The Supermarket of Dreams The Daily Reckoning - Weekend Edition October 14-15, 2006 Baltimore, Maryland by Chris Mayer MARKET REVIEW: THE SUPERMARKET OF DREAMS "The supermarket of dreams." That's what Max Gunther calls the stock market in The Zurich Axioms. Indeed it is. Especially when the market is going up - but there's more to the story when you start to look at it a little closer. As we make new highs on the Dow, people start to dream again. Early retirement. Little house by the sea. Chilled wine in slender glasses and warm sunshine in a bright blue sky. Nice cigar. Leisurely meals. No financial worries. As author Charles Bukowski observed: "It's easy to fall into this kind of thinking when men hand you large bills at the cashier's window." The market's been handing out lots of bills lately. But let's look at it differently. Let's look at the market as we look at the produce section. No one buys the produce section. You buy potatoes and melons and onions - and not just any potato or melon or onion. You look over each carefully before you put it in your basket. You consider the price and the condition of the produce. So let's look at the market in the way we look at melons and broccoli - with a discerning eye. See, the big picture misses a lot of detail. People talk about "the stock market" as if all the stocks danced to the same routine, like a line of Rockettes. But that's not really true most of the time. These people miss the better stories that lie beneath. There is a lot of movement in varying directions. The market is more like a freeway, with some cars turning off and new cars zipping on. Not everyone is going to the same place. There are trouble spots in today's market, sure - warning signs of a slowdown in the highly cyclical semiconductor market, building inventories among PC manufacturers and electronics retailers, vulnerable housing related financial stocks and more. And there are always broken restaurants and busted airlines lying around, like shards of shattered dreams. Even as the market makes new highs, there are pockets of horrible performance. Over the last seven weeks, coal (-18%), maritime (-16%) and Canadian energy (-16%) have been among the worst performing industries in the market. The bright spots? Interestingly enough, they are names you probably wouldn't guess off the top of your head. The best performing industry over the last seven weeks was the shoe business (+15%), followed closely by the tire and rubber group (+14%). We've made bets in both of these sectors in K-Swiss (KSWS:nasdaq) and Bandag (BDG:nyse). I wrote a few weeks ago that the bottom was in on Bandag after its strong earnings report in July. The stock is up more than 30% since. Granted, we've had to wait awhile -- but we've collected dividend checks as we've waited. So you can see there are lots of crosscurrents even as the Dow makes new highs. The fact that the Dow made a new high is the least useful part of the story. It really doesn't tell you much about what's happening in the market. The more and more time I spend studying markets and investing, the more and more I harden in my view that trying to figure out what "the market" is going to do is a waste of time. The rewards are always richer when I focus on the smaller stories and dig into the details. Any nitwit can have an intelligent sounding opinion on the market. Don't be fooled. The great investors don't spend a lot of time trying to figure out what the market is going to do next. They do something simpler than that. They go through the market as if it were a produce stand and turn over a lot of fruit and veggies looking for the good stuff at a price they like. Those dreams - that house by the sea and the life of leisure - are achievable. But you have to know the right way to go about getting there. Investing well is part of it. Chris Mayer for The Daily Reckoning P.S. At Capital and Crisis, we've found our own little pockets of value, too, that have done exceptionally well in a short amount of time so far. We've recently added SJW Corp. (SJW:nyse), up 27%; Northwest Pipe (NWPX:nasdaq), up 18%; and Horizon Lines (HRZ:nyse), up 29% in only a matter of months. Most recently, we've added water rights and Argentine real estate. I expect these stocks will deliver good gains, too. If you want to learn how to add value to your portfolio, see my latest special report, here: Capital and Crisis
--- Daily Reckoning Book Of The Week --- Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis - Now available in paperback! by Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin "Watching the news is a bit like watching a bad opera," say best-selling authors Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin. "You can tell from all the shrieking that something very important is supposed to be happening, but you don't quite know what it is. What you're missing is the plot." After a generation of being spoon-fed reality by media, it's understandable that Americans are confused about the state of their nation. In their newly released book, Empire of Debt, Bonner and Wiggin wield their sardonic brand of humor to expose the nation for what it really is - an empire built on delusions. Americans are rapidly facing a choice: recognize these dangerous delusions and take steps to avoid their collapse. Or remain ignorant of them and risk losing all of their wealth when the house of cards comes crashing down. Daily Reckoning readers can purchase their copy of the book that The Economist called one of the top ten books that will "tell you what's really going on" - at a discount - by clicking here: "The Most Feared Book in Washington!"
