BEING STREET SMART
by Sy Harding
If You Like QE3 But the Stock Market Makes You Nervous - Buy Gold!
QE2 in 2010 and ‘Operation Twist’ in 2011 recovered the
stock market from double-digit corrections that were underway at the time, and
rescued investors from their extreme bearish sentiment each time.
QE3 is underway and many are convinced that’s all that
matters, that a repeat of stock market gains is a sure thing.
You need to realize that conditions are much different this
time.
For instance, rather than being down double-digits this time
with fears high that it is heading down further into a bear market, the stock
market was already near four-year highs, and investor sentiment was at high
levels of bullishness and confidence when the surprise of QE3 was announced last
week.
Perhaps more significant, in 2010 and 2011 corporate
earnings were growing impressively. Profit margins were benefiting from the
improved productivity brought about by large employee lay-offs, plant closings,
and tax loss carry-forwards from the recession, while corporations with global
operations benefited even more from their ties to Brazil, China, India, etc.,
where economies remained strong and the main concerns were rising inflation.
But this time, those normal driving forces for stocks are
completely reversed. The economies of important U.S. trading partners like
China, India, Japan, Brazil, and the entire 17-nation euro-zone, have slowed
dramatically this year, the euro-zone already in a recession.
And corporate earnings are nose-diving. In the U.S. S&P 500
earnings grew at a huge 45% pace in 2010 as they recovered from the losses
suffered in the Great Recession. That unsustainable pace slowed to a still
robust 15% earnings growth in 2011.
But this year earnings grew only 0.8% in the 2nd
quarter, and the consensus forecast is for
negative growth in the current
quarter, a decline in earnings growth for the first time since the recession
ended. Adding to the deteriorating situation, corporations are warning of even
slower sales and earnings going forward, citing slowdowns globally that are
beyond the ability of the U.S. Fed to fix.
Global bellwethers Intel, FedEx, and UPS, joined the
warnings parade in recent days.
Warnings from major transportation companies, like FedEx
(FDX), UPS (UPS), and Norfolk Southern Railroad (NSC), are particularly
worrisome, since the DJ Transportation Avg has been in a negative divergence
with the rest of the market all year, even before these warnings. In spite of
the stock market rally since the June low that has the S&P 500 now up 16% for
the year, the Transportation Avg has been hitting lower highs on its attempts to
rally and is down 8% from its January high. The Transports often lead the
economy and the rest of the market since they see early warnings when shipments
of raw materials to manufacturers, and of finished goods to end users, decline
sharply.

I seriously doubt that the laws of business cycles have gone
away, and I still believe that fundamentals matter.
So with previous global economic strength crumbling, a sharp
downside reversal in corporate earnings underway all year, the negative
divergence of the bellwether Transports, and the stock market already excitedly
rallied to four-year highs, there are reasons to question further bullish
expectations for the stock market from QE3 this time.
However, since the Fed’s goal for QE3 is also to devalue the
dollar again (in an effort to boost U.S. exports, and to create inflation) if it
is to at least succeed with those goals QE3 should light a fire under gold. And
it has been doing that.
We are on a buy signal on gold, and holding a 20% position
in the SPDR Gold Trust etf, symbol GLD. But while gold has already rallied 15%
from its June low, equaling the rally in the S&P 500, at least gold is rallying
from an oversold condition after declining 18.5% from its 2011 record high to
its June low. And its rally does not yet have it back to its high of last year,
let alone to four-year highs like the S&P 500.

So if you expect continuing positive reactions in markets to
QE3, gold might be a wiser choice than the stock market.
The world’s largest gold bullion etf is the SPDR Gold Trust,
symbol GLD. Canadian investors can choose from six gold bullion etf’s that trade
in Canadian dollars on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The largest and most active
is the iShares Canada Gold Bullion Fund, symbol CGL-T.
Sy Harding is president of Asset Management Research Corp, and editor of www.StreetSmartReport.com, and the free market blog, www.streetsmartpost.com. He can also be followed on Twitter @streetsmartpost
Editors: You are welcome to quote from this article, or use it in its entirety, in your publication or on your website, as long as the credit in the above paragraph is also included. Readers are also welcome to e-mail, or print and snail-mail it to friends.
These reports reflect our opinions and are based on our best judgment, but no warranty is given or implied as to their accuracy. Past performance does not guarantee future performance.
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