Sloper Profiles: Biffermas (by Leisa)

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(Note:  Biff has been a tireless chronicler of the affairs of Slopedom. 
I wanted to turn the table and interview him for Slopers.)

Leisa
Biff, I still remember very vividly your entrée into the SOH. I found
you to be a very fresh and interesting voice–I have to say, too, that
your moniker, Biffermas, had a certain odd crispness to both my eye and
ear. I'd like to start by asking you how you found SOH
.

 
BiffI merely stumbled
upon it while doing a Google search of some financial thing or another. 
It immediately struck me as something unique given the large community
that actively participated in the forum.  Until then my only exposure to
trading forums was through Yahoo Finance, which is inhabited by various
trolls, stock pumpers, and generally unpleasant people from the
internet underground.  Slopers were respectful, intelligent, and
committed to the site.  Weird! 

 
In the community trading blog
genre there are many excellent sites, but most are focused primarily on
the exchange of trading ideas.  This is valuable, but I find such
interaction kind of dry after awhile.  Besides, I have a trading plan
and style, so I'm not looking for "hot tips" and new ideas.  I like the
waffle house / neighborhood bar feel of the Slope, where random
conversation occurs alongside trading topics.This seems kind of dry, but
I don't know quite how to make it interesting.


Leisa:  What aspects of your
personal life would you like to share with Slopers?


Biff: This is a tough one
to answer, since personal life stories can be quite boring.  I was born
in Utah in 1970, and spent my early childhood in Northern California
while my dad suffered through a medical residency in Santa Rosa.  My
parents divorced when I was seven and I moved back to Utah with my
mother.  I was raised Mormon in various backwater locations until I
declared war on authority at 14.  Ironically I received my Eagle Scout
award just prior to this phase!

During my teenage years I exerted full
independence from mankind and made all kinds of bad decisions, which
took years and needless stress to recover from (I won’t go into details,
here).  Being a young fool I joined the Army Reserves at 17, and went
to basic training upon graduation from high school.  College was a much
needed clean slate and I capitalized on this by playing the academic
game as well as possible.  

During this time I married Mrs. Biff at a fairly young age (22), and she
gave birth to little Biff five months later.  We’ve had a great life,
the three of us.  After finishing at the University of Utah we moved to
Milwaukee for dental school at Marquette University.  Four years later I
graduated and was accepted to the orthodontic residency, which took
another two years.  We moved to Colorado, bought one practice and opened
another, and we found ourselves in our early thirties with well over a
million dollars in debt (since paid off).  I should note that Mrs. Biff
is a pediatric dentist, and we share a practice together.  
 
I’ve
had many hobbies, which I consider to represent on of life’s great
pleasures.  Among my favorites are: brewing beer, distilling hard
liquor, making wine, hydroponic gardening, construction / wood working
(I built the trading room / tiki shack shown in the picture, below), skiing,
mountain climbing.  I even went through a brief quilting phase, which
I’ve been mocked for incessantly!
 
Leisa: I've enclosed a picture of your wine room.  Is that
one of your quilts on the floor?

Biff: The quilt shown is something we
purchased at a
charity auction.  Boulder Dental Aid holds an annual fund raiser that we
support.  The money keeps a practice for low-income children
functioning.
 

LeisaI'm quite fond of the FatBoy Slim Weapon of
Choice video that you introduced to the Slope.  With respect to
trading, what would you describe as your Weapon of Choice? Are you a
futures, ETF, single equities guy, or a Renaissance man?  Also, what
time frame (short, intermediate, or long term) time frame do you use?

 

Biff : With any new profession or serious endeavor it’s
important to initially expand your knowledge base and be open to a huge
spectrum of ideas and styles.  Many assorted professions (including my
field of orthodontics) follow this philosophy.  What ultimately happens
to any effective professional is they submerge the vast majority of what
they’ve learned and focus on a single, predictable technique that works
for them.  This often takes years of practice to achieve, and some
never quite arrive.  The most dangerous surgeons are those that never
settled on a coherent, reproducible style for any given procedure they
perform.  Having a patient on life support and splayed open is no time
for contemplation and second-guessing oneself (insert your own trading
analogy here…)

 
Following
this process I very effectively formed a tremendous cloud of trading
information which led to my “paralysis by analysis” phase.  This lasted
many years, and I’m still shedding needless “baggage”.  I eliminate
concepts and ideas that don’t suit my purposes in a very Darwinian way. 
Through my experience trading I’ve tried countless methods for various
lengths of time, but ultimately always returned to what suits my personality:
day-trading with futures.  I’m not altogether comfortable in what that
says about me, quite frankly!
 
