Dear Daily Reckoning reader, 
 
Could this be the beginning... the 'tipping point'... 
nudging the markets in the direction we've long 
anticipated? 
 
Following Tuesday's attack...you will be told that 
everything is okay. 
 
Indeed, many will think it will be better than okay. The 
Fed has promised that it will provide more money. OPEC has 
pledged to provide more oil. The government will launch new 
anti-terrorist initiatives. Some will say that war is good 
for the economy. Defense stocks will rise. 
 
But if you've been reading the Daily Reckoning, you know 
that markets rarely work out the way people hope. 
 
The stock market has already cost investors $4 trillion... 
seven rate cuts have produced no positive results. And now, 
the American consumer - already tapped out - has sustained 
a severe blow to his shaky confidence. 
 
In that light, I've asked Dan Denning, editor of the Daily 
Reckoning Investment Advisory, to give you his analysis of 
what Tuesday's tragedy means... what's next... and what you 
can do right away to safely negotiate the weeks, months and 
years ahead. You'll find the text of his report below... 
 
Regards, 
 
Bill Bonner, 
The Daily Reckoning 
 
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 
 
A New Era of Uncertainty 
by Dan Denning 
 
 
All of France observed 3 minutes of silence today. 
 
No phones. No faxes or e-mails. No traffic. 
 
Just"le son du glas" - the tolling of the bells - in the 
churches nearby. 
 
Along with our French colleagues, we prayed for our country 
and for the victims of Tuesday's tragic attacks. I 
especially prayed for a friend of a friend of mine, an 
accountant with Cantor Fitzgerald. Cantor is a bond trading 
firm that had offices on the top floors of Tower One. 
 
We only know that Jason kissed his girlfriend goodbye at 
approximately 8:30 am on Tuesday, then boarded the subway. 
From there, it's just a 5 minute ride to the World Trade 
Center. And another few minutes in the elevator to the 
104th floor. We have heard nothing from Jason since. 
 
In the coming days and weeks, the personal dimensions of 
this tragedy will emerge. Unimportant matters have faded 
away. The focus now, for all of us, is on essential human 
values. Compassion, courage, strength. 
 
Together, we'll grieve. But, because we are Americans and 
because we are human, I believe we'll find strength in that 
grieving -- strength to look ahead, to rebuild, and 
ultimately to discover what we must do next, now that the 
world has forever changed. 
 
Though it's hard to think in these terms at the moment, 
it's especially important for you to regain your focus when 
it comes to financial markets. 
 
There have been other markets that reacted favorably when 
America went to war. Our current conclusion is that this 
will not be one of those times. Not in the long term. 
 
If I'm right, the decisions you'll make in the weeks and 
months ahead will be significant indeed. Here's a brief 
summary of what I expect: 
 
Impact #1 - On September 17th, U.S. Markets Will Reopen and 
Crash. 
 
On Monday, both the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange 
are scheduled to re-open. 
 
Ash and debris still clog the ventilation systems in the 
AMEX building. So the AMEX may be forced to do its trading 
from the NYSE floor. 
 
When the markets do open, you'll see that stock traders 
don't like uncertainty. They have not priced in this 
tragedy. When they do, the resulting decline will be swift 
and large. Circuit breakers will slow the declines, but 
not control them altogether. 
 
NYSE rules call for a 60 minute halt on trading for any 
fall of 550 points or more. 550 is about 5% of the Dow. If 
more pent up selling drives down the markets more, circuit 
breakers will kick in again. 
 
The actual functions of the market are safe. After the 
1993 World Trade Center bombing, firms spent millions of 
dollars building redundant systems. Data is backed up in 
multiple locations. 
 
Just the same, lots of panic selling has built up over the 
last several days. Airlines, insurers, and financial 
companies, especially those located in the Trade Center, 
will all go down. 
 
Cantor Fitzgerald alone has over 900 employees missing. 
Cantor is indispensable to the trading of U.S. government 
bonds. They handle nearly 25% of the $3 trillion dollars in 
daily trades. 
 
As the picture gets more clear, I'll be able to update 
readers of the Daily Reckoning Investment Advisory. 
 
Impact #2 - Gold Rises, Bond Prices Soar, Stocks Rally 
 
When trading in U.S. bonds resumed on Thursday, the yield 
on the 10 year note fell to its lowest level since it began 
trading in 1972. 
 
Expect it to fall even lower -- perhaps under 3% -- as 
investors flee to safety. 
 
