Dear VBHN
These 10 reasons are "FOREN" and more so applicable to US
Ours is a different ball game
We can only make wild gueses
I guess if US market tumbles in near future , it will be be a longer drawn out battle for us
Chances of crash in our market a la 2008 are near absent
But it could be a slow grind on the downside
But then this period should be the BEST ACCUMULATION GOLDEN PERIOD of our lifetime
Currently India is the sole hope for world investors
No one will afford to let it crash
May be after 2 - 4 months or so , it could be a rocket ride for us
And the world may restart the dead debate of DECOUPLING
Regards
SM
--- In sharetrading@yahoogroups.com, Vbhn Advisory <vbhn_advisory@...> wrote:
>
> This list tells you why I believe we are in the worst bear market of our
> collective lifetime.
>
>
> 10. Poor Outlook for Small Businesses â" Small businesses make up more than 50%
> of non-farm GDP, employ about half of the nationâs private sector workforce,
> and create most of the nationâs new jobs according to the Small Business
> Administration. For the month of May, the National Federation of Independent
> Business reported that small business owners had a more negative outlook on job
> creation, capital expenditure plans, and future sales expectations. Considering
> that small business owners have more tenuous access to credit and are uncertain
> about cash outlays for healthcare and unemployment benefits, many are putting
> growth plans âon holdâ. If 50% of GDP and employment remains âon holdâ, it
> points to the strong possibility of a double dip recession and, in turn, another
> decline in the S&P 500.
>
>
> 9. Cash Outflows Are Trending Poorlyâ" ICI reported that for the week ended
> June 16, domestic equity mutual funds saw $1.8 billion in outflows for the
> seventh sequential weekly outflow. Despite net activity of $5.2 billion for
> 2010 thus far, the first seventeen weeks of the year were comprised of $40.6
> billion in inflows while the last seven weeks represented $35.4 billion in
> outflows. Should this trend continue, it will put managers in an awkward
> position of having to sell âwinnersâ to meet redemptions due to the low levels
> of cash on hand. If both of these trends continue, one would have to believe it
> will have a negative impact on the S&P 500.
>
>
> 8. Tax Cut Expirationsâ" Art Laffer, apparently not one for mincing words,
> wrote an excellent opinion piece in a recent The Wall Street Journal called,
> Tax Cuts and the 2011 Economic Collapse. While his title gets at the point
> rather well, briefly, in summary, Mr. Laffer made the very strong case, in my
> opinion, for the idea that income and production will be inflated above where
> it would be otherwise in 2010 since in-the-know individuals and businesses are
> shifting income, when possible, to 2010 in order to avoid the tax hikes that
> are coming in 2011. Not only did this happen in 1993 from 1992, but he believes
> ââ¦this shift in income and demand is a major reason that the economy in 2010
> has appeared to be as strong as it has. When we pass the tax boundary of Jan.
> 1, 2011, [his] best guess is that the train goes off the tracks and we get our
> worst case nightmare of a severe âdouble dipâ recession.â
>
>
> 7. Deflationâ" In the most macro-terms possible, and at the risk of being
> repetitive, until the asset class at the eye of the financial storm â"
> residential housing â" heals via stabilized pricing, we are living in a world of
> deflation. This is reinforced by record low mortgage rates. In more
> micro-terms, over the last 12 months, the core rate of inflation has risen only
> 0.9% or well below the 2.0% average annual increase over the past 10 years. In
> addition, returning to small business owners, 28% reported making price
> reductions in May, an increase over April, while this price cutting contributed
> to a high percentage of such owners reporting declining sales. Lastly, the
> Fedâs extraordinary liquidity efforts of the last two years have led to
> stagnant money rather than monetary expansion. Should this transform into a
> true âliquidity trapâ, stagflation is the best case scenario but outright
> deflation is more likely.
>
>
> 6. High Unemploymentâ" 15 million Americans are out of work. Nearly half of
> those people lost their jobs after December 2007. Private sector hiring appears
> to be at a standstill with only 41,000 new jobs created in May. 46% of the
> unemployed have been out of work for more than 6 months or the highest
> percentage since this record has been kept back in 1946. The real unemployment
> rate, counting those who have simply stopped looking for a job, is nearly 17%.
> All in all, a rather bleak picture on the employment situation here in the U.S.
> and one that will lead consumers to remain on the spending sidelines and
> especially for houses.