My trading knowledge came from
persistent personal study, but my trading style is assembled largely
from what I learned here on the Slope from people like you, Market
Sniper, Giledain, ComicFX, Viscous, and many others.  The willingness of
our friendly community to share and help others out is quite
remarkable.

Leisa:  We know that with most of things that we
undertake in life, those that challenge us help us develop needed
skills.  However, those challenges also unearth some weaknesses.  Would
you be willing to share with Slopers your single greatest strength and
how you've developed that in addition to your single biggest weakness
and how you have compensated for that?

 
Biff:  Ironically my twin strengths
also periodically become my twin weaknesses.  They are, 1- my
obsessive-compulsive focus / stubbornness, and 2- my comfort level with
risk taking.
 
If
compelled, I can tackle a single subject or problem for 18 hours a day
and months / years on end.  I refuse to give up until the issue is
solved to my satisfaction.  Naturally this becomes a net liability at
times as well, since virtually every other aspect of my life falls
dramatically on my priority list.  Trading is unique because it's been
my major extra curricular passion since 2002, far longer than any other
obsession has retained such a lofty status.  My comfort with taking a
risk has been a huge benefit in my life in general. I've never minded
moving to a new city, opening a business, taking on debt, initiating a
trade, going to school for protracted periods with no income,
etc.  Occasionally this risk-taking backfires.  I’m ashamed to admit I
purchased my house in May 2007.  Talk about lousy timing!  My penchant
for risk taking has also caused some hardships in a few areas. Starting a
practice from scratch resulted in zero income for two years, and I blew
out my trading account as a noob in 2002.  Overall, however, one must
take a chance or remain stagnant in life.

Leisa: If you had only one minute to spend with an aspiring,
avocational trader, what would you want to say to that person
?
 
Biff:  Focus on defense.  This game
might appear easy, but it isn't.  You will come face to face with the
darkest aspects of your personality.  There are some basics that you
should follow until you become comfortable with your own trading
psychology and methods.  If you find yourself violating these, you
should seriously question whether you have the makeup for trading,
because you are heading for disaster.

  •  Have a reasonable
    stop for every position you place.  Allow your stops to be hit without
    flinching.
  •  Don't use excessive leverage, and don't attempt to
    hit home runs.
  •  You are a student, and you must be willing to
    spend the time to learn.
  •  Avoid “gurus.”  Have faith in
    yourself.
  •  Eliminate the risk in any trade early by taking
    partial profits and raising your stops.

 
Leisa:   You trading room looks very
inviting! Biff, thanks for taking the time to share a few things with
Slopers. There is a reason why I call you Bifferific!

What Have We Learned?

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One solid year of an up market, and one solid month of the most agonizing trading time I've had in my entire life, have put me in a deeply reflective mood. Even though the January 19th high has not been violated (yet), I am having deep doubts as to my long-term outlook on the market. It seems to head higher, regardless of external news or realities.

So what has the past year taught us? I have some thoughts on this; and although these thoughts may seem grumpy, snarky, or even whiney, I promise you, they are not intended to be. Cynical? Yes. Despairing? Sure. But complaining? No. Complaining about reality is pointless. So here's what I think the world has learned:

1. Investment banks can, with few exceptions, act with impunity. Yes, Lehman and Bear are gone, but that's just a sliver of the investing banking world. By and large, investment banks entered into the crisis as winners and exited the crisis as even bigger winners. They now know there really is no consequence for negative outcomes. If they win, they keep the profits; if they lose, they will be bailed out. End of story. So I think that, far from being chastened, banks have been emboldened to act in a manner that makes 2007 look like doe-eyed innocence.

2. Financial reform isn't going to happen. Whatever gets passed is going to be feeble. Maybe they'll pass a bill demanding that disclosure statements on credit card applications be in a font size two points larger than before, but that's about it. All this Volcker rule hub-bub is only going to compel the Goldmans of the world to dispose of their classification as bank holding companies, now that the need to be in that category (with its benefits) has passed. The panic is gone, so the motivation for real change is dead.

