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The Answer to the Panic Question
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
August 23, 2007

"Steve, all the financial news lately has got me really worried… I think the market could lose a quarter of its value here… what do you think? "

A friend sent this e-mail to me in what felt like a panic. I'll reply to him in today's DailyWealth.

Dear [friend],

Don't worry…

I know that's easier said than done. The markets are down, politicians are looking for someone to blame for the subprime mess, and there doesn't seem to be an end to the real estate troubles.

So it's quite normal to worry. Investors, in general, are more than worrying right now… investors are downright panicky.

I went back and crunched the numbers… and found that when investors panic, you want to be a buyer, not a seller.

Investors panicked in 1997 during the Asian crisis… but once the fear subsided, stocks shot up something like 20%. Investors then panicked in 1998 (during the Russian bond default/LTCM crisis). Once again, as the fear started to subside, stocks soared. As you can see in the chart, the S&P 500 shot from less than 1,000 to 1,400 in no time.

We had a few more panics… September 11, 2001, of course, but the S&P 500 rallied nearly 20% very quickly – and this was during a bear market! Late 2002-early 2003, as the U.S. invaded Iraq. Once again, as the uncertainty/panic subsided, stocks soared… The S&P 500 ran from 800 to 1,100.

We're in another panic now. But the fear is subsiding…

The Volatility Index (the VIX) is my measure of fear. Some call it the Fear Gauge. On Friday, it closed at 30. On Monday, it closed at 26. Today, it's around 23.

Now I can't guarantee that fear can't jump once again. As you can see from the chart, the Fear Gauge often has more than one spike to "scary" levels.

But if you ask me, I think we're closer to a near-term bottom than a top. I can be completely wrong, of course… The Crash of '87 set a record on the Fear Gauge, and we didn't get a whole lot of advance warning. Just days before the '87 Crash – the worst one-day drop in Wall Street history – the Fear Gauge was right in line with its average for the previous 12 months.

Instead of betting on a decline from here, this is what I see: Based on valuation, stocks are as cheap as they've been in a dozen years. The Fed is about to start cutting interest rates. And if you believe that you've got to be a contrarian to make money, the contrary thing is to believe in stocks when most people don't… and that's now.

Don't worry. And don't hustle out and sell things in haste.

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

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WHY CRUDE OIL IS GOING TO FALL, PART TWO

Two weeks ago, we forecasted a "less expensive" price for the world's most fought-over commodity, crude oil.

Given the typical selling pressure crude receives around $75 a barrel, and the fact that hedge funds held a record amount of bullish bets on the commodity, it was only reasonable to expect the oil boat to tip over to the other side.

We'd actually like to see oil decline to $55 a barrel. This seems to be market's "Goldilocks" price for crude oil. Not so hot that it cripples the global economy, and not so cold to crimp investment in future energy infrastructure. As the world's hedge funds close their long positions, expect crude to keep heading in that direction.

-Brian Hunt

The Federal Reserve raised hopes last week of a lowered federal funds rate after slashing a secondary rate. On Friday, the Fed cut its discount rate by 50 basis points, to 5.75%, from 6.25%. Banks use the so-called discount window to borrow money directly from the Fed.

The slashed discount rate puts the federal funds rate next in line for a mowing. December fed funds futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade rose Monday to 95.5, indicating futures traders are expecting rates to be cut to 4.50% from 5.25% by the end of this year.

-Forbes

The producers of a CBS reality show featuring 40 children living on their own in the New Mexico desert were warned by the state attorney general's office while the show was being taped last spring that they might be violating the state's child-labor laws, according to interviews with state officials and documents obtained Tuesday under the state's open records act.

The show, "Kid Nation," which is scheduled to premiere on CBS on Sept. 19, is a reality show whose premise is to take 40 children, ages 8 to 15, and place them in a "ghost town" in New Mexico to see if they can build a working society without the help of adults.

But after the production ended in mid-May, the parent of one child in the production complained to state officials that the children's treatment bordered on abuse. Four children received medical treatment for accidentally drinking bleach, one child was burned on her face with hot grease while cooking in an unsupervised kitchen, and most of the children were required to work 14 hours or longer per day. They received a payment of $5,000 for their participation.

-New York Times

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