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It was beautiful. It was wow. It was unbelievably exciting. It was indescribable. It was beyond superlatives, and no, we are not talking about the spectacular display at the Beijing National Stadium. It was the bull rally last week on Wall Street, riding the back of falling oil prices and the reversal of the dollar.

The opening ceremony of the Games of the XXIX Olympiad was magical. The collective life force of 1.3 billion people that poured into the "Bird's Nest" had one objective; to make the world's viewers speechless. Mission accomplished. A gold medal for people of China; their repressive government...

The European Central Bank and the Bank of England, facing acceleration in the decline of growth, at just .2 percent in the 2nd quarter, left interest rates unchanged on Thursday, earning silver medals; two days after the FOMC did likewise. This unanimous decision indicates an acknowledgment that inflation is no longer the sole concern of central banks in Europe. With less pressure on the dollar, now, the meme of possibly lower rates later this year fired the starter pistol for the equity Olympics.

The DJIA advanced 302.89 or 2.65 percent on Friday to 11,734.32. The S&P 500 moved higher 30.25 or 2.39 percent for the day at 1,296.32. NASDAQ climbed 58.37 or 2.48 percent Friday to close at 2,414.10 for the week, the Dow increased 3.60 percent, on two 300-plus point rallies, the S&P 500 up 2.86 percent, and NASDAQ rose for the week 4.46 percent.

The implications of a stronger dollar include companies with major overseas sales and earnings may experience softer numbers in the 3rd and 4th quarters. Exporters will notice headwinds as well and a firmer dollar will aid job losses. The tradeoff is lower oil and gold prices unless the military action by the Russians in Georgia threatens the flow of oil in the region. Speaking of which, the U.N. Security Consul held an emergency session to discuss this potentially grave regional/international matter.

This runs counterproductive to the impulse of the international Olympics. In theory, bringing together the various nations of the world to participate in athletic competition allows an exchange of communication and diplomacy that can forestall hatred, mistrust, and warring. If you don't buy this scenario, then you might want to check out gold medal Harvard historian Niall Ferguson's multi-part PBS series "War of the World". It's a fresh and sobering look at how the 20th century began and how several conflagrations converged into World War II. Hopefully, we will avoid global destruction this century.

Consumers added $14.3 billion to their credit cards in June, $8 billion more than expected, while personal income rose .1 percent and personal spending rose .6 percent. Initial jobless claims increased by 7k; a 23k drop in claims were expected.

Apparently there are still a few free lunches left on Wall Street. Bronze medals go to regulators who pressured Citigroup (C), Merrill Lynch (MER), and UBS (UBS) into buying back, from thousands of high net worth retail clients, Auction Rate Securities. This Dutch auction creature that paid above money market rates, for awhile to customers anyway, crashed and burned in the great liquidity squeeze of 2007/2008. Only a money market is as safe as a money market. Every chance I got, I attempted to talk customers out of chasing these minor differences in yield. The risk to reward wasn't there. But, if you are a hog, don't be surprised when you are slaughtered.

More silver medal analysts are glomming on to the idea that the current downturn will be deeper and will last longer than previously expected. Many, many more believe, however, that it is business as usual and that a soft landing will be engineered through Fed policy with some help from Treasury. If it were only that easy to manage the world's largest economy, no analysts would earn bronze medals. Mortgage rates are trending higher, underwriting standards are tightening, and, if residual real estate values drop another five to ten percent, that is a trillion dollars erased from household net worth.

Banks are beginning to freeze or reduce individual lines of credit. A gold medal goes to Oppenheimer & Co.'s Director of Equity Research, Meredith Whitney, who appeared on CNBC on August 4th, sharing a dismal overview of the banking industry and the economy for the balance of this year and next. Last year, 85 percent of mortgage liquidly came from securitization. Last year to date, that accounted for $900 billion in loans. In 2008, that number is $100 billion. Overall, there is $2 trillion less in liquidity in the marketplace. Also, she expects banks to reduce unused lines of credit to customers from $4.9 trillion by $2 trillion in 2009. Ouch.

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This article has 6 comments:

  •  
    Once we hit the election and oil prices level out the economy should make a comeback. It's a great time to buy into many stocks right now, invest!
    2008 Aug 11 10:12 AM | Link | Reply
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    Kind of unbelievable isn’t it. One would think that the markets had planned it that way. I wonder how much money the FED dumped into the markets to goose the market before elections. They pulled a rabbit out of their hat by elimination the naked shorting rules for those major financial institutions. That caused some banks to rally 20-40%, yea.

    An ex SEC chairman set up the first clearing house so that shares may be borrowed for legitimate shorting. Kind of makes you wonder how the shorting by the big boys was being conducted before.

    We pigeons were first told that naked shorting was paranoia or NON-EXISTANT, then we were told it was tini-wini problem limited in scope, then a SHO list was set up but we were not allowed to know how many shares were naked shorted nor who was naked shorting, then we were told that the fifth largest I-BANK was brought down by naked shorting, then they eliminate the OBVIOUS naked shorting avenues for the major financials and the financial have an all time 1 weeks rally. Makes you wonder how those hedge fund managers were able to pay themselves 1 BILLIONS in bonuses.

    Who is bull sh—ting who. This cat is now out of the bag and the big boys are trying to stuff it back in. If they finally enforces the law and eliminate naked shorting for all companies, the market could rally and cause many hedge funds to go BK. That will cause more losses at the I Banks. If they truly get serious and force buybacks most hedge funds will go BK and that will force the I-Banks to cover the naked shorting and they will go BK and it will easily BK the so call brokerage insurance. The rest of the world will finally see that counterfeit shares in the US market is as big as the legitimate shares. They will stop listing in the US and they will stop investing in the rigged game. The suckers in the 401Ks will have their values cut in half and heads will roll.

    Politicians fear the backlash and the big money that owns them will NEVER let the light be shown on this cesspool.
    2008 Aug 11 10:30 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Gaucho, this was a lot more smart than the olympic BS
    2008 Aug 11 10:43 AM | Link | Reply
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    HAHAHA. Agreed Phinsuntanning. The market will get it right, but socialism and corruption to attempt to fix socialsim and corruption comes first. I do not expect Washington to change overnight and forecast the next Bull run to begin in 2013.
    2008 Aug 11 12:42 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    co incidental isnt it .dollar rallies ivan(russians) walks into georgia.after seeing oil hit 115.this is another example of market manipulation this time by ivan whom for now had finished dumping his t bills for now.thus the the dollar bounce .ivan is clever he has paid off his debts is loaded with commodities and weapons.he will soon resume dumping his t bills buying gold and chopping oil pipe lines and turning the oil spigots to slow.we will pay for our apeasement and double standards.welcome to the new cold war.the retro seventies scenario is now complete.you know what to do .so do it
    2008 Aug 12 03:36 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    his is a true bear rally .the bear being russian of course
    2008 Aug 12 03:37 PM | Link | Reply