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This Investment Goes Up When Everything Else Goes Down
By Tom Dyson
December 17, 2007

First, a riddle:

This asset is popular when all other assets are going down.

The market for this asset is the most liquid in the world.

Although every person in America owns this asset and wants more, it's less popular than it has ever been before.

What is it?
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Here's a hint: In 1981 – after 15 years of stagnant stock prices – this asset represented 77.1% of all mutual fund assets.

In 1999, when stock market optimism was at its strongest, this asset represented only 23.7% of all mutual fund assets.

Today, investors hold about the same percentage of this asset as they did in 1999. As of October 2007, this asset represents 24% of all mutual fund assets.

Perhaps by now you've guessed the solution to the riddle. The least-popular asset in America, yet the one thing people can't seem to get enough of, or get rid of fast enough, is...

Cash.

Right now, according to Investment Company Institute, the public is close to the lowest cash balance it has ever had relative to other investments. The ICI keeps detailed statistics on the assets the mutual fund industry controls. You can look up these statistics at http://www.ici.org/.

But you don't need statistics to figure this out... just look around you. Do you see your neighbors saving money, or did they just buy a new Hummer, condo, or vacation? Would they be more likely to buy a house or open up a new savings account?

Nope, no one wants to hold onto cash.

I love hated investments. This is one reason I like cash. It's such a contrarian investment.

But I have a more specific reason for liking cash. It's Jason Goepfert's "mutual fund cash indicator." When this indicator flashes a signal, the stock market declines 4% a year on average versus cash. The cash investment I'm going to recommend to you in a minute pays a 4.5% interest yield. Therefore, by following this system, you can expect to earn 8.5% a year on your cash – relative to stocks – whenever the indicator flashes.

The indicator is flashing right now...

Here's how Jason Goepfert's indicator works:

Cash is a safe haven. So if you look at the assets the American public holds in cash versus stocks and bonds, you get a good indication of the public's sentiment. When cash balances are high – as they were in 1981 – the public is afraid of investing, but it has lots of spending power. This is a good time to spend cash and buy stocks.

When cash balances are low – as they are now – the public is comfortable investing in stocks and bonds, but it doesn't have any firepower. This is a good time to raise cash and sell stocks.

This system is too crude to be of any use, even with the detailed statistics from ICI. Interest rates are the problem. They distort cash levels. Investors tend to keep more money in cash when interest rates are high. When interest rates are low, low cash balances make more sense.

So Jason stripped out the influence of interest rates on mutual fund cash balances using statistical modeling. In short, he figured out a normal level of mutual fund cash holdings at every level of interest rates.

Right now, the cash held in mutual funds is 2% below where it should be given today's interest rate levels. In the past, a 2% deficit has signaled average stock loses of 4% a year. Here's what this looks like in a chart:

My favorite investment in cash is the Lehman 1-3 year bond fund ETF (SHY).

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SHY is the safest investment vehicle on the planet after gold. It's a fund of short-term bonds issued by the United States government. Short-term United States Treasury bonds are the most liquid assets on the planet. They are as good as cash. SHY pays a 4.5% dividend.

In sum, if you're looking for a safe place to park your money – or speculate on increased demand for cash – you should consider investing in SHY. I expect it will beat stock market returns by 8.5% a year until mutual fund cash balances return back to normal levels.

Good investing,

Tom

P.S. Jason Goepfert runs sentimenTrader.com. This website is absolutely the best source for sentiment indicators. Steve and I follow Jason's put/call ratios, volatility indices, investment manager surveys as well as hundreds of other indicators Jason created. You can check his site at www.sentimentrader.com.

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NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Coca Cola (KO)... soda
McDonald's (MCD)... fast food
Exelon (EXC)... nuclear power
Monsanto (MON)... agriculture
Mosaic (MOS)... agriculture
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM)... agribusiness
Covance (CVD)... CRO
Merck (MRK)... Big Pharma
Annaly Capital (NLY)... virtual bank
MFA Mortgage (MFA)... virtual bank
Helmerich & Payne (HP)... oil services
Diamond Offshore (DO)... oil services
Atwood Oceanics (ATW)... oil services
Morningstar (MORN)... investment research
INVESTools (SWIM)... investment education
Western Union (WU)... money transfers
Jacobs Engineering (JEC)... infrastructure
Chicago Bridge & Iron (CBI)... infrastructure
Plum Creek Timber (PCL)... timber REIT
Art's Way Manufacturing (ARTW)... agricultural equipment
Lindsay Corporation (LNN)... agricultural equipment
Bucyrus International (BUCY)... mining equipment
Rice, Soybeans, and Canola oil

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Smith & Wesson (SWHC)... guns
JetBlue (JBLU)... airline
US Airways (LCC)... airline
Bruswick (BC)... recreational boats
Sallie Mae (SLM)... student loans
First Marblehead (FMD)... student loans
Office Depot (ODP)... office supplies
American Express (AXP)... credit cards
Eastman Kodak (EK)... photography
Carmike Cinemas (CKEC)... movie theaters
Regal Entertainment (RGC)... movie theaters
Gannett (GCI)... newspapers
McClatchy (MNI)... newspapers
Harry Winston (HWD)... expensive diamonds
Zale (ZLC)... cheap diamonds
Starbucks (SBUX)... $5 coffee
Washington Mutual (WM)... subprime victim

Soybeans may lead gains among non-energy commodities next year because of shortages of acreage and rising demand for biofuels, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said.

"We believe that both supply and demand drivers will further tighten global soybean fundamentals over 2008 and into 2009, suggesting there are still good investment opportunities in the oilseed," analysts led by Jeffrey Currie, London-based head of global commodities research, said in a report yesterday.

The New York-based bank raised its 12-month forecast for the crop by 61 percent to $14.50 a bushel from $9 a bushel. Wheat in Chicago may trade at $7.50 a bushel in a year compared with a previous forecast of $6, Goldman said. The bank raised its estimate for corn by 20 percent to $5.30 a bushel from $4.40.

Agricultural products have been the best-performing commodities this year because of rising demand for biofuels and as droughts curbed supply. Wheat rose to a record in September while soybeans climbed to a 34-year high this month and corn reached a 10-year high in February.

– Bloomberg

The U.S. ethanol industry may struggle to shift excess supply next year because of inadequate storage and transportation infrastructure on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, BernsteinResearch said.

The industry, which has almost doubled in size in two years, "is now under threat and at risk of turning into a bust as ethanol margins have been squeezed as supply has rapidly outgrown demand this year," BernsteinResearch analysts Neil McMahon and Sebastian Williams-Key wrote in a report dated today.
– Bloomberg

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