by Addison Wiggin & Ian Mathias

Stocks stage huge rally, but will it hold? Key levels to watch, and some historic perspective

Libor continues to ease; famous Wall Street CEO explains why credit still isn’t flowing

John Williams on the “true cost” of the U.S. financial crisis, with charts to prove it

Byron King with an “exploding” foreign resource market

Plus, a stinging critique of I.O.U.S.A., and one thing you must do before voting Nov. 4

The Dow logged its second best one-day point gain, 889 points, in its even more storied history yesterday:

Percentage wise, at 10.8%, the rally ranks sixth. The S&P and Nasdaq trundled alongside the old lady like puppies.

After finding a new “credit crisis” low on Monday, traders on Wall Street snapped back with vengeance. But it’s not the higher highs we’ll be watching for the rest of the week — but lower lows. During each sell-off since extreme volatility began three weeks ago, we’ve reached all-new lows.

The Japanese market performed in a similar way through the entire decade of the ’90s. It rallied at least 30% higher five times since 1992, before finding new lows again, and again… and again.

Extreme volatility is a good thing if you’ve got the stones for it. “You do know someone who does seem like they know what the hell they’re doing, day to day,” Steve Sarnoff wrote to us after reading yesterday’s 5.

Steve included his gains sheet from Options Hotline, noting that his Intel calls triggered yesterday. Any of his subscribers with filled orders profited about 97% in a single trading day. Yawn… stretch… not as exciting as his 439% gains on QQQQ puts two weeks ago. But still…

On the short side, Dan Amoss told his readers yesterday to pocket 94% gains on their Fleetwood Enterprises short sale. Shorting a financially distressed manufacturer of recreational vehicles… who’d have thought that would be a good play?

If you’re interested in options or shorting stocks, let us remind you both are extremely risky ventures. But we’ve got a couple of ringers to help. Check out Options Hotline and/or Strategic Short Report for ideas. Both are included in your Reserve Membership. Or available a la carte.

Despite yesterday’s monster stock rally, the credit markets are still moving cautiously. The rate at which banks lend to one another (Libor) did decline again today, the 13th day in a row, but only by a little.

The three-month dollar Libor fell just 4 points overnight, to 3.46%. Considering an all-but-certain rate cut from the Federal Reserve today, commercial banks had every excuse to relax lending rates significantly… but guards are still up around the world.



“We are not going to say, ‘Yahoo, this is over!’” explained JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, “and extend credit like we did without fear. If you’re not fearful, you’re crazy.” That coming from the guy who was fearless enough to buy Bear Stearns with little more than a wink from Ben Bernanke over Sunday tea.

The Fed will announce its latest interest rate decision today around 2:15. Anything less than 75 point cut and we suspect a sell-off. 1% or lower, here we come. We’re turning Japanese… we really think so.

After a decade and a half of practically free money, the Bank of Japan is considering its interest rate again, too. It’s already at the 0.5%. How much lower can the Japanese go?

The reversal in the equity market yesterday reverberated in the currency world.

The dollar took a pretty good whack. The dollar index fell two full points from yesterday’s high, now at 85.5. Thus, the euro enjoyed a nice bounce, up 3 cents, to $1.27. The British pound is back up nearly a nickel, to $1.60. And yen traders took profits, bringing the Japanese currency back to 97.

“The eventual cost to the U.S. financial and economic system,” says John Williams, “will be much higher inflation.

“The monetary base has seen an unprecedented surge, reflecting total reserves of depository institutions jumping from an average of $47.1 billion (seasonally adjusted) in the two weeks ended Sept. 10 to $328.6 billion in the period ended Oct. 22.







“Using the St. Louis Fed’s adjusted monetary base (effectively total reserves plus M1 cash in circulation), the year-to-year growth in the latest period was an unprecedented 38%. In the period since 1919, the previous high growth rate was 28% in September 1939, as the U.S. was building up industry for the evolving war in Europe.



“Back in the days when the Federal Reserve targeted money supply growth, the monetary base was the measure it adjusted. The current surge in the base is a direct result of the ongoing, extraordinary actions taken by the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury aimed at preventing a collapse of the U.S. financial system. The higher monetary base growth will result in sharp spikes to domestic money supply growth and will intensify inflationary pressures in the year ahead, irrespective of wild gyrations and sell-offs in oil and of strength in the U.S. dollar, which otherwise should prove very short-lived going forward.”

Meanwhile, the U.S. government is beginning to advertise for new bailout money: “We are making it clear to sovereign wealth funds,” Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Robert Kimmitt said yesterday, while seeking help in the Persian Gulf, “that we are open to investments that are done on a commercial, not political, basis, and that do not raise security concerns.”

Kimmitt hinted he may have found some takers already: "We think that they are continuing to look very closely at opportunities in the United States. We have a number of cases before the Committee on Foreign Investment right now… Every investor that I’ve spoken with here and elsewhere had been in the United States within the past month, looking for opportunities.”

Who would have thought even three months ago — besides your cranky editors of The 5, I mean — that Wall Street would be holding a global garage sale this fall?

