http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/dogseatheirownfeces.htm
{ Not widey publicized is the fact that dogs eat their own feces. I
shockingly saw this first hand of a pedigreed german shepard before learning
the fact that such is a dog trait. Cats certainly do not (eat their own feces)!
No wonder dogs are considered in america to be ‘man’s best friend’. Yuck! }
Why are some of the biggest names
in the corporate world unloading stock like there is no tomorrow, and why are
some of the most prominent investors on Wall Street loudly warning about the
possibility of a market crash? Should we be alarmed that the big dogs on
Wall Street are starting to get very nervous? In a previous article, I got very excited about a
report that indicated that corporate insiders were selling nine times more of
their own shares than they were buying. Well, according to a brand new Bloomberg article,
insider sales of stock have outnumbered insider purchases of stock by a ratio
of twelve to one
over the past three months. That is highly unusual. And right now
some of the most respected investors in the financial world are ringing the
alarm bells. Dennis Gartman says that it is time to "rush to the
sidelines", Seth Klarman is warning about "the un-abating risks of
collapse", and Doug Kass is proclaiming that "we're headed for a
sharp fall". So does all of this mean that a market crash is
definitely on the way? No, but when you combine all of this with the weak
economic data constantly coming out of the U.S. and Europe, it certainly does
not paint a pretty picture.
According
to Bloomberg, it has been two years since we
have seen insider sales of stock at this level. And when insider sales of
stock are this high, that usually means that the market is about to decline...
Corporate executives are
taking advantage of near-record U.S. stock prices by selling shares in their
companies at the fastest pace in two years.
There were about 12 stock-sale
announcements over the past three months for every purchase by insiders at
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) companies, the highest ratio since
January 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and Pavilion Global
Markets. Whenever the ratio exceeded 11 in the past, the benchmark index
declined 5.9 percent on average in the next six months, according to Pavilion,
a Montreal-based trading firm.
But it isn't just the number
of stock sales that is alarming. Some of these insider transactions are
absolutely huge. Just check out these numbers...
Among the biggest transactions
last week were a $65.2 million sale by Google Inc.’s 39-year-old Chief
Executive Officer Larry Page, a $40.1 million disposal by News Corp.’s 81-
year-old Chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch and a $34.2 million sale from American
Express Co. chief Kenneth Chenault, who is 61. Nolan Archibald, the 69-year-old
chairman of Stanley Black & Decker Inc. who plans to leave his post next
month, unloaded $29.7 million in shares last week and Amphenol Corp. Chairman
Martin Hans Loeffler, 68, sold $27.5 million, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg.
Google Chairman Eric Schmidt,
57, announced plans to sell as many as 3.2 million shares in the operator of
the world’s most-popular search engine. The planned share sales, worth about
$2.5 billion, represent about 42 percent of Schmidt’s holdings.
So why are all of these very
prominent executives cashing out all of a sudden?
That is a very good question.
Meanwhile, some of the most
respected names on Wall Street are warning that it is time to get out of the
market.
For example, investor Dennis Gartman recently wrote that
the game is "changing" and that it is time to "rush to the
sidelines"...
"When tectonic plates in
the earth’s crust shift earthquakes happen and when the tectonic plants shift
beneath our feet in the capital markets margin calls take place. The tectonic
plates have shifted and attention... very careful and very substantive
attention... must be paid.
"Simply put, the game has
changed and where we were playing a 'game' fueled by the monetary authorities
and fueled by the urge on the part of participants to see and believe in rising
'animal spirits' as Lord Keynes referred to them we played bullishly of
equities and of the EUR and of 'risk assets'. Now, with the game changing, our
tools have to change and so too our perspective.
"Where we were buyers of
equities previously we must disdain them henceforth. Where we were sellers of
Yen and US dollars we must buy them now. Where we had been long of gold in Yen
terms, we must shift that and turn bullish of gold in EUR terms. Where we might
have been 'technically' bullish of the EUR we must now be technically and
fundamentally bearish of it. The game board has been flipped over; the game has
changed... change with it or perish. We cannot be more blunt than that."
