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Signal Update
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Current
Signal Performance as of
Signal
Type |
Trade
Date |
Index |
Return
since issued |
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Nasdaq 100 |
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Russell 2000 |
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S&P 500 |
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Market Update |
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This week
was marked by the Federal Reserve's decision to cut its key
funds rate for the first time since June 2003. The markets started
the week by moving modestly lower Monday on very thin volume,
as many investors chose to remain on the sideline ahead of the
Fed meeting the next day. Whereas many market watchers had expected
the Central Bank to lower interest rates by 25 basis points,
the Fed instead surprised investors Tuesday by deciding to act
more aggressively and cut the funds rate by half a percentage
point to 4.75%. In its statement, the Fed also signaled that
additional rate cuts may be on the way in order to protect the
economy from the adverse effects of the ongoing credit crisis.
Stocks zoomed higher on strong volume following the Fed's announcement,
with the S&P 500
jumping almost 3% for its biggest daily gain of the year. Still
buoyed by the Fed's decision, markets kept moving higher Wednesday
on even stronger volume before they took a pause Thursday as
profit taking forced stocks to give back a small portion of
their gains on lighter trade. Strong earnings results by Oracle
helped the markets resume their march forward Friday to cap
their best week of the year. Volume was again heavy as the day
marked the expiration of September options and futures contracts.
The Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 and
Russell 2000 respectively gained 2.43%,
2.80% and 3.78% on the week. All three indexes are now again situated
above both their 50-day and 200-day exponential moving averages (EMAs).
For its part, our World Index Ranking portfolio
matched the performance of the S&P 500 this week with a 2.79%
gain. The portfolio consists of the 5 top-ranked world indexes
as of September 14, which marked the beginning of the current
4-week holding period.
Our current Buy
signal remains in effect.

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Trend Timing School |
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Honest
money
When traveling, it is frequently the unplanned and uncharted
side trips which deliver real discoveries and the most lasting
rewards. Today, we take it upon ourselves to temporarily stray
from our equity-centric Trend Timing journey to explore an entirely
separate asset class: gold. Since the essence of this article
is about identifying and following the mega trend in the yellow
metal, we are not completely abandoning Trend Timing.
The reason this topic is so timely is that the U.S. dollar's
already bleak prospects have taken a major turn for the worse.
We have written before about the fundamental ills and gloomy
outlook of the dollar (read "The
end of the U.S. dollar era"), but the Fed's actions earlier
this week have major ramifications. Here are a few conclusions
drawn by experts from the Fed's move to aggressively lower interest
rates:
- Despite
tough talk about fighting inflation, the Fed blinked
- The
U.S. economy and financial system is sicker than previously
thought
- The
dollar will be sacrificed in an attempt to bail out U.S.
banks, the housing sector and the equity market
- Future
inflation is now baked into the cake
- Commodities,
precious metals and gold in particular will benefit
Lower
interest rates are bearish for the dollar because they make
it less attractive to foreign investors. The dollar already
has to overcome the obstacles created by poor fiscal policy,
U.S. debt and deficit spending of unparalleled proportions,
and depends entirely on interest rate differential to motivate
investors. Combine that with a government that is obviously
scared of a recession and has now embarked on a hyperinflationary
monetary policy and you get the U.S. dollar moving down in
all currencies and gold moving up in all currencies.
Since the dollar's gold peg was broken by President Nixon
in 1971, the U.S. dollar and gold have generally been moving
in opposite directions. This is illustrated quite clearly
in Chart 1 below and by the recent round
of record highs and lows by gold and the dollar, respectively.
The dollar, depicted by the U.S. Dollar Index (the green line
in the graph), not only resumed its long term down trend but,
following the Fed's pronouncement on interest rates, did so
with a vengeance as it sunk to new lows against all major
currencies. The greenback is at parity with the Canadian "loonie"
for the 1st time in 31 years, and it also reached an all-time-low
against the 13-nation euro which traded above $1.40 for the
first time. The U.S. Dollar Index also closed at a new record
low today (78.59) but more critically, it broke its most important
(and last) support area which had held since 1992. This is
technically very bearish for the U.S. dollar.
Chart 1: Long term view of gold and the U.S. dollar

