thinking for years past has been vitiated in the same way. People can foresee the future only when it coincides with their own wishes, and the most grossly obvious facts can be ignored when they are unwelcome. Political language... is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” -George Orwell, 1984

Theory, Experience and the Consensus Thinking

My first venture into this field gave me the impression that stock market prices had been fundamentally driven by company earnings. Thus I worked my way into the learning the ways to “project” earnings. Now years after, I’ve come to the conclusion that the importance of earnings is secondary.

Yet, such mindset continues to reflect on the consensus thinking. As most of the books, the preaching of the academe and especially the orientations of my peers that are regularly communicated either verbally or through transcriptions via newsletters persist to influence the investing public.

Nonetheless, during the early days, from a strict “fundamental” standpoint, experience altered my perception of the markets. Going along with my contemporaries, I was made to believe that profits involved NOT only earnings, but from special activities as “deals or mergers”. So the goal now shifted from studying corporate fundamentals to one of ascertaining advance information from insiders, and correspondingly took bets on them.

And obtaining insider information meant networking with many people, which prompted me to join forums and groups. Unfortunately, the hunt for financial glory, which turned out to be a profit tryst was nothing but systematic punt and which ultimately taught me an expensive and emotionally agonizing lesson when the market reversed.

Nevertheless during the heydays of the 90s and the subsequent depression, I came to realize too that there had been some blatant inconsistencies with what is understood by consensus based on the dogma of “earnings-as-drivers” and from those acquired through experience.

I realized that on good times everyone seemed energized as the stock market levitated, and on the contrary, during bad times, everyone was either somber or looking for a new endeavor outside the stock market.

Market Tides And Stock Prices

It was then from the classic book “Reminiscences of A Stock Operator” of Edwin Lefèvre or a.k.a the legendary Jessie Livermore that my empirical observations was reinforced.

Remember this Edwin Lefèvre quote which we used to warn of the transitioning bear market in 2007,

``I NEVER hesitate to tell a man that I am bullish or bearish. But I do not tell people to buy or sell any particular stock. In a bear market all stocks go down and in a bull market they all go up...I speak in a general sense. But the average man doesn’t wish to be told that it is a bull market or a bear market. What he desires is to be told specifically which particular stock to buy or sell. He wants to get something for nothing. He does not wish to work. He doesn’t even wish to think. It is too much bother to have to count the money that he picks up from the ground.”

In contrast to mainstream brokers who ceaselessly bombard you with the hackneyed “earnings-as-drivers” of the market, market reality shows otherwise (see figure 1)

Figure 1: Market Tides Applies to the Phisix Sectors and the World

The upper window is the performance of the sectoral or industrial indices of the Philippine Stock Exchange which spans from 1996 to the present. Do you notice of any material divergence? The answer is none. (chart index: green-Mining, blue-Properties, black-Bank, pink-Commercial Industrial, red-Holding, red orange-service)

The point is stock prices in general, as rightly observed by Mr. Lefèvre, sink or swim depending on market tides.

Do you not wonder why speculative issues or even shell companies greatly outrun cash flow backed fundamental issues during bullmarkets? Or has there been any domestic stock issue (speculative or blue chips) that has been spared from today’s grizzly bear market?

Case Study: Robinsons Land Corporation

Let us make an actual comparison. I will use Robinsons Land Corporation (RLC) as an example. My choice of RLC came about out of availability, it is the company that last reported a disclosure on January 23 (I don’t own RLC) and is likewise Phisix component.

According to the company’s disclosure, “audited consolidated net income by the end of the fiscal year 2008 (October 2007 to Sept 2008) amounted to Php 3.15 billion, up 29% from the same period last year.” Even in 2007, the same figures showed a 42% growth.

On the other hand, its stock prices have COLLAPSED EVEN AS REVENUES CONTINUE TO CLIMB, albeit at a slower DOUBLE DIGIT pace. RLC prices peaked on February 2007 at Php 23 and closed at Php 4.8 Friday or a loss of an astounding 79%!

Yet if stock prices function as forward discounting mechanism based on future earnings streams then the recent stock price trend of RLC conveys a message of a very steep collapse of revenues and earnings, possibly similar to those in the US. Remember, RLC’s stock price slump has been two years old (in 2007 +1.5%, in 2008 -70%)! Usually markets are ahead of fundamentals by 6 months.

And at the close of November of 2008, which is not far from where RLC last traded Friday, according to the PSE, RLC has a dividend yield of 9.14%, 154 basis points higher than the Philippine government 10 year bond (!!!), a price-to-earnings of 5.82, a price to book of .73 and a debt equity of .78.