3. Real estate is doing just fine. Think real estate is in trouble? Ask the holders of SRS how their investment is doing. Real estate isn't going to be permitted to fail.

4. The financial industry is doing fine. Disagree? Check in with holders of SKF. They, as with SRS holders, are holding on to securities at lows never before seen in history.

5. Keynesian "economics" works. On the rare occasions a government faces a crisis, they just have to "print" (well, electronically create) trillions of dollars in "money." Bang! Problem solved.

6. Buying as many stocks as you can during times of panic is like legally stealing money. Gobbling up stocks – any stocks! – a year ago was a brilliant move for those who did it. The old saw about buying when there is blood running in the streets surely has held true.

7. It's much easier being a bull than a bear. The reason is simple – – pretty much all the vested interests in the world are on your side. You don't have to fight the tide all the time. Nine years out of ten, you're going to be right.

8. The unemployment rate doesn't matter. About 10% of the public has no income, and about 20% is underemployed. Obviously it doesn't matter to equities. The government will just keep printing up unemployment checks (no matter how many extensions are required) to keep things civil.

9. The US dollar is a one-edged sword. If the dollar is weak, equities will explode higher. If the dollar goes down, it doesn't matter.

10. The citizens of the U.S. love buying stuff. It doesn't matter if they need it, or if they have the cash on hand to afford it. This is the national pastime, and it's never going to end.

To a person like me, who is rational to a fault, and who loves free markets, these cold realities are depressing beyond imagination. But I'm not an idiot; I can see what's going on, and it's time to face the facts.

Have a nice day.

China, Inc. (by Gary Tanashian)

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Dear SOH, this article was published in my newsletter this past weekend.  It is a bit long and some of it is not very relevant to your immediate trading needs.  Yet, it attempts to ferret out both the intermediate term and long term fate of China from a personal 'hands on' perspective, along with those of noted short seller Jim Chanos and even a couple of NFTRH subscribers, both financial pro's. 

Excerpted from the January 17th edition of Notes From the Rabbit Hole (NFTRH68)


As
a US manufacturing person, I have been aware of and had to deal with
globalization from day one. First it was Japan, with its revolutionary
efficiency, automation and constantly improving quality. There was no
use fighting it or complaining about it. The only options were
innovate, automate or die. We chose options 1 & 2. This dynamic,
with its inherent quality and productivity, is to the benefit of the
entire developed planet. Continuous improvement, it’s more than just a
corporate buzz phrase.

In
recent years, it seems that China is the new Japan… on steroids. What’s
more, Wall Street – through famous commodity gurus like Jim Rogers –
has got the bit in its mouth and commentators far and wide continually
weigh in on the global manufacturing behemoth. 

So
what do we have here, new global manufacturing superpower, destined
through continuous improvement and shear capacity to become THE one
stop shop for the world’s manufacturing needs (one happy side of the
Wall Street spin) or a gigantic bubble built of limited regulation,
massive pollution, exploitation of human ‘capital’ and a noxious Ponzi
scheme involving a late-stage consumerist society’s increasingly worth less treasury bonds? This is of course, the dark side of the spin.

I
would have to say that the answer involves all of the above. There are
many obvious negatives currently in play for a ‘China Story’ that is
promoted 24/7 by financial types who are selling abstractions as
opposed to boots on the ground knowledge. There are also many positives
that time should nurture to the forefront.

On the surface, we have the likes of ‘China’s Round-the-Clock Auto Factories Still Cannot Meet Demand’
http://tinyurl.com/nftrh68a,
as credit has continued to expand, despite pretense toward fiscal austerity
http://tinyurl.com/nftrh68d
Beneath the surface, we have noted short-seller Jim Chanos looking into the books
http://tinyurl.com/nftrh68b
of China, Inc. In addition, here is an interview in which he not only
looks at China, but also the commodity complex so vital and intertwined
with its growth http://tinyurl.com/nftrh68c.

Technicals

I decided to highlight China this week in light of the Chanos story and since it is a short position held by
NFTRH,
with short fund FXP still performing fairly well as its mirror image,
the FXI China 25 ETF continues to look toppy. FXI has pulled a full 50%
retrace of the crash from the highs, weekly MACD has remained
trigger-down and the setup remains in place for an important high to be
registered.

