
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, April 29, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Rare though they may be, several asset bubbles are currently frolicking in our midst, according to bubble-tracker Jeremy Grantham. But which bubble does he think is about to pop? Find out here
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------------------------- THE AUSTRALIAN CANARY By Eric J. Fry Jeremy Grantham is bubble-tracker. The chairman of investment firm Grantham, Mayo, Van Otterloo (GMO) seems to enjoy tracking and studying asset bubbles, much like a biologist might track and tag endangered California Condors. Asset bubbles, however, are hardly an endangered species. Rare though they may be, several bubbles are currently frolicking in our midst, according to Grantham. In fact, he believes, a massive housing bubble is expanding throughout the English-speaking world at this very moment. The British bubble is, by far, the most dramatic. But it is the Aussie bubble, he believes, that deserves the most attention. "The Australian residential real estate market could be the canary in the coal mine - that is, a harbinger of bad things to come for a lot of us," Grantham warns. "Sydney house prices rose earlier and faster than any other. Australia also raised its rates earlier and further than England
And both of these foreign markets have [a large proportion of] floating rate mortgages, so it would reasonably be expected that the effect of higher rates would impact prices faster." According to Grantham, the Aussie canary is already swooning a bit. "Sydney prices are well off their highs," he observes, "although as yet far from a real bust." But the "real bust" is certain to arrive, he warns, because ALL bubbles do "indeed move all the way back to (or below) the trend that existed prior to those bubbles forming." Grantham allows no exceptions, simply because he has never discovered a single exception in any financial market. Bubbles form; bubble burst; prices revert to the mean - this is the natural order of the financial universe. Grantham and his research team have identified "28 good examples of previous bubbles" from within the world of global stock markets, currencies and commodities. "I am patiently waiting for the current 28th bubble, the S&P 500, to go all the way back to trend - about 750 versus today's 1150," he says. "It fell to within 10% of trend in 2002, but still no cigar. But
ALL the other 27 identified bubbles did indeed move all the way back to [trend]." Grantham defines a bubble as an asset value that rises more than two-standard deviations away from its historic trend. Such "two-sigma events" are the kind that would occur about once every forty years, on average. Drawing the bubble boundary at two standard deviations, says Grantham, "seems (at least to us) to be reasonable, although it is quite arbitrary." Applying the lessons learned from the financial markets to the real estate markets, Grantham reveals that inflated home prices are just as certain to burst as inflated stock prices, and therefore, just as certain to fall back to the trends from which they emerged. The specific trend he finds most useful in assessing real estate values is the ratio of median home prices to average household incomes. On this measure, the real estate markets of Australia and New Zealand are clearly in bubbles, while the U.K. market is, literally, off the charts. To illustrate the mean-reverting tendency of real estate bubbles, Grantham provides the chart below.  "The U.K. housing data
show, in addition to the current mega bubble, two prior substantial bubbles that both fully mean-reverted," Grantham points out. "Prices bottomed [in 1995] at 2.9 times income, or another 20% below trend. Today, though, in the U.K., the price/income ratio would have to fall by 37% to merely get to trend
Any overrun would inflict substantial pain
Australia and New Zealand would be in the same boat as the U.K., but the U.S. would obviously be less bad."
Nevertheless, "less bed" would still be unpleasant. Furthermore, he suspects that the pricey real estate markets on both coasts of the United States could suffer as badly as the Aussie or U.K. markets. In his hometown of Boston, for example, the price-to-income ratio is more than 6.5-to-1, which is - you guessed it - more than two standard deviations above trend. Here in the Northeast, the white-hot real estate market might already be starting to cool somewhat. In the fourth quarter of 2004, Manhattan apartment prices topped $1 million for the third straight quarter. Nevertheless, the million-dollar average price tag represented a 2.6% drop from the record prices of the prior quarter. This week's new-home sales data also presented some troubling data about the Northeast property market. When the Commerce Department announced last Tuesday that nationwide sales of new homes shot up an astonishing 12.2% in March, it also disclosed that home sales here in the Northeast FELL 9%. No doubt the steep falloff in Northeast home sales contributed to the equally steep 9% drop in median sales prices last month to $212,300 from $234,000 the prior month. Perhaps the housing market of the northeastern United States is another canary that bears watching. "The key point in the U.S.," Grantham emphasizes, "is that in the recent 3-year stock market decline, all the stock market wealth lost by the median family holding stocks was more than offset by a 21% advance in house prices. This favorable circumstance seems extremely unlikely to recur [next] time. The inevitable 30% to 40% decline in U.S. stock prices necessary to get to fair value, accompanied by flat to down housing prices, will pose substantially greater risks for consumer spending than last time. "The 'best' reasonably likely outcome in the U.S.," the bubble-tracker concludes, "is that a moderate stock market decline in the next two years
could be accompanied by up to one more year of average house prices rising, for the U.S. housing market has lagged the other countries and has some good potential for catch-up in certain regional markets
"But by this time next year," Grantham warns, "time would really seem to be running out for our U.S. housing semi- bubble. It also seems likely that by then the housing markets in England and Australia will have completely run out of steam." Thus spake the bubble-tracker. [Ed. Note: Grantham's research is excellent, but how do use this valuable knowledge to protect ourselves or even make money? Simple. Dan Denning has traveled the globe and prepared a manifest of recommendations designed to profit from Grantham's expected outcomes. Here's what we need to do
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? By Eric J. Fry Jeremy Grantham is also forcing himself to consider the possibility of a bubble in crude oil prices
even though he hopes not to find one. Crude oil prices have, indeed, jumped two standard deviations above their historic trend, Grantham admits, which technically means that the price jump has reached bubble proportions. But he wonders whether crude oil might be that "very rare bird - a paradigm shift." In other words, he wonders if crude oil might be the first-ever bubble not to revert to its previous trend. He admits the odds of such an outcome are very slim.
"Over the years," he explains, "we have asked over 2000 investment professionals [if they knew of] an exception to our claim that every asset class move of 2 sigma away from trend had broken [back down to trend]." Unfortunately, Grantham confesses, "not one of the 2000 ever offered an exception!
But we have always said that intellectually, you could imagine a paradigm shift in an asset class price, even if we have been unable to document one yet in history." He believes crude oil is capable of resisting the powerful forces of mean-reversion. "It's the best possibility I've seen in my career," he says. "But the investment desert is littered with the bones of those who bet on new paradigms." [Ed. Note: It makes no difference to Kevin Kerr whether oil is going up or down, bull or bear, paradigm shift or not
as long as there's a market, he still makes money. That's because he's a natural born trader with years of experience in the pits. With his guidance, anyone can make money in the energy complex. Here's what you do
http://www1.youreletters.com/t/134487/4891088/775297/0
------------------------- And the Markets
| Thursday | Wednesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,070 | 10,199 | -87 | -6.6% | S&P | 1,143 | 1,156 | -9 | -5.7% | NASDAQ | 1,904 | 1,930 | -28 | -12.5% | 10-year Treasury | 4.15% | 4.23% | -0.10 | -0.06 | 30-year Treasury | 4.49% | 4.55% | -0.09 | -0.33 | Russell 2000 | 575 | 587 | -15 | -11.7% | Gold | $431.15 | $432.80 | -$3.45 | -1.5% | Silver | $6.94 | $7.11 | -$0.34 | 1.8% | CRB | 304.40 | 305.88 | -2.89 | 7.2% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $51.77 | $51.61 | -$3.62 | 19.1% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 106.07 | JPY 105.84 | -0.09 | -3.4% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2891 | $1.2931 | 175 | 4.9% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.9066 | $1.9058 | 81 | 0.6% |
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