THIS WEEK in THE DAILY RECKONING: Out celebrating Columbus Day and missed and issue of The Daily Reckoning? Never fear, we have all of this week's issues catalogued for you, below
The Late Great Helmsman, Part II 10/13/06 by Bill Bonner "Today, Bill picks up where he left off in last Friday's essay - with our sordid protagonist, Mao Tse-tung, lolling in his sedan chair, with scrawny, skin-kneed porters hauling him all around China. Read on
" http://dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2006/DR101306.html The Paris of South America 10/12/06 by Chris Mayer "Investors have been wary of putting their money into Argentina since the country's financial meltdown in 2001. But Chris Mayer explains that five years later the Argentine economy is quickly growing - and there are many opportunities to profit. Read on
" http://dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2006/DR101206.html
The Coming Correction 10/11/06 by Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin "Now that the housing market has gone soft, what's next? Well, despite a stock market rally and high consumer confidence, a correction is headed our way - and it won't be pretty." http://dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2006/DR101106.html False Signals and Unrealistic Hopes 10/10/06 by James Howard Kunstler "The basic insanity of a system that presumes vastly increased wealth where none will occur, has led to further distortions in finance." http://dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2006/DR101006.html Something Strange in the Neighborhood 10/09/06 by The Mogambo Guru "There's a chill in the air
and it's not just the change of seasons. The Mogambo's economic nose is twitching
find out why, below
" http://dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2006/DR100906.html --- Advertisement ---- Do you believe gold is money? We do, too. Long gone are the days when the dollar was "as good as gold". We all have to take individual measures to protect ourselves and the stability of our personal wealth. Since 2001, thousands of individuals and companies have used GoldMoney(r) to buy gold to guard their assets from today's financial uncertainties. Many of them have also found GoldMoney's patented process of digital gold currency payments to be an ideal payment solution for online commerce. GoldMoney is easy to use and inexpensive, with the added convenience of transacting entirely on the web. Want to give us a try? Please click on the link below to start buying gold or silver today: http://goldmoney.com/?gmrefcode=dailyrec ------------------------ FLOTSAM AND JETSAM: Natural gas projects gone awry
ancient ice
and the Planet of the Apes? Justice Litle has all the news that shapes the global resource world, below
Global Briefing by Justice Litle Flood of Mud Thanks to a natural gas project gone horribly wrong, 10 square miles of a heavily populated Indonesian island have been covered in hot, stinking mud. As many as 10,000 residents of eastern Java were forced to flee. Factories, homes and highways have all been buried. The mud pours forth from a 2-mile deep exploration well, forming a large, gray, bubbling lake 20 feet deep in places and nearly 140 degrees at the center. Indonesian villagers are up in arms regarding the government's inept response. Angry accusations of incompetence and corruption have been hurled at Aburizal Bakrie, the government minister in charge of disaster response, and a wealthy investor in the project. The disaster is another not-so-subtle reminder from Mother Nature: Man does not have as much control over the environment as he might think. Climatologists Tap Ancient Ice Scientists have found a way to study the relationship between carbon dioxide levels and climate shifts as far back as 800,000 years. The novel method for doing so involves extracting air bubbles trapped in ancient Antarctic ice cores. Over the long (very, very long) term, pockets of air habitually accumulate in piles of frozen snowflakes. Because it's Antarctica, these piles never thaw - they harden into ice, instead. Over time, the layers of trapped air in this ancient ice serve as a sort of time capsule. Concentrations of CO2, methane and hydrogen isotopes in the layers give an indication of past temperature shifts. News from the core is disconcerting: Over the past two decades of fossil fuel use, acceleration of CO2 parts per million has matched what nature took a thousand years to do. DOE Has Too Much Time on Its Hands The Department of Energy is apparently concerned about a Planet of the Apes-type scenario, in which generations thousands of years hence have completely lost touch with the 21st century. The "Waste Isolation Pilot Plant," or WIPP for short, is a sci-fi posterity project dedicated to warning future busybodies away from a huge cache of radioactive material buried in the New Mexico desert. Among other goofy measures, WIPP scientists plan to erect monolithic, Egyptian pyramid-type warning structures. (The best way to stay on message for thousands of years, WIPP asserts, is to carve that message in stone.) WIPP researchers are also busy testing out pictograms and warning symbols on various non-English speaking subjects, for fear that existing languages will be completely and irrevocably lost. If we somehow revert to hunter-gatherer societies, future diggers might be grateful for all this. Sorry, We Need the Money for Pyramids When is a technology mature? For U.S. entrepreneurs focused on hydropower and geothermal energy, this is not a trivial question. The Department of Energy has decided to zero out research funding in both areas, making a request that Congress let it drop the axe. The justification is that these technologies are no longer in need of support, which has energy advocates shaking their heads. Geothermal power, for example, currently generates less than 1% of the nation's electricity; though geothermal has vast untapped potential, serious development has barely begun. The DOE hopes to save or divert a miniscule $24 million a year by killing off this research; ironically, it is happy to spend more than that on pyramids. (The WIPP program detailed above is expected to cost $1 billion over the next 30 years, or approximately $33 million per year.) Editor's Note: Outstanding Investments is positioned on the strength of underlying conditions that will play out for years if not decades. The weak hands almost always get washed out before the big crescendo, so times like these are no surprise. You want to trade the swings in oil and gold, that's fine - then trade them. But from a long-term investment perspective, the type of action we see here provides bargains. It allows the patient investor to scoop up assets from the weak hands without staying power
to profit from those who are neither traders nor long-term investors, but conviction less cannon fodder caught in the middle ground. Read Justice's latest report here: The Full-on Oil War of 2007
|