51fxiweekly 

As a side note before continuing, I would remind
readers that FXI (along the Hong Kong Hang Seng and Nasdaq 100, among
others) was one of the leaders to the upside of Hope ’09 as it made its
‘higher low’ in March, and as long as it persists with the current
topping posture, it must be taken as a negative divergence leading the
broad rally.

Two Esteemed Observers, Differing Opinions

Last
week I received emails from two subscribers, one a former executive of
a major auditing firm and the other, a Vice President at a well-known
investment firm. Both emails centered on the ‘Chanos bearish on China’
story. The former knows how to ‘look into the books’ of enterprise and
is bearish and in agreement with the NFTRH view that
China may be leading the US and other global markets into a topping process. The latter is quoted as follows:

“Beware
of advice/opinion you receive on China from any [non-Asian] that has
not lived in that country for years. China is littered with the dead
bodies of Western business execs who thought they understood how that
place works.

I highly recommend you read the book “Mr. China” before you bet any significant capital against that country:
http://tinyurl.com/nftrh68e
My brother has made MILLIONS undoing the destruction Western business execs have caused their firms in China.”

‘Destruction’

I
have seen plenty of it, as American companies fall all over themselves
– even creating new executive positions like ‘VP of Global Sourcing’ to
gain access to the Chinese miracle (and pennies on the dollar savings).
Do you want to know what has been destroyed? Quality ethic. I cannot
tell you how many times I have seen customers try to come back to
companies like my own, hat in hand simply wishing to get the stuff made
right.

NFTRH
is about perspective, if nothing else. So this is not a ‘slam China’
piece. I have no doubt that China is setting up as one of the behemoths
of the 21st century. But there are growing pains – huge ones, centering
on quality, lack of regulation, human rights and its love/hate
relationship (of convenience) with the US. 

Meanwhile,
sometimes there are happy endings for those who have been burned by the
China outsource trade. In 2009 I experienced yet another one. 

We
have made a high quality medical oxygen component for the last eight
years, never raising the price and employing ‘lights out’ automated
production. Our customer’s outsource czar found a Chinese company that
would do it for .60 on the dollar, but their quality was lacking. So
the customer jumped at our offer to compromise to .86 on the dollar.
But the game was not over yet; the customer redesigned the component
(we were not given the opportunity to quote the re-design) to make it
easier to produce and was rewarded with a .40 on the dollar price! Got
to love capitalism, and cheap medical components.

No
tears for me dear reader, we have more than replaced this business with
medical companies that understand quality is number one. But for all
those who need medical oxygen, if you use the fine ‘American’ brand
XXXXXXXXX, breathe easy. After all, they wouldn’t compromise quality in
the interest of saving a buck, would they? Would they?

NFTRH View

I
will distill the two subscriber’s opinions into my personal view that
China is leading the global rally in hope and denial into termination.
But as NFTRH
has noted from early on, China – along other developing situations – is
an area I would look to invest in at the appropriate time, for the
longer term. But first there is the sorting out of its intimate
relationship with the consumer of last resort, the USA, to deal with.

The
United States is in the impossible predicament of trying to convince
the world that its debased treasury still deserves the world’s
confidence, even as it attempts to live on the creation of more debt
and printing of Federal Reserve Notes, with no commensurate
productivity to back up said confidence.

China
on the other hand, is in a dangerous situation for the near term due to
its reliance on what is in essence a gigantic macro vendor-financing
scheme. Its foreign exchange reserves grew another 23% in 2009 http://tinyurl.com/nftrh68f
Is it any wonder that countries like China and India are buying gold in an increasingly systematic manner?

Hording
of vital resources remains a key component of the future for China,
even if it means ‘over’ paying by using increasingly worthless US
dollars to do so. One wonders to what degree this plays into the
current bubble in copper and inflated pricing in other commodities.
Back in 2004, I wrote an article addressing the situation, and today I
would say that the only thing that has changed is the level of urgency.
Now I Get It!:

“In
phase one, Americans have happily gone along with Roach's "new
paradigm", where China more and more controls the means of production,
and the US controls the means of production of a different kind; that
of the world's reserve currency. In essence the game goes like this:
"You keep making cheap stuff (wink wink) and we'll keep printing this
paper (wink wink) and pay you huge amounts of it. Sure, there will be
'economic girlie men' out there saying this can't be done, but LOOK at
us, we're DOING it!". I don't doubt there are legions of people taking
the attitude of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it", but that's just the
point, it is broke. The fallout is just not obvious to all yet.”

