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Are We at the Bottom? This Guy Knows the Answer...
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
February 9, 2009

What's the bottom look like? Is the worst over?

The smart thing to do is to check with the guy who literally wrote the book on it... Russell Napier.

Napier diligently studied the great bear markets of the last 100 years. Then in 2005, he published Anatomy of The Bear: Lessons from Wall Street's Four Great Bottoms. In it, he showed readers which indicators said the bottom was here.

Napier currently teaches the course "A Practical History of the Financial Markets" through the Edinburgh Business School. But he's not just an academic... When he was the Asian strategist for CLSA (a major Asia-focused brokerage and investment group), he ranked No. 1 for Asian investment strategy in all the industry polls.

In his book, Napier called exactly what would happen in this bear market... though nobody listened at the time:

Equities will have to fall below their fair value, and the likely catalyst for this will be a bout of deflation... There will have to be a bear market in bonds and a recession. Before the bear market is over the DJIA is likely to decline by at least 60%... This bear market will likely come to an end sometime after 2009...

Back in 2005, none of the above had happened yet. But what about today?

Are equities below fair value? Yes. Have we seen a bout of deflation? Yes. Is there a bear market in bonds? Yes – the worst ever in everything but government bonds. Are we in a recession? Yes.

Finally, has the Dow Jones declined by at least 60%? No... but 14,000 to 8,000 is a heck of a fall.

Just about all the things Napier mentioned – things that hadn't happened in 2005 – have happened now. So where does he think we're headed from here?

Many of Napier's indicators of a bottom look good now... He found that corporate bonds bottom first, then stocks bottom, then the price of copper bottoms. Well, corporate bonds bottomed in October. Then stocks bottomed in November. And copper bottomed in December.

It looks like all our ducks are in a row. The signs are good the bottom is here, right now. The worst of the recession could be behind us, and we could see a great rise in stocks.

I wish I could end this note with that hopeful picture... Unfortunately, Napier's recent writings are not so hopeful. He believes a huge rally is almost here... But he thinks the ultimate lows in stocks are farther ahead of us, after a big fall in the U.S. dollar and U.S. government bonds.

If Napier is right, the federal debts the U.S. government will create today with its new spending programs will ultimately crush the U.S. dollar and government bond prices. The ensuing inflation will bring stocks down, too.

Napier's book, Anatomy of the Bear, isn't quite "beach" reading. But if you want to understand what happened in the four major bear markets of the last 100 years, and compare it to where we are today, it's probably the best book out there. If you're interested, check it out.

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The good news is, based on the traditional indicators of bottoms in past great bear markets, we should be right at the bottom, right now. The short-range forecast from a man who should know is that we should have a nice rally this year.

Good investing,

Steve

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NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Brinks (CFL)... home security
Cephalon (CEPH)... biotechnology
Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX)... biotechnology
Anadys Pharmaceuticals (ANDS)... biotechnology
Myriad Genetics (MYGN)... health care diagnostics
ITT Education (ESI)... secondary education
Career Education (CECO)... secondary education
Lincoln Educational (LINC)... secondary education
Corinthian Colleges (COCO)... secondary education

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Capital One (COF)... credit cards
MGM Mirage (MGM)... casinos
Wynn Resorts (WYNN)... casinos
Skechers USA (SKX)... shoes
Thor Industries (THO)... RVs
General Electric (GE)... conglomerate
Bank of America (BAC)... bank
Weyerhaeuser (WY)... paper products
Costco (COST)... wholesale club
Gartner (IT)... tech research
Kilroy Realty (KRC)... office REIT
Essex Property (ESS)... residential REIT
One Liberty Property (OLP)... retail REIT
Equity Residential (EQR)... apartment REIT
Advisory Board Co (ABCO)... business research
Lamar Advertising (LAMR)... advertising
Franklin Covey (FC)... business services
Fifth Third (FITB)... bank
First United (FUNC)... bank
Nara Bancorp (NARA)... bank
Regions Financial (RF)... bank
Wilmington Trust (WL)... bank
Bank of Granite (GRAN)... bank
Cascade Bancorp (CACB)... bank
Northrim BanCorp (NRIM)... bank

Market Notes trade of the week: stay long biotechs, stay short banks.
It is China's disconcerting secret: Its economic slump is much deeper than official data show.

The government says the economy grew by 6.8 percent in the final quarter of 2008, but that is based on an outdated system that measures growth against the same period a year earlier.

Compared to the previous quarter, the method used by most major economies, growth was about 1 percent at an annual pace and possibly zero, economists say.

If China's economy is indeed barely growing, that would dash hopes China, the world's third-largest economy, might drive the world out of recession. It also means communist leaders face a tougher challenge than outsiders might think as they scramble to stem a flood of job losses and ignite a recovery.

– Associated Press


William Ackman's hedge fund that invests solely in Target Corp. fell 40.1 percent in January, bringing the loss since inception to 89.5 percent, according to a letter sent to investors.

The decline in Pershing Square IV fund was about four times that of Target shares in January because Ackman made his bet using options rather than owning the underlying stock, which tumbled 9.6 percent.

Ackman started his fund investing in the Minneapolis-based retailer in 2007 with $2 billion.

– Bloomberg
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