>
>
> 5. Commercial Real Estate âCrashââ" Various sources estimate that between $1.3
> and $3.5 trillion in commercial loans is coming due in the next 5 years with
> more of it weighted toward 2012. This could be an ugly event. This is
> especially true if banks are unwilling or unable to offer new financing to the
> borrowers since commercial real estate owners will then be put in the awkward
> position of having to pay for multi-million dollar commercial real estate
> holdings in cash. While some will be fortunate enough to do so, there are
> others who will not and this will force mainly small and mid-sized banks, and
> insurance companies, to write down bad loans and determine what to do with
> portfolios of commercial real estate in a depressed market. This situation is
> so grave that chairperson of the Congressional Oversight panel, Elizabeth
> Warren, said that half of all commercial real estate loans will be underwater by
> the end of 2010 and the bulk of these loans are concentrated in small- and
> mid-sized banks. She even went so far as to say that this will devastate
> small-business lending and create âa downward spiral of economic contraction.â
>
> 4. Housing Double Dipâ" After a year of respite for the U.S. housing market due
> to the governmentâs tax credits and MBS purchases, residential housing is set
> to take another deep dip down. Mayâs non-government âownedâ housing market
> activity was awful. Housing starts dropped by 10%, permits fell by almost 6%,
> mortgage applications were down, the homebuildersâ sentiment index dropped,
> existing home sales fell by 2.2% while new-home sales took a 33% nosedive.
> However, it is the combination of the S&P/Case-Shiller Index and annual housing
> starts that demonstrate that the housing marketâs direction is down. While this
> Tuesdayâs CSI release may be to the positive as may be both July and August,
> the chart at top (click to enlarge) shows that there is a very real chance that
> pricing could level off where it had been in the late 1990s while housing
> starts are in unchartered territory having broken multi-decade support of about
> 1 million starts annually. It is difficult to see how the gravity of either
> chart can be warded off in the next 5 to 10 years, and thus to understand how
> the housing market can move in any direction other than down.
>
>
> 3. Financial Institutions Are Tied to the Housing Marketâ" Putting aside the
> potential implications of the bank-reform bill and any links between U.S. banks
> and both European banks and sovereign debt, financial institutions are likely
> to have a tough go at it again. I spoke to a banking analyst yesterday who told
> me that if the decline in housing is accompanied by a worsening unemployment
> picture âit will really flow throughâ to U.S. banks and insurance companies.
> This âflow throughâ will show up in two places: (1) security portfolios, and,
> (2) loan portfolios. Remember the âtoxic assetsâ of 2008? They still exist to
> the degree that they were not sold off or written down. If the upcoming decline
> in housing is aggravated by unemployment, it is likely to spur another wave of
> delinquencies and foreclosures. This will hit the value of the security
> portfolios because much of the paper will become âtoxicâ again due to the
> non-performing loans layered in the various, and sometimes repackaged, tranches
> of debt. However, it will also hit the loan portfolios of banks, and this
> analyst thought this was the real danger, because banks will have to write off
> a new wave of bad loans and figure out to unload houses in a truly distressed
> housing market. All of this is why I continue to believe that until the asset
> class at the eye of the financial crisis heals â" housing â" we can be assured
> that the crisis itself is not over.
>
>
> 2. The Worldâs Unsustainable Borrowing Binge of the Last 30 Yearsâ" While not
> nearly as powerful as Mr. Lafferâs title, it does speak for itself. The private
> sector, and financial institutions in particular, borrowed in what proved to be
> an unsustainable manner between 1980 and 2007. âUnsustainableâ because active
> borrowing as measured by the Federal Reserve collapsed in 2009 to -$611 billion
> from its annual peak of $4.6 trillion in 2007. That is a huge, almost
> incomprehensible decline in borrowing to have occurred in two years. The U.S.
> government has attempted to shoulder some of that load by borrowing about $2.9
> trillion in the last two years, but it is a nearly impossible task. Should it
> prove to be more than the U.S.âs balance sheet can handle, it will result in
> foreign creditors demanding a higher rate of return on Treasurys as is happening
> in Greece today. This will devastate banks because their fixed-rate assets will
> be underwater, but more frighteningly, the U.S. dollar will become severely
> devalued if not collapsed.
>
>
> 1. The Ugliest Chart of All Timeâ" Unless there is an act of God between now
> and 4 pm EDT this coming Wednesday, the chart of the S&P 500 will be forever
> altered for the worse. This chart is, of course, the basis for all of my work,
> or what I have called the Twin Peaks, or the S&P 500âs severe double top with a
> technical target that is far, far below where the index is today.
>
>
>
> And there you have it, the Top Ten Reasons To Be Bearish and why I believe we
> are in the worst bear market of our collective lifetime.
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
> VBHN Advisory
>
Please use your discretion before acting on the ideas expressed in the group.
Happy Trading,
United we grow!!!