That is a very ominous
warning, but he is far from alone. Just the other day, I wrote about how legendary investor
Seth Klarman is warning that the collapse of the financial markets could happen at literally any time...
"Investing today may well
be harder than it has been at any time in our three decades of existence,"
writes Seth Klarman in his year-end letter. The Fed's "relentless
interventions and manipulations" have left few purchase targets for
Baupost, he laments. "(The) underpinnings of our economy and financial
system are so precarious that the un-abating risks of collapse dwarf all other
factors."
Other big hitters on Wall
Street are ringing the alarm bells as well. For example, Seabreeze
Partners portfolio manager Doug Kass recently told CNBC that what he
is seeing right now reminds him of the period just before the crash of 1987...
"I'm getting the 'summer
of 1987 feeling' in the U.S. equity market," Kass told CNBC, "which
means we're headed for a sharp fall."
And of course the
"perma-bears" continue to warn that the months ahead are going to be
very difficult. For instance, "Dr. Doom" Marc Faber recently
said that he "loves the high odds of a ‘big-time’ market crash".
Another
"perma-bear", Nomura's Bob Janjuah, is convinced that the stock
market will experience one more huge spike before collapsing by up to 50%...
I continue to believe that the
S&P500 can trade up towards the 1575/1550 area, where we have, so far, a
grand double top. I would not be surprised to see the S&P trade marginally
through the 2007 all-time nominal high (the real high was of course seen over a
decade ago – so much for equities as a long-term vehicle for wealth creation!).
A weekly close at a new
all-time high would I think lead to the final parabolic spike up which creates
the kind of positioning extreme and leverage extreme needed to create the
conditions for a 25% to 50% collapse in equities over the rest of 2013 and
2014, driven by real economy reality hitting home, and by policymaker
failure/loss of faith in "their system".
So are they right?
We will see.
At the same time that many of the
big dogs are pulling their money out of the market, many smaller investors are
rushing to put their money back in to the market. The mainstream media
continues to assure them that everything is wonderful and that this rally can
last forever.
But it is important to keep in
mind that the last time that Wall Street was this "euphoric" was right before the market crash in 2008.
So what should we be watching
for?
As I have mentioned before, it
is very important to watch the financial markets
in Europe right now.
If they crash, the financial
markets in the U.S. will probably crash too.
And the financial markets in
Europe definitely have had a rough week. Just check out what happened on
Thursday. The following is from a report by CNBC's Bob Pisani...
Italy, Germany, France, Spain,
U.K., Greece, and Portugal all on track to log worst day since Feb. 4. European
PMI numbers were disappointing, with all major countries except Germany
reporting numbers below 50, indicating contraction.
What does this mean? It means
Europe remains mired in recession: "The euro zone is on course to contract
for a fourth consecutive quarter," Markit, who provides the PMI data,
said. A new insight is that France is now joining the weakness shown in
periphery countries.
You're giving me agita: Italy
was the worst market, down 2.5 percent. The CEO of banking company, Intesa
Sanpaolo, said Italy's recession has been so bad it could cause a fifth of
Italian companies to fail, noting that topline for those bottom fifth have been
shrinking 35 to 45 percent. Italian elections are this weekend.
It wasn't any better in Asia.
The Shanghai Index had its worst day in over a year, closing down nearly three
percent.
And the economic numbers
coming out of the U.S. also continue to be quite depressing.
On Thursday, the Department of Labor announced that
there were 362,000 initial claims for unemployment benefits during the week
ending February 16th. That was a sharp rise from a week earlier.
But I am not really concerned
about that number yet.
When it rises above 400,000
and it stays there, then it will be time to officially become alarmed.
So what is the bottom line?
There are trouble signs on the
horizon for the financial markets. Nobody should panic right now, but
things certainly do not look very promising for the remainder of the year.’