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The One Report Investors Should Watch For
By Tom Dyson
December 8, 2008

The Bureau of Labor Statistics is the government department that keeps track of the unemployment rates in the United States. On the first Friday of every month, the BLS releases its report. This report generates more reaction in the stock, currency, and bond markets than any other regular economic report. It's because unemployment is such a political issue. The market knows this report directly influences the Fed's policy...

On Friday, the BLS published its report for November. It showed the sixth-largest monthly increase in unemployment since the BLS began keeping records in 1929. The United States lost 533,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate rose from 6.5% to 6.7%.


This data shocked the market. Economists had only expected 350,000 job cuts. The stock market dropped 200 points after the opening bell, and bond yields dropped to new all-time lows. Then a funny thing happened. Around midday, the market turned around and rallied 450 points higher. The bond market reversed, pushing interest rates back up.

My theory is that investors realized this report would trigger more stimulus from the Fed and the Treasury to combat the recession. They hope this stimulus will put more liquidity in the market, soften the recession, and generate a new bull market in stock prices.

Here's the thing: I think unemployment rates will continue to rise as the recession gets more intense. Last week, for example, I read an interview in the Casey Report with a major commercial real estate player. His name is Andy Miller. Since he founded his company, he's bought over 30,000 apartment units, acquired several million square feet of retail space, and invested in large office projects all over the country. Today, his firm employs 500 people.

Miller says that many of his retail tenants have told him they're going to shut down their stores after Christmas. Christmas is the most profitable time of the year for retailers. If Miller's right, they'll sell as much as they can leading up to Christmas, then they'll fire their staff and vacate their properties in the new year.

It's not just retail properties closing down and firing employees. Miller says there's a crisis coming in all commercial real estate. He says it feels like a slow-motion car wreck. "Whether it's apartments, shopping centers, office buildings, industrial properties, hotels, senior housing – operating incomes are eroding. Cap rates [that's income yields] are eroding. Operating expenses are going up," he says.

When cap rates erode while profits fall, you see massive declines in price. It's the same way in the stock market with dividend stocks. If a company cuts its dividend by 50% while investors are demanding twice the dividend yield, you get a 75% decline in the stock's price.

A crisis in commercial real estate portends millions of job cuts. Occupancy falls in offices, malls cut jobs, property developers and construction companies cut laborers, and so on.

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If a crisis in commercial real estate develops, you should anticipate some of the worst unemployment data since the Great Depression. And as a result, more and more stimulus from the Fed and the Treasury. This leads to a paradoxical situation: The worse the unemployment data, the more likely we get a rally in the stock market following the news releases.

This phenomenon will last until the public realizes how damaging the Fed's stimulus is... which may take several years. In the meantime, expect fireworks on the first Friday of every month.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson 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 Tom Dyson.

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NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Hot Topic (HOTT)... teen clothing
Dollar Tree (DLTR)... dollar stores
Granite Construction (GVA)... infrastructure
Lehman 20+ Year Treasury Bond (TLT)... long bond ETF
Lehman 10-20 Year Treasury Bond (TLH)... long bond ETF
Lehman 3-7 Year Treasury Bond (IEI)... intermediate bond ETF
Japanese Yen

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Rio Tinto (RTP)... metals
Boston Beer (SAM)... brewery
Walter Industries (WLT)... coal
Unilever (UN)... Big Food
ConAgra (CAG)... Big Food
H.J. Heinz (HNZ)... Big Food
Campbell Soup (CPB)... Big Food
Hormel Foods (HRL)... Big Food
StatoilHydro (STO)... Big Oil
Baker Hughes (BHI)... drill rigs
Halliburton (HAL)... oil services
Schlumberger (SLB)... oil services
Transocean (RIG)... world's largest oil driller
Nissan (NSANY)... Japanese auto
Toyota Motor (TM)... Japanese auto
Honda Motor (HMC)... Japanese auto
Sony (SNE)... Japanese electronics
Panasonic (PC)... Japanese electronics
Potash Saskatchewan (POT)... fertilizer
CB Richard Ellis (CBG)... real estate
Research in Motion (RIMM)... BlackBerrys
Texas Instruments (TXN)... semiconductors
Freeport-McMoRan (FCX)... world's largest publicly traded copper producer
Oil, Gasoline, Natural Gas, Copper
Canadian Dollar, Swedish Krona, British Pound

The fundamentals of commodities are "unimpaired" and prices will rebound when a lack of new supply leads to shortages, said Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings.

"Commodities will be the place to be if and when we come out of" the downturn, Rogers said yesterday in an interview from Miami. "The only thing where fundamentals are unimpaired are commodities. Farmers cannot get loans for fertilizer now. Nobody can get a loan to open a zinc mine. So we are going to have some serious, serious supply problems before too much longer."

The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 commodities has plunged 53 percent from a record in July on concern that a global recession will sap demand for raw materials. The index almost doubled between its low in 2001 and the end of last year.

– Bloomberg

Investors in the $4 billion Templeton Foreign Fund already have lost more than 50 percent of their money this year and now they'll be forced to pay taxes on as much as $1 billion of gains from the sales of investments.

Shareholders of Templeton Foreign, run by Franklin Resources Inc. in San Mateo, California, have plenty of company. Franklin said 33 of its 106 stock and bond funds will have capital gains. Fidelity Investments, the world's largest mutual-fund manager, expects 135 of its 212 funds to make the distributions, based on data as of Nov. 15.

Money managers have had to sell profitable holdings this year as customer redemptions increased, resulting in short- and long-term capital gains. The result means tax bills for investors in the worst year for financial markets since the 1930s.

– Bloomberg

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