 “But
something tells me a strong hint of what's to come was just flashed for
all to see with the above acquisition announcements. China's planners
are not so dumb after all. They'll use an advantageous labor arbitrage
and currency peg to gain global industrial production market share,
ship en mass to the largest consumer engine in the world, receive
payment in the heretofore most trusted world currency, and for the
master stroke, turn around and recycle those dollars into the very
commodities, goods and resources that will be necessary for their
continued growth and climb to world power.”

The
essential theme is that the United States feasted off of the 20th
century, and for good reason; it was a country in ascension with a
relative freedom of industry and private endeavor, which became the hub
of global commerce and finance, anchored by the then-respected US
dollar, the world’s reserve currency. 

But
humans being subject to excess and hubris, the US transformed into an
economic vampire, consuming not only its own seed corn but by leading a
system of debt creation as funding mechanism (replacing the old
productivity), leading much of the rest of the industrialized world
into financially hazardous practices as well. 

If
the US goes down, China is going to go down with it. This could become
a major buying opportunity as the deck chairs get rearranged for the
21st century. China, like the US, is inflating to try to keep the
current arrangement in place, but this will ultimately fail, as all
major inflations and bubbles eventually do. But with its reserves and
status as creditor, at least it will have options when it comes time to
dig out from the rubble. 

The
US on the other hand, has nothing but confidence to fall back on. That
will not cut it when said confidence is lost. The US will need to begin
the long, hard process of revaluing its remaining productive resources.
That will not happen as long as the printing press keeps running in a
pathetic attempt to deny reality (and re-valuation).

Given
that I may not even be alive by the time America heads back up the
curve, I think I will await coming opportunities out on the horizon in
China, other developing regions and in commodities. Shorter term, NFTRH
will continue to focus heavily on the gold sector for the fundamental
reasons carried forward to date and reviewed again below; until/unless
said reasons change.

In
short, the China miracle is in progress and will not be stopped. But
just as the US dealt with the great depression along the way to 20th
century dominance, so too will China deal with a multitude of issues
along the way. Not least of which will be extricating itself from the
twisted and complex relationship it has going with the great consumer
of last resort.

$IRX Breaks Out (by Gary Tanashian)

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The counter-trend reset of human spirits has dragged on longer than
I thought likely. Much longer, actually. Perhaps I was a bit naive last
winter projecting a rally that might retrace 38% of the crash and last
a few short months.

But it is notable that I am now so bearish I
can taste it and it should also be notable that I was so bullish I
could taste it a year ago. The big question revolves not around some
blogger/newsletter writer. The big question is what was the mainstream
media doing when the turn toward bullishness came about?

Come on
now, I don't really need to address that again, right? The MSM scared
the hell out of the public and aided a grand theft of the public trust,
bolstering the coffers of a massive financial services apparatus that
now collects mega bonuses, touts equities and attempts to lure the
final holdouts – who capitulated in March – back into the water.

The
meat of the rally has however, been to the benefit of the corporate
welfare state, organized labor and the financial services industry,
which tells the public "move along,
nothing to see here… forget about what you saw behind the curtain
last year… and by the way, would you like to see some of our new
income products to help you make back your losses?"

The dollar is rising (as this blog has anticipated again and again, as did NFTRH
as part of an ongoing thesis), interest rates are rising on the long
end and now… may I present to you the yield on the 3 month t-bill?
The chart has finally made a move. As you know, I have dragged out a
chart of the $IRX quite often on FOMC day as the Fed pretended they had
a decision to make, all the while 0% t-bill rates told them there is no
decision. Well now, we have a change as the short end begins to respond
to the lack of confidence going on in the long end.

Irx

The MSM and
the troubadours on Wall Street spin this as positive. "THE" recovery is
in process and the Fed will raise rates sooner than the sponsors of the
euro-junk that ran with the anti-dollar inflation rally. It's all good.
A strong dollar, whodda thunk it could be good for the US recovery.
It's a solid one after all, right?

Well, it had better be. It
had better be real or else the spendaholic ways of the Obama
administration and the easy money policies of the Bernanke Fed are not
going to be able to come to the rescue. That is because the treasury
market is posturing through all maturity time frames as if it wants to
return sensible practices to a treasury market that tells the macro
inflators whether or not they can continue creating debt to spur
recovery.