Gold on the other hand (the gold colored line in the graph),
has gone through different gyrations. Marking the end of the
last secular bull market, gold had reached its all-time high
of $850 per ounce in January 1980. Gold then entered a severe
bear market which lasted some 20 years and took it to a low
of $253 in August of 1999. Gold was all but forgotten, which
is exactly when the next secular bull market began. Very few
had the foresight and the audacity to invest in gold back
then, but they have already been massively rewarded. By surpassing
the May 2006 bull market high this week, gold is now at levels
not seen in 27 years. Yet, anyone who believes that at $730
we are within reach of that record high forgets the long term
effect of inflation. Using the "Dollar
worth calculator", kindly provided by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, which applies the Consumer Price
Index (CPI) as published by the U.S. Department of Labor,
the $850 in 1980 dollars converted to 2007 dollars is well
over $2,100.
This means that the price of gold would have to almost triple
from here just to match the previous high, which is also the
best indication that the current secular gold bull market
has a long way to go.
Some will argue that the stock market will also be one of
the beneficiaries of lower interest rates and other liquidity
injections, which is true. Still, even with equity markets
in a sustained bull market for nearly 5 years, they have been
weaker than gold. Chart 2 below graphs the
Dow Jones Industrials
in terms of gold, a ratio which has been on a clear down trend
since gold bottomed in 1999.
Chart 2: The value of the U.S. stock market in terms
of gold
So what does it all mean to me? A weaker U.S. dollar means
that Americans will pay more for imports and trips abroad,
but it is also expected to boost demand for U.S. goods and
increase profits of U.S. exporters. The lower U.S. dollar
will make America a cheaper destination for foreign tourists.
The implication of future inflation is the steady decline
in buying power and standard of living for Americans. Faced
with such a quasi certainty it is our responsibility to protect
our wealth from devaluation.
We had provided a general guide to "Dollar
proofing your portfolio" in the July 20, 2007 Weekly Update,
but this time around we focus on precious metals and gold
in particular.
The TimingCube
Model has no relationship with commodities, precious metals
and gold, and the signals provide no clue about their separate
trends. Unlike TimingCube
which exclusively focuses on the trends in broad U.S. and
world equity markets, our sister service ETFTide invests in
various asset classes which could at times, depending on relative
strength, incorporate commodity related ETFs such as GDX (gold
miners), GLD (gold), SLV (silver), DBC
(diversified commodities) (see "ETFTide
ETF selection" for the full list of investments). Here
we are not considering a trading technique but rather to be
positioned on the right side of a long term trend. All the
evidence points to a continuation of the secular bull market
in gold and rising prices for years to come.
Why gold? It is worth to mention that throughout recorded
history gold has been a store of wealth and used as a currency.
In fact it is said to have preserved its buying power intact
through the millennia, unlike any other currency invented
by man. Most national currencies used to be backed by gold,
including the U.S. dollar. Paper currencies have come and
gone, but gold has always remained a safe haven in times of
crisis. Besides the fate of the dollar there are many drivers
behind the gold bull market. The best way to summarize the
situation is that the demand is unprecedented and growing
and the annual production and discovery of new deposits have
been on the decline for years. For many gold is the only real
money, or honest money, because it comes with no political
affiliation or obligation, no baggage, and no small print.
No one can fabricate gold (alchemists aside). We believe that
everyone should own some gold for safety and liquidity reasons
in times of crisis, as well as a very promising long term
investment.
Luckily there are many way to invest in gold and other metals:
- Commodity
ETFs (GLD, IAU, SLV, DBC)
- Bullion,
coins and bars
- Mining
companies
- Gold
mining sector ETF (GDX)
Short
term, the dollar has become oversold and gold and gold shares
are in overbought territory. This does not mean that they
cannot increase these conditions further, but it suggests
that there is a higher likelihood that the respective moves
will take a breather sooner rather than later. Any such pause
should be a great opportunity to establish your honest money
position.

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FAQ of the Week |
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Question:
How do I access and use the World Index Ranking?
With the traditional TimingCube
strategies, one could simply go by the signal notification e-mails
and never log in to the site (at the risk of missing the wisdom
of our weekly prose ).
With the World Index Ranking system you need
to access the site at least once every 4 weeks to obtain the
latest Top 5 list.
Your immediate destination after logging in to the TimingCube
Web site is the "Current Signal"
page. Besides providing the "Current Signal"
and your "Subscription Status", the
page also holds the most current World Index Ranking
table listing the Top 10 indexes and the 7 U.S. indexes. The
complete ranking showing all 27 markets can be accessed by the
corresponding link below the table.
The idea behind the World Index Ranking is
to establish your positions in the Top 5 world indexes by purchasing
the corresponding ETFs and holding them for 4 weeks. Every 4
weeks you rebalance your portfolio which consists of eliminating
the positions that are no longer listed in the Top 5 and replacing
them with the new ones. This is the Buy and Rebalance
strategy which simply ignores the timing signals. The Long
Only strategy is identical, except that it goes to
cash during Sell signals.
The Long and Short strategy shorts the QQQQ
during Sell signals.
For more details read the "World Index Ranking
strategies" section of the "Strategies"
page.
Warm wishes and until next week.
The TimingCube
Staff
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