So the point is, if the market is CORRECTLY pricing future earnings then the company’s balance sheet and income will deteriorate tremendously over 2009 almost 24 months into the RLC price summit. On the other hand, the market may NOT have been reflective of the fair market value of the company and has been INFLUENCED BY OTHER FACTORS HARDLY CORRELATED with the company’s fundamentals.

And if we apply the same logic, the Philippine benchmark the Phisix or the PSEi which has lost nearly 55% from peak-to-trough, has a dividend yield is 5.63%, a PE ratio of 9.76, Price to Book at 1.28 and debt equity of 2.78. Yet the collapsing stock market doesn’t square with the economic figures which registered moderate but POSITIVE growth and NOT a recession.

In short, evidence defies consensus thinking. (I have seen the same story in 2002)

Bubble Cycles Defines Today’s Risks Environment

And curiously we see the same developments overseas. Going back to the chart, from 1999, seen from the lower window, exhibits some of major global benchmarks-S&P 500 (black), Brazil’s Bovespa (blue), Japan’s Nikkei (violet), Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (red) and the Phisix (green)-have ALL moved synchronically.

You might object, but what about my old mining and oil issues that became wall papers? Doesn’t this signify the need for fundamentals?

Well the answer to that question is shown in figure 2.


Figure 2: Cyclical nature of Commodity prices over 200 years

Let us put this into perspective.

This isn’t simply a matter of “speculative” issues that had gone kaput. The fact that Enron, once the 7th largest company in the US, went bankrupt in 2001, today’s quasi nationalization of the world’s former 18th largest public company in American International Group (AIG), the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, founded in 1850 (!) and was the fourth largest US investment bank, the forced merger of Bear Stearns-also founded in 1923 and was one of the largest US investment banks- with JP Morgan and importantly, the DEMISE of the US investment banking industry (Economist) or the transformation of its relics to bank holdings, only goes to show that whether it is a defunct speculative mining issue in the 1980s or erstwhile blue chip behemoths as today, they are subject to the risk influences of bubble cycles.

And an unwinding bubble cycle,

1. strips the CHIMERICAL INVINCIBILITY of industry leaders (e.g. US investment banks, real estate industry, mortgage lenders and etc…),

2. unmasks FRAUDS and corporate SKULLDUGGERY (e.g. Madoff and Enron) and

3. bankrupt UNVIABLE companies (old speculative mining issue)…

…all of which had been founded or built upon unsound business models.

The Philosopher’s Stone

Bubble cycles are shaped by monetary policies which are aimed at inciting PERMANENT boom conditions by omniscient ‘Powers That Be’, particularly interest rate manipulation.

Yet defying basic economic laws, when interest rates are forced below market levels or at the rate at which the demand for and supply of capital are equalized, excess credit, which the central bank creates, unduly expands demand for assets. Worst of all, by discouraging or even punishing savings, it encourages expanded risk appetite or speculation.

In other words, business projects that shouldn’t have existed at all are given false signals from which they rush in to take advantage of.

Yet, the ensuing illusionary boom distorts the capital structure and overvalues the currency through the intertemporal misallocation of resources or malinvestments, thereby increasing unpredictability into entrepreneurs’ plans. Moreover, an overvalued currency induces a shift of manufacturers overseas.

Hence, the onrush of demand for assets lowers the demand for money which leads to increases in interest rates and which ultimately impacts the feasibility of these unsound business model based companies.

Hence, the boom eventually turns into a bust, where according to Ludwig von Mises, ``The boom is called good business, prosperity, and upswing. Its unavoidable aftermath, the readjustment of conditions to the real data of the market, is called crisis, slump, bad business, depression. People rebel against the insight that the disturbing element is to be seen in the malinvestment and the overconsumption of the boom period and that such an artificially induced boom is doomed. They are looking for the philosophers' stone to make it last.”

Nonetheless some invaluable insights from the late University of Vienna Professor Fritz Machlup (1902-1983) in The Stock Market, Credit and Capital Formation, on the tight relationship between inflation, bubble cycles and the stock market (bold emphasis mine):

-A continual rise of stock prices cannot be explained by improved conditions of production or by increased voluntary savings, but only by an inflationary credit supply.

-Extensive and lasting stock speculation by the general public thrives only on abundant credit.

-Abundant funds, especially those of inflationary origin, may not find ready outlets in real investment.

-Any decrease in the effective supply of money capital is likely to cause disturbances in the production process.