Orders for durable goods, surprisingly, jumped in September. According to the Commerce Dept. today, orders for things meant to last more than a few years increased 0.8%, well above the expected fall of 1.2%.



Before you celebrate (we know how durable goods data get you percolating), the actual details weren’t so optimistic. The Commerce Dept. revised August data to show a 5.5% fall in orders, the worst month in almost two years. And all of this month’s improvement came from transportation equipment, a sector so depressed it hardly has any more room to fall.



Since the dollar has pulled back, commodities have pushed forward. Gold continues to inch up this week, and has now struggled back to $760 an ounce.

Oil is creeping back up, too. Crude is up $4 today, on a weaker dollar and the fleeting image of a stronger U.S. economy. A barrel goes for $66.

“Energy development is exploding in Africa,” reports Byron King. Our energy adviser made the long trip to South Africa for a conference on African energy development.

“In the past decade alone, the number of companies actively looking for energy deposits in Africa has soared from under 100 to over 500. By 2018, there may be 800 or so companies exploring for and producing energy in Africa. Expect to see $350 billion spent in Africa by 2020, just on energy development.

“There are over 100 billion barrels of discovered oil reserves in Africa. And there may be as much as another 100 billion barrels left to be found. And even more natural gas, in terms of energy content. Plus, heavy oil. And coal and coalbed methane. Which makes Africa more of an energy development target than Russia, or the even the Arctic — without the weather issues that we find up north in such frozen climes…

“For now, oil prices are down, but investment is still flowing into a lot of energy projects in Africa. Some companies are having trouble with short-term credit, but this is not the biggest issue for the energy industry and its efforts in Africa. When the economic logjam breaks up, among the first things that will happen is that worldwide energy supplies will tighten. And eventually, the world will confront its long-term lack of investment in the energy industries.”

Even though oil has perked up, gas prices are still plummeting. The national average is now at $2.58 a gallon. That’s a level unseen since March 2006. The national average has shaved off a full dollar and change in the last month alone.

The IMF officially bailed out Hungary today. The country is getting a $25 billion loan. That’s the third IMF nation rescue in this crisis, and bigger than the first two — Iceland and Ukraine — combined.

Six percent of U.S. employers have cut 401(k) contributions this year or plan to do so in the coming months. According to a study by human resources firm Watson Wyatt, that number is likely to grow, as many firms surveyed refused to comment, as admitting to a 401(k) slash stinks of fiscal weakness.



Notable companies that have already nixed their 401(k) contributions include Goodyear, Frontier Airlines, commercial real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield, Entercom and rental car agency Dollar Thrifty.

“I, for one — also a Reserve Member — am totally thrilled,” writes a reader, responding to yesterday’s inbox, “that not one word of ‘asset allocation,’ ‘time horizon,’ ‘risk tolerance,’ ‘cost averaging’ or other such drivel and pablum of the financial industry is to be had among the Agora publications. I hope it stays that way. If it’s advice on those subjects he’s looking for, well, it’s even more abundant than the rivers of worthless paper flowing out of the Fed. Just ask for it from almost any investment adviser.



“As Buffett aptly notes, those are all methods for how to be average — and average right now is downright scary. The degree of risk that one assumes is directly proportional to how much one understands the fundamentals of an investment, sees the obvious and acts accordingly. It was largely due to the steady stream of spot-on, if not conventional and frequently unpopular, commentary coming from the crew of Agora doomsayers, who often ran against the mainstream financial media and consistently pointed to the buildup of ugly economic data, that I became convinced to do the obvious.

“Last year, I exited nearly all long positions and loaded up on puts in the financials and in the consumer stocks and indexes and barricaded myself with inverse market positions, with many of these either recommended or inspired by Strategic Short Report and the late Survival Report. And yes, I even did this for my retirement account. I couldn’t be happier with the results.

“While I’m still waiting for gold to have its day, Mr. Bernanke and friends have been very hard at work ensuring my eventual returns there. Had I asset allocated according to my time horizon and risk tolerance (gag…cough…) I would no doubt be enjoying the wonderful returns on bonds and cash, instead.”

The 5: Nice work.

Cheers,

Addison Wiggin

The 5 Min. Forecast

P.S. Don’t forget, the DVD of I.O.U.S.A. is now available for at just about the lowest price we can offer. After Election Day, we’ll charge more… so get your copy here.

P.P.S. Finally, a little controversy… Dean Baker from the Center for Economic and Policy Research wrote a line-by-line critique of I.O.U.S.A. It’s odd because he’s a gentleman we often agree with. For example, his critique of the housing bubble and the Greenspan Fed over the past five years or so has been spot on. But here, he calls I.O.U.S.A. “anti-Social Security propaganda”… excuses Congress for running deficits over the past 40 years because A) we can handle deficits at a low percentage of GDP and B) he thinks it’s OK that the government overspends during times of stock market turmoil and during downturns in the economy. Hmmmn… you can read his critique here.

His biggest beef is with the medical and health insurance industries and their lobbyists in Washington. Upon introducing the film to The Huffington Post, he says busting up the health industry cartel is too difficult, so we — as filmmakers — “went after old people, instead.” We’ll hold our response until you’ve had a chance to read the critique.