Advanced Search

This 27-Year Bull Market Ended Last Wednesday

By Tom Dyson, publisher, The Palm Beach Letter
Monday, January 5, 2009

Treasury bond yields have been falling for 27 years. Eight weeks ago, they moved into the "blow off" stage. 

 
I use the 30-year Treasury bond as the benchmark for this market. On October 27, the 30-year bond closed with a yield of 4.37%. After eight straight weeks of declines, it fell as low as 2.52%.
 
It's been one of the most relentless moves I've ever seen in the markets. Especially the Treasury bond market, which is normally tranquil. The 30-year Treasury bond now pays the lowest yield it's ever paid, and the recent decline is the biggest two-month fall in its history.
 
I believe the Treasury bubble has now popped, and it's time to start betting on a rise in Treasury bond interest rates.

 

First, Treasury bonds have garbage fundamentals. The Treasury is about to flood the market with supply. For example, the Treasury plans to auction more November 2018 10-year Treasury notes. It's already sold $36 billion of this bond in the last two months. Today, it will sell another $16 billion or so. That's $52 billion maturing in November 2018. In addition to increasing the size of its auctions, the Treasury has also increased the frequency of its 10-year bond auctions from eight times a year to 12 times a year.

 
At the exact same time, demand for Treasury bonds is about to fall off a cliff. The world's two largest customers – the Japanese and the Chinese –buy Treasury bonds with the money they earn from exporting goods to the United States. But now that the American consumer is broke, Asian exports will collapse. Less money will flow into the Treasury bond market.
 
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve is inflating the money supply so fast, no one's ever seen anything like it before. Last week, for example, the Federal Reserve published its plans to buy $500 billion of mortgages issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Sallie Mae using freshly printed dollars. (You can read the Fed's FAQ on this scheme here.)
 
It's the perfect recipe for a massive rise in Treasury bond yields.
 
Here's the thing: Before you try to short a bubble in the financial markets, you must wait for the bubble to burst or you are liable to be wiped out in the final irrational stage. Imagine trying to short technology stocks in 1999. The Nasdaq Index doubled in the final six months of the bubble. You would have lost a fortune.
 
In the last two business days, yields on Treasury bonds have reversed. They surged from 2.56% to 2.81%. This is good evidence of a trend change from falling yields to rising yields. The amazing thing is, yields rose despite recent news that should have made them decline.
 
On Wednesday, the U.S. Labor department reported the initial jobless claims number. Economists said this statistic wasn't meaningful because it covered the Christmas week. Also, winter storms crippled the North East last week, so many people couldn't leave their homes to sign up for unemployment benefits. The day this "meaningless" news came out, bond yields jumped by 0.11% (it doesn't sound like much, but for the Treasury market, that's huge).

Then on Friday, the Institute of Supply Management reported its index of U.S. manufacturing activity had fallen to its lowest level since 1980 and its index of new manufacturing orders had fallen to its lowest reading since 1948. News like this should make bond yields fall. They rocketed higher by another 0.13% that day.

 
Treasury yields are ignoring news that should make them fall and rising on news that shouldn't have any impact. It tells me the path of least resistance is to higher yields... and the bubble in low Treasury bond yields finally burst on last Wednesday.
 
My favorite way to play a rise in Treasury bond yields is the ProShares UltraShort Lehman 20-Year ETF, which delivers twice the inverse of the long-term U.S. Treasury Index.
 The symbol is TBT.
 
Good investing,
 
Tom







NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Royal Gold (RGLD)... gold royalties
Validus Holdings (VR)... insurance
Castlepoint Holdings (CPHL)... insurance
Odyssey Re Holdings (ORH)... insurance
Lannett (LCI)... generic drugs
Thoratec (THOR)... medical devices
Landauer (LDR)... radiation detection
LHC Group (LHCG)... home health care
Gentiva Health Services (GTIV)... home health care
Athenahealth (ATHN)... health care services
Valeant Pharmaceuticals (VRX)... biotechnology
Emergent BioSolutions (EBS)... biotechnology
Optimer Pharmaceuticals (OPTR)... biotechnology
SXC Health Solutions (SXCI)... pharmacy benefit management


NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

La-Z-Boy (LZB)... furniture
51job (JOBS)... Chinese job search
Summer Infant (SUMR)... stuff for babies
Protection One (PONE)... home security
Bank of Granite (GRAN)... banking
Northrim Bancorp (NRIM)... banking
Peoples Financial (PFBX)... banking
Riverview Bancorp (RVSB)... banking
Tamalpais Bancorp (TAMB)... banking
Crescent Banking (CSNT)... banking
Carrollton Bancorp (CRRB)... banking
Stewardship Financial (SSFN)... banking
Naugatuck Valley Financial (NVSL)... banking
Princeton National Bancorp (PNBC)... banking
Southwest Georgia Financial (SGB)... banking
First West Virginia Bancorp (FWV)... banking
First Business Financial Services (FBIZ)... banking


Market Notes trade of the week: long biotechs, short banks.

classics
  • Friday, December 19, 2008
    The End of America
    Porter Stansberry predicts America will lose its place as the world's superpower and urges you to buy gold bullion.

recent articles
  • Where to Find the Best Deals in Gold Bullion
    By Jeff Clark Saturday, January 3, 2009
    As the Federal Reserve continues conjuring new money for Washington to borrow and spend, you can count on three things: The dollar will fall, inflation will return with a vengeance, and gold will rise to new heights.


  • A True Story: It Happened to Us... It Could Happen to You
    By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud Friday, January 2, 2009
    Please, do yourself a huge favor. Remember the old "ounce of prevention/pound of cure" saying. Take more steps to protect yourself online than you ever thought you needed to.
     


  • Why January 20 Is Next Year's Most Important Date For Investors
    By Tom Dyson Wednesday, December 31, 2008
    The financial system we use today is a simple confidence scheme... a Ponzi scheme. It works exactly the same way Bernie Madoff's scheme worked, except it's much larger.

    To survive and grow, our system needs a constantly increasing river of capital. As long as more capital enters the system than leaves it, the system functions. As soon as new capital shrinks, the whole system breaks down.


  • A Scary Lesson from Christmas Break
    By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud Tuesday, December 30, 2008
    Some people have accepted reality. They've taken their lumps just to get out. They're honest with themselves, and they're making changes. Their wives are going back to work, and they're scaling back their expenses in a big way.

    The real estate market will finally bottom when the "hold and hope" crowd joins the "take your lumps" folks, puts their properties up for sale, and gets another job. They're not there yet.


  • The Double-Digit Bear Market Income Secret
    By Tom Dyson Monday, December 29, 2008
    Iowa Telecom has all the qualities of a safe dividend stock. It cannot expand, it pays almost no taxes, and it cranks out the same cash-flow numbers every quarter. Management pays out almost all its cash flow in dividends. When I first went to visit the company, it was paying a 9% dividend.