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The End of the Range


By Dan Denning • February 20th, 2009 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

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  • French Model of Economy Allows Meddling from the State
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  • U.S. Recession: Is the End Nigh?
  • Bear Markets Do Not End With Stocks Still Trading at Nearly 20 Times Earnings
Filed Under: Market
Tags: bretton woods • currency • De Gaulle • deficits • fed • Gold • Lehman • Nixon • Paul Kanjorski • range • speculation
feature photo

How strange. Stocks are up this morning. Hang on...we've just had a look again. They're down now. Sigh.

There's so much bad news about in the land that stocks moving up in such a climate is noteworthy. It means everyone's talking about how bad things are, but there aren't any sellers left. So are there any sellers left?

Well, over in New York there are. The Dow Jones made a new bear-market low at 7,465. It's a six-year low for the index, in fact.

Here in Australia things are more range bound. Kris Sayce produced the following chart in his weekly e-mail update to subscribers of the Australian Small Cap Investigator. The market is clearly trading in a range. You might even call it a range within a range.

Range within range on for Aussie stocks

As Swarm Trader Gabriel Andre says, these sorts of patterns don't last forever. Range-bound indices break out. But in which direction? If it's up, this is good news for the small-caps Kris tracks. Many of them have been absolutely battered in the last year. But if it's down...it means lower highs and lower lows. It is possible.

Take this for the complete psychological speculation that it is, but this "feels" a little like the moment last year when the oil price peaked. On June 27th of last year, when oil traded at $139.69, we wrote: "Our intuition is that you could see oil put a top in sometime in the next week, if it hasn't already happened."

That call was a few weeks early. But the idea at the time is one you should consider today. "Not that you want to step in front of a moving truck," we wrote." Markets can remain irrational longer that you can remain solvent, the old saying goes. We're not suggesting you bet against oil. But we are suggesting you take note of the sentiment. The bears have almost totally capitulated. The bulls are being whipped into froth. When any little thing drives the price higher, you have a very dangerous market."

Feelings are not very scientific. But maybe a sense of crisis-fatigue has set in and sellers are exhausted. That might make room for some profit-taking in gold and rebound/relief rally. Might. We'll see. But if we had to compare the market's selling exhaustion to a YouTube video, it would be this one.

If you wander over to YouTube, you might want to check out this video from CSPAN over in America. On the video , U.S. Congressman Paul Kanjorski explains what Ben Bernanke and Henry Paulson told Congress behind closed doors on September 15th, 2008, the day Lehman Brothers died.

Pay special attention to what he says between 2:14 and 3:44 of the clip. For those of you who can't watch it, Kanjorski says that the by 11 am that day, over US$500 billion had been liquidated from money market accounts. He describes it as, "an electronic run on the banks." He says the Fed told Congress that if action wasn't taken immediately, over $5 trillion would disappear from the markets by 2pm.

That's pretty precise forecasting isn't it? Whether the Fed was exaggerating, guessing, or in total panic mode isn't the point though. Kanjorski says the whole day threatened, "The end of our economic and political system as we know it."

You can't make this stuff up.

But then, Australia's own Central Banker has told Australian politicians that September 15th is a day that will forever live in financial infamy. He didn't use those words exactly. But in prepared remarks to be delivered to Australia's House of Representatives today, Glenn Stevens fingers the 15th as the day the world changed.

Shortly after the Committee last met" he begins, "the global financial system took a serious turn for the worse. On 15 September 2008, the American firm Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy. It was the biggest actual failure of a major American financial institution for many years. While it had been widely known that Lehmans was under immense pressure, when it came the event was still a shock. It triggered a massive re-appraisal of risk, and ushered in a period of the most intense financial turmoil seen in decades.

"The worst of the turmoil was actually fairly short-lived - a matter of weeks. But in that time a number of events occurred that have had a significant bearing on the outlook for the global economy. These included the incipient failure and/or public support of a number of major financial institutions in the United States, the United Kingdom and continental Europe, effective closure of many important capital markets and a worldwide decline in equity values of a quarter, leaving them around 50 per cent lower than their peak."

We'll leave any further discussion of September 15th's significance until next week. There are two other dates, though, that are critical to the story you now find yourself a part of. The first is February 4th, 1965.

That's the day French President Charles De Gaulle gave a press conference. It was a press conference that would begin undermining the post-war Bretton Woods international currency system. Why? It's what DeGaulle said about gold.

"The time has come," he said, "to establish the international monetary system on an unquestionable basis that does not bear the stamp of any country in particular. On what basis? Truly, it is hard to imagine that it could be any standard other than gold. Yes, gold whose nature does not alter, which may be formed equally well into ingots, bars or coins; which has no nationality and which has, eternally and universally, been regarded as the unalterable currency par excellence."

Over the next five years, French banks would begin redeeming American dollars for gold. The French could see America's war debt from Vietnam stacking up. Lyndon Johnson's Great Society program promised infinite butter along with a multitude of guns for the war in South East Asia. Government deficits soared.

Just over six years later, somewhere between August 13th and August 15th, Richard Nixon met with his economic Politburo at Camp David in Maryland outside Washington, DC. Against the advice of Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns, Nixon decided to institute wage and price controls and, more importantly, close America's gold window.

We've been living with the world of free-floating fiat currencies and expansion of deficits and credit ever since. Lehman's collapse was one nail in the coffin of the modern financial system. De Gaulle built the casket in February of 1965. So what's the third date that changed the world? More on that next week...

Dan Denning
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • French Model of Economy Allows Meddling from the State
  • The French are Feeling Pretty Smug
  • Gold and Silver!
  • U.S. Recession: Is the End Nigh?
  • Bear Markets Do Not End With Stocks Still Trading at Nearly 20 Times Earnings

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Posts by This Author

There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. Comment by Julian on 23 February 2009:

    That clip from Youtube sounds like the PBS Frontline special that aired on Feb 17 called "Inside the Meltdown". I checked it out on the PBS website and it goes through the events last year that lead to collapse of the US investment banking system.

    I'd recommend anyone to go check it out.

    They show Frontline specials on SBS from time to time. They may show this one sometime soon.

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