-An inflated rate of investment can probably be maintained only with a steady or increasing rate of credit expansion. A set-back is likely to occur when credit expansion stops.

-The use of credit for financing working capital does not assure "self-liquidation" or liquidation free of disturbance. For the economy as a whole circulating capital mostly constitutes long-term investment and, if the volume of production is to be maintained, even permanent investment.

-The start of a general business upswing can be financed out of surplus cash balances without an expansion of bank credit. The temporary surplus cash balances, dishoarded at the beginning of the upswing, are set free again when the crisis is liquidated; they are then disposable for another upturn.

-If bank reserves are controlled by the monetary authorities, credit inflation should not be attributed to the stock-exchange boom. However, margin regulations may be an effective means of checking the expansion.

Conclusion and Recommendations

Overall, here are our observations and recommendations:

1. Seen from the overseas perspective, the transmission mechanism of inflationary policies from the US abetted by global policies geared towards financial globalization or the facilitation of cross border capital flows have narrowed national idiosyncrasies (decoupling) and reinforced synchronization of movements among major global stock market benchmarks (integration) during the recent boom cycle.

The same reverse effects from the credit bubble deflation can be seen today unfolding around the world today. And this convergent stock market deflation theme even applies to most of the US markets (see figure 3) or even to Warren Buffett’s flagship Berkshire Hathaway’s portfolio.

Harry Markowitz, the economist who popularized the Modern Portfolio Theory appears to have been invalidated with the recurring inflation deflation cycle. Today’s market conditions reveal that “diversification” under inflationary policies hasn’t been applicable…yet.


Figure 3: Gavekal: Deflating Margin Debt=Deflating Stock Market

2. Edwin Lefèvre’s empirical observation that individual stock prices move in the general direction of the markets is greatly supported by the role of central bank policies.

3. Monetary authorities have been aware of the significance of this stock market-inflationary policy relationship; hence have partly crafted policies in support of such outlook. As evidence, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke wrote in his A Crash Course for Central Bankers, ``History proves, however, that a smart central bank can protect the economy and the financial sector from the nastier side effects of a stock market collapse.”

4. Inflationary/deflationary environments shape risk taking appetites. Under loose monetary conditions or boom cycles, augmented risk appetites translate to a stretching for yields. This also means that the selection breadth by market participants of the asset horizon widens.

In general, like tea poured into a teacup that is filled to the brim, the tea spills over to the saucer and eventually out to the table and to the floor. An easy money landscape extrapolates to a “rising tide lifts all boat” as excess money diffuses to the general market.

And conversely, when the liquidity tide goes out or in bust cycles, you will learn that many have been caught swimming naked (estimated $30 trillion in 2008), to paraphrase the world’s best stock market investor Warren Buffett.

5. Because the Philippine stock market is largely underdeveloped, have low penetration level of exposure, have low degree of sophistication and whose domestic participants have inadequate understanding of the markets and thinks that they are some form of “gambling casinos”, an inflationary environment extrapolates to surging speculative activities which often directs punts to high volatile “issues”.

6. In advanced and sophisticated markets as the US, the weightings of “earnings as driver” may have bigger contribution to pricing relative to underdeveloped markets but as the Berkshire Hathaway portfolio shows has been impacted by the inflation deflation cycle.

7. Unlike typical brokers who will frame and impress on the public with the “earnings as drivers” theme, our advice is to understand not so much of “micro” fundamentals and “market timing”, but more from the unorthodox standpoint of comprehending the market, economic, political-inflationary and business cycles. Markets ultimately as seen today are driven by inflationary actions in the era of fractional standard based modern central banking.

8. Most brokers spread the wisdom of “earnings-as-drivers” theme but tacitly intend to induce trades, where earnings do not seem to matter. They will ask you to open a position based on fundamentals (e.g. PE ratio) and close the same position based on price actions (e.g. sell on resistance). Remember, “fundamentals” and “technical price actions” are distinct tools in approaching the market. Avoid the confusion by identifying, planning and implementing these tools (one or the other or a mix of) before going into any trade/investment.

9. Lastly Professor Fritz Machlup drives a very important point about the prospects of recovery, he says ``The start of a general business upswing can be financed out of surplus cash balances without an expansion of bank credit. The temporary surplus cash balances, dishoarded at the beginning of the upswing, are set free again when the crisis is liquidated; they are then disposable for another upturn”.

Again against consensus thinking, SAVINGS AND NOT CREDIT is likely answer for the recovery.