I guess what I am saying is that if the bond market
does indeed signal recovery, the recovery is on its own. No more spoon
feeding of liquidity. So it will be interesting to watch. Gold has
taken the hit (again, as anticipated on this blog
and in NFTRH) and with strong support at around the $1000 level, it
will be an important sign post in determining the authenticity of what
the Wizard is asking you to believe.

The pablum quoted below
tells you that liquidity is flowing, "THE" recovery is in full swing
and oh yes, we will need more spending and stimulus. You can't have it
both ways. The stance here remains that the inflators need a downside
event or else the inflationary monster they created is going to
preclude their ability to continue manufacturing liquidity (treasury
rates rising). Now, I look at NFTRH's biggest picture chart of the
S&P 500 and that thing is bullish. So again, there will come a
point where I stand aside from the moderate bearish stance (as opposed
to my current full bearish personal sentiment).

But with Santa
in play, Wall Street on full tout and the utterly useless (to real
traders) MSM on the job, this mess is going to have to prove itself for
more than a couple pumpy weeks in January. Gold is taking an oh so
healthy correction, purging the momo's and players. When the correction
concludes, we will find out the nature of many things.

Right now, on with silly season!

From Reuters & Bloomberg this morning:

This fanned expectations that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates sooner than its counterparts in the euro zone and Japan,
sending the dollar higher and pushing U.S. Treasury yields to
four-month peaks. MSCI world equity index (.MIWD00000PUS) rose 0.3
percent, on track to scoring one of the biggest annual gains in the
past 20 years.
— Reuters

Congress
and the Obama administration are taking a bigger role in the rescue of
the economy from the Federal Reserve, shifting the strategy to stimulus
spending from central bank lending… "It may be tough for elected
officials to quit spending, prolonging the bailout and adding to the
federal budget deficit. “There’s a danger of getting addicted to fiscal
stimulus programs,” said David Wyss, chief economist with New
York-based Standard & Poor’s, in an interview. “The Fed can print
money. Government has to raise taxes or borrow more."
–Bloomberg

U.S.
consumer spending probably rose in November for the sixth time in seven
months as households took advantage of holiday discounting, economists
said before reports today. China’s growth may surge to as much as 12
percent next year, according to Citic Securities Co., the nation’s
biggest listed brokerage. Consumer confidence in Italy unexpectedly
rose in December to the highest in more than seven years after Europe’s
fourth-biggest economy emerged from a recession.

“The
path of least resistance will continue to be to the upside,” Robert
Doll, who helps oversee about $3.2 trillion as chief investment officer
for global equities at New York-based BlackRock Inc., said in a
Bloomberg Television interview. The economic recovery “means earnings
should be somewhat better and liquidity should still be plentiful.
That’s a recipe for equities moving higher,” Doll said.
–Bloomberg

Uncle Buck and One Lonely Bull (by Gary)

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Pssst… come 'ere. Did you hear the one about the guy who's still
bullish the US dollar? Yes, he actually exists. No no, I am not
including the perpetually dollar bullish Prechter and Hochberg. They
are a given.

But aside from them, I heard a rumor that this
other guy actually exists. Fear not however Hope '09 participants; what
are the odds that this lone guy would be right against an entire
financial world on the other side of that trade?

Everybody from
government to monetary officials are stacked against the USD. Wall
Street and the financial establishment remain on the other side of this
lucrative trade as they pitch their wares to the traumatized public.
The gold bugs who think rising copper and oil is good for the gold
sector? They're on board and indeed, leading the charge. So why worry
about a dollar rebound? 

Well, the dollar has done some terrible
technical work on the big picture, which certainly informs NFTRH's view
for 2010, but in the short term all I see is what could be interpreted
as a break from a falling wedge (not shown on this chart that is
already too busy), a 3rd day above the SMA 50 (for the first time on
this systematic and grinding decline), RSI and MACD looking good and a
technical target up there at around the SMA 200.

Usd

If we are to
get a #2 leg in a mini cyclical bull (in hope), the dollar will first
rise and correct this mess, and that one lonely bull would be king of
the world for a short while on a short covering rally in USD. If not,
AGAIG '09 (as good as it gets) will continue to terminus and our
protagonist of one will join the rest of the world in staring down Bob
Prechter.  —Gary