Three percent may seem an inauspicious number, but it certainly

Three percent may seem an inauspicious number, but it certainly

caused some headaches last week. Firstly, UK inflation is running at 3%, over

the Bank Of England target of 2% and obliging the Governor of the Bank of

England to write a letter of explanation to the Government.

Secondly, on Friday, US markets in unison fell by over 3% as panic once more

swept through financial markets. The week ended how it had began with some

faltering rallies in between. The main catalyst for the capitulation was the

U.S. payrolls decline. The jobless rate of 5.5% was the biggest increase

since 1986 and the fifth consecutive month that the US had lost jobs. The no

recession consensus that had been building is now under considerable pressure

on both sides of the Atlantic.

The final nail in the coffin was the price of oil awaking from its temporary

slumber. Crude prices surged over $15 Dollars in the final two days of the

week, adding $11.31 on Friday alone to close at a new record high of $139.12.

Fears of war in the Middle East and a US recession created the perfect Storm.

Even before equity markets opened for the week June had already started badly

for domestic markets. In early trading, the Pound fell sharply against the

Dollar on weak manufacturing data. Then equity markets opened to an all out

blood bath on shares in Bradford and Bingley. News had already leaked over

the weekend that the Bank was in trouble, and so it proved with shares pushed

down to 60 pence at one stage. The bank has now fallen an incredible 87%

since its peak in 2006. Barclays Bank has fallen less in percentage terms

since its peak, but the size of the bank has made its collapse all the more

damaging. Last week Barclays closed the week at its lowest level since March

2003 on capital adequacy concerns.

Recently there were signs of a slowing but not capitulating UK economy, now

things are looking graver. As house prices inch lower, consumers feel poorer

than six months ago. This in itself is not too dramatic, but combined with

oil prices not far off record highs and food inflation on the up, consumers

not only feel poorer, they actually are.

There was no surprise from the MPC with its rates decision last week, but the

ECB ruffled some feathers by indicating that they may have to raise rates as

soon as July. The DAX and CAC have lagged behind other markets, as the

prospect of higher rates proves unpopular with equity investors. Bernanke

dropped some large hints that the Feds bias was moving towards tightening

rates after an easing cycle, but the recent payrolls data shows that the Fed

like many other central banks, is stuck between a recessionary rock and a

inflationary hard place.

Next week has the potential to pour more misery on an already depressed

market. The week starts with UK PPI data, and the latest House price balance

from RICS. Tuesday sees the release of UK industrial production figures and

the US trade balance. The weeks hottest ticket is potentially the US retail

sales data on Thursday. If the US consumer starts to seriously tighten their

wallet, there could be wide reaching international consequences.

Bespoke Investments have some interesting data on the performance of the Dow

Jones following capitulations such as Friday. The average change following a

3% drop has been 0.11% the following day and 0.28% the following week. Over

the last decade, the average performance the next day has been 0.63%. In

addition when the market rises 1.5% one day then drops 1.5% the next day (as

the Dow did on Thursday and Friday), then the following day is up on average

0.14% and 0.56% over the following week. There are certainly wide variations

in the making of this average and one must be mindful of Nassim Talebs advice

to never cross a river because it is on average 4 feet deep. However, there

is at least the potential for upside that may not be currently priced in. The

Dow Jones closed on Friday at 12209.81. A 0.5% rise over a week would bring

it to 12271.05. Setting a bull bet predicting that The Dow Jones (Wall

Street) will be higher than 12271 in 10 days time could return 126% with

BetOnMarkets.com.

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