TCK.B Teck Resources.

   tck 2011 3

Back in January as the stock peaked at about $65, we came up with this chart for TCK. The old highs had been exceeded and the whole things looked like and smelled like a B-wave. If not ,it would be a 5 wave sequence.  In both cases the stock should drop to around $32 initially. Here is where it is today.TCK.b sept 2011

We are at $35, a loss of $30 on $65 or about 46%. Look for that to become 50% at it drops further to the level of the B wave in the larger B-wave rally. Note that this stock was on most advisors buy list. I do not believe there was a 5-wave sequence, but the jury is still out. If indeed this was a large B-wave rally instead the stock could make new lows even if it pauses at around $32.!

FFH, Fairfax Financial

ffh sept 2011

Almost 3 years ago we got lucky with this stock by recommending a sell at $400 (about 61.8% retracement) and buying back at $275 a month later. We prefer to be smart but will take luck any time. Since then the stock has spent 2 to 3 years doing relatively little, the amber light was on and there was nothing more to say. Only once before has this stock spent so much time doing so little (‘03 to ‘06), so, like a volcano , it may come to life at any moment, most likely to the downside! It has been hugging the lower boundary line for almost a year now and has done what it should in terms of retracement. Time to get out or at the very least put in a stop at about $375.

This company is run buy  very smart management (Mr. Watsa) , known for their willingness to contemplate the bear side which would normally work in their favour. But they are also an insurance company and as such are experiencing difficult times due to low returns on investments. According to statements made by Mr. Watsa they now fear a deflationary environment and are also concerned about a Fed. that has effectively made itself irrelevant due to no more ammo and, are very concerned about the Chinese real estate bubble. So the stock could actually go up but for the moment the risk seems to be to the downside.

DAX update

Dax sept 20 2011

The DAX and so many other indexes have been more or less suspended for the past week or two while we await the outcome of the Greek implosion and the American deficit reduction and jobs bill progress. These things always take longer if you are waiting for the outcome. With this in mind an earlier thought with respect to the DAX keeps resurfacing.

The drop of roughly 2600 points from the may high to the Sept low is not over , but we may just get a slightly bigger rebound. The 5th wave of 3 appears to have been a wedge, which normally retraces entirely. This could mean that the present wave 4 could go another leg higher. A 40% retracement of wave 3 would require about 1000 points and this would equate nicely with the start of the wedge , the upper channel line and the 50-day moving average.

After that, as discussed, wave 5 could be precipitous or just wave 5 of 1.

MV=PT , Irving Fisher and economics oversimplified.

R.Prechter has now for the longest time argued that we are going into a “deflationary depression”. In his latest “Theory”, a misnomer for his monthly publications, he uses a chart from the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank , a public database known as FRED which I will also use but in a slightly different way.

MV=PT is the mathematical brainchild of Irving Fisher. He used the formula to explain the debt deflation that he thought was the cause of the Great Depression. Later, of course it was extensively used to provide the monetarist theories of the likes of Milton Friedman et al. with a mathematical framework.

The M stands for money / bank reserves. V is velocity , turnover or by extension the multiplier if you wish. P is the price level and and T is the volume of transactions , trade, or GDP. We will not get into the detailed definitions as that is beyond the scope of this didactic exercise.

Friedman and all monetarist, of course , believe that all inflation is monetary, always the result of too much money chasing too few goods. This is why everybody and their brother are now absolutely certain that the few trillion or so that the Fed and other Central Bankers have thrown into the pot, is certain to cause runaway inflation. This consensus exists despite evidence to the contrary, just a years ago the FED was fearful of deflation, and appeared so scared that it prompted QE2. The thing that the FED does not want to acknowledge, certainly not through “helicopter Ben”, is that there is such a thing as a “liquidity trap” best explained by the vernacular term “pushing on a string”.

Here is how it works . You load up the system with cash which flows to the banks (except for what they deposit back to the Fed) who then lend the money out which multiplies like rabbits depending on what fraction is used in the fractional reserve system ( presently 0 so the multiplier could theoretically approach an infinite value) Here is the M and the V (multiplier);

money base 2 multiplier

Both courtesy the Fed. They can be enlarged by clicking on them. Since about 2008 the monetary base has gone from 900 to 2800 or roughly threefold. The multiplier has gone from 1700 to 700 or roughly 2.4 times in the opposite direction. If further adjustments are made for banks deposits at the FED that sort of bypass this process the growth in reserves is , for the most part negated by the implosion of the velocity, as we know that GDP  (the T) has not grown much over past few years. The result is that inflation , the CPI, (the P)has not budged;

cpi sept 2011

It keeps going up for 40 years now at a rate of 3% or so (my guess) but has not accelerated recently. Even gold, as Prechter has pointed out many times, has over compensated for this inflation at least when measured from the $36 or so at the time Nixon (1971) did away entirely with convertibility. On the other hand. measured from the highs in 1980 it may be undervalued, so you get to pick your poison depending on what camp you want to be in.

As the latest (Sept 5) copy of Bloomberg/Business week points out, tongue in cheek, a better hedge might be stock in Sturm Ruger. These guys have done very well according to this publication, especially in the “concealable handgun” segment. The implication is that you do not need to own gold or food if you have the means to take it away from your neighbor. Perhaps the next economist has to figure out how the F for force fits into the formula.

rgr 

A sell, obviously. Target at around $17.50 for lower trend-line, wave 4 of prev. degree and 62% retracement.