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View Full Version : Knight Research' Stunning Call: "The Game Is Over"



Ares
17th November 2010, 09:27 PM
From Knight Research. Presented without commentary.

The Game Is Over

The simple story is this: We believe the structural and cyclical terms of global trade have finally reached their tipping point. This will catalyze a wholesale change in sentiment and a historic repositioning of risk assets. The emerging market global growth story is over.

* In meetings with clients throughout October, we began emphasizing our growing concerns about the nearly ubiquitous confidence the financial markets—and for that matter, global leaders and their body politic—have in China; and by extension, the rest of the emerging market story, commodities, and the direction of foreign exchange cross-rates.
* Not surprisingly, our concerns were met with varying degrees of resistance; but the overall consensus clearly favored a very bullish, asymmetric outcome over both the near and intermediate terms. When pressed as to our own sense of timing and specific catalysts for broad-based trend reversal, candidly we were unclear. Our sense then, was that the higher and faster the commodity markets pushed, the sooner the reversal would occur. But we have now clarified our view.
* In just the past several weeks, we believe the data and government actions out of China, the back-up in US interest rates, the Fed’s emphatic commitment to QE2, intensifying pressures across the EU, broadly rising commodity prices, government efforts to control hot money flows, have finally pushed the global terms of trade to their tipping point.
* And now, as is evident by the flight to safety, and growing evidence that China will soon try and effect price controls in addition to raising interest rates and significantly changing the rules for their vast network of Local Government Funding Vehicles (LGFVs); the writing is on the wall. The game is over.
* The simple story is this: The structural and cyclical terms of global trade have reached their tipping point which will effect a wholesale change in sentiment and a historic repositioning of risk assets.
* So what do we consider the “terms of global trade”? Structurally, per our top chart, they are the intersection of Government Policy (viz., rule of law, market systems, trade law, etc.,) Resource and Industry (viz., natural resources, labor/demographic pools, industrial advantages, import dependencies, etc.,) and Economic Security (viz., the sovereign’s competitive standing, the relative power/needs of the citizenry, the mandate/control of the government, etc.) And cyclically, (as represented by the light blue, bold arrows) the terms of trade are defined by the intersection of foreign exchange rates, commodity prices, and the cost and availability of trade finance.

* And in our assessment given:

1. The structural breakdown of the credit and labor markets in the developed world and the anemic outlook for nominal GDP growth
2. The immaturity of the developing world and their vulnerability to credit shocks and uncontrollable inflation
3. China’s dependence upon non-economic, and unsustainable credit expansion to maintain growth far beyond natural export and domestic demand, and
4. Asia’s dependence upon imported energy and agriculture

the game is over. Presently, we believe that the broad-based resurgence of investor confidence in the emerging market and secular bull market in commodities will end badly; proving that the rally which commenced in Q2 2009, was in fact an “echo bubble” facilitated by massive—and unsustainable—stimuli from the Chinese Government

* And although such cataclysmic shocks rarely result in rhythmic, straight line fractures, the chain of price adjustments should be relatively clear. Accordingly, we expect a shockingly powerful rally in the dollar, broadbased weakness across the commodity sector, a dramatic widening of emerging market credit spreads, and what could prove to be a stampede of hot fund flows out of the emerging markets.
* We appreciate both the gravity and the brevity of this note; but then again, the story is simple.

We believe that the end of the Great Consumer Credit Cycle and the vast structural differences in the terms of trade between the United States, the EU, and China, have finally caught up with the secular bull thesis on Emerging Market and Commodities. Quite ironically, the Fed’s aggressive policies will likely prove to be the catalyst which breaks China’s unbridled expansion of credit and non-economic growth, ushering in a wholesale rebalancing of risk assets.

<img src="http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/gono/Knight_0.jpg"/>

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/knight-research-stunning-call-game-over

Ares
17th November 2010, 09:44 PM
Yeah I thought it funny too, doesn't make sense why the dollar would climb.

But take a look at this: http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/index/DXY/charts

Look at the strong upshot from the dollar. With money basically being thrown out of a "helicopter" why is it going up?

Ares
17th November 2010, 09:53 PM
I stopped watching painted charts for quite some times now...

No longer believe in what they show me,
I no longer believe by seeing a picture.
My actions are now based on the BIG picture.

Oh you'll get no argument from me trying to convince you otherwise. But even an inquisitive mind has to wonder at what lengths people will continue to believe the fairy tale that all is ok and it's just "business as usual".

Cebu_4_2
17th November 2010, 10:00 PM
Yeah I thought it funny too, doesn't make sense why the dollar would climb.
But take a look at this: http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/index/DXY/charts
Look at the strong upshot from the dollar. With money basically being thrown out of a "helicopter" why is it going up?


I asked this a couple days ago, the dollars value is in a basket right... well all them other currencies are dropping which makes the dollar look good even tho its worth less.

I think my comment was"

You have a pocket full of coins, you grab them and drop them on the ground, these contain all the coins of the basket were in. The coin with Nixon lands on top... we win.

Horn
17th November 2010, 10:31 PM
Unobtainium.

Gaillo
17th November 2010, 10:37 PM
Yeah I thought it funny too, doesn't make sense why the dollar would climb.

But take a look at this: http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/index/DXY/charts

Look at the strong upshot from the dollar. With money basically being thrown out of a "helicopter" why is it going up?




Yes, the Dollar will go up (at least in the short term)... but keep in mind it is going "up" compared to OTHER failing fiat currencies. This does NOT mean that it will be increasing in actual value, because metals are also going to be going up at the same time (actually, the metals will, as always, hold their value while the dollar depreciates!). All it means (again, in the short term) is that the Dollar will be dropping in REAL value slower than the other currencies.

FunnyMoney
17th November 2010, 10:41 PM
It seems like they're expecting another repeat of what we saw in late 2008. To some degree I think they'll be right but I doubt precious metals will take the same kind of hit and in general I don't think commodities will drop that much either.

A half year down, then another year or so up, then down again, then repeat. The really big hammer to the head, where the dollar tanks, is not likely to happen until around 2016.

Horn
17th November 2010, 11:06 PM
It seems like they're expecting another repeat of what we saw in late 2008. To some degree I think they'll be right but I doubt precious metals will take the same kind of hit and in general I don't think commodities will drop that much either.

A half year down, then another year or so up, then down again, then repeat. The really big hammer to the head, where the dollar tanks, is not likely to happen until around 2016.


Either that, or it will all take place in the time span under 9 months.