The greater the perceived risk, the more investors will 
want to own high-grade debt. The government will issue 
billions in new bonds to finance a ramp up in defense 
spending. Global investors will scoop them up as the 
safest investments in the world. 
 
Gold rallied sharply on Tuesday, but gave back most of that 
gain Wednesday. Look for it to move higher from here. On 
Thursday in closed up US$6, or 2.3%. A handful of gold 
stocks will benefit from a higher bullion price. 
 
For instance, we had already added to our gold stock 
holding last Friday. Since then, we've seen one of our 
picks rise 1.5% in one day. 
 
By the way, from it's declines, I do expect the stock 
market to roar back (although I believe the move will be 
temporary.) 
 
Even prior to the attacks, sentiment was building for a big 
rally in stocks to compensate for a horrible summer. Now, 
post-tragedy, the market will gain confidence simply 
because it's again open for business. 
 
When news hit the London market, stocks dropped 5.7%. In 
Frankfurt, they were down 8.6%. Paris slid 7.4%. Since 
then, all have stopped declining and have recovered some of 
their losses. 
 
The same should happen in the U.S. I expect at least a 5% 
initial decline followed by a short-term rally. 
Unfortunately, it will be temporary. 
 
Impact #3 - You'll remember that U.S. markets were on shaky 
ground even before Tuesday's attacks. Corporate profits and 
corporate spending were down. Layoffs were up, as new 
jobless claims hit their highest level since July. 
 
Unemployment is now at 4.9%. You can't spend if you don't 
have a job. This combined with lower business spending 
could lead to full-blown recession. 
 
The Fed has vowed to open the money spigots to help banks 
and financial institutions. But in the long run, this won't 
work. 
 
Even before Tuesday's events, the problems in the financial 
sector were already severe. What's changed? Now those same 
indicators have reached crisis levels. Our calculations 
show the Dow could fall as low as 5,000, while the Nasdaq 
may fall to 800. Grim, yes. But entirely possible. 
 
The War Bounce 
 
If we do go to war, what effect will that have on the stock 
market? 
 
That very question is a matter of great debate. 
 
We have seen several studies this week which show that 
buying stocks after the initial shock and declines have 
subsided is profitable. Our friend Gibbons Burke shows 
that in the year after each event, the Dow rallied an 
average of 18.4%. In all 6 cases, the market went up for 
the following two years, averaging 30.7% returns. 
 
Our friend Steve Sjuggerud, Ph.D. of the Oxford Club 
reports similar findings. (You can view Dr. Sjuggerud's 
report by clicking here: 
http://www.pirateinvestor.com/greatbubble.) 
 
As Steve points out, after the initial uncertainty of the 
beginnings of both World Wars, Korea, the Cuban Missle 
Crisis, and the Gulf War, U.S. markets surged. 
 
This would suggest your best strategy is to ride out the 
initial uncertainty, wait for an overwhelming U.S. military 
response, and buy stocks aggressively. 
 
But this time around, this may not be the case. This time, 
U.S. stocks will not rally for the long-term after the 
shock wears off. This is not the time to be aggressively 
long in the stock market. Let me explain: 
 
Perched On The Edge 
 
The difference between now and other crisis events is not 
just the severity of the event itself. But the 
fundamentals firmly in place before the attack. 
 
Five months ago, we published a report for our subscribers 
titled"The Fall of the Last Superpower." It seems all too 
prescient now. 
 
The report outlined what our analysts believed to be 
overwhelming evidence that the U.S. stock market was headed 
for a protracted bear market, perhaps as long as 17 years. 
 
As we saw it, the market was already headed for a"tipping 
point." Consider: The peak PE ratio on the S&P 500 in 1929 
and 1964 was 21. Following both peaks, the market endured a 
grinding 17-year bear as stocks and valuations reverted to 
the mean. Today, the PE on the S&P stands at 26. 
 
The report also pointed out how decades of personal and 
corporate debt had ravaged balance sheets, both of private 
citizens and public companies. 
 
Corporations had borrowed to pay for expansion in the tech 
and telecom sector - a bubble that has long since burst. 
The amount of exposure U.S. banks had to the telecom bubble 
isn't clear. But the telecoms themselves have already lost 
nearly $4 trillion in capital. 
 
If corporate debt was a cancer on the economy before 
Tuesday, personal debt was an even greater one. None of 
that has changed. 
 
American's burned through their savings in the 1990s. They 
borrowed to the hilt. They never expected to start losing 
their jobs. They never expected stock market gains to 
disappear. 
 
In our report, we had already concluded - long before the 
planes cracked the glass and steel of the Trade Center 
towers - that the U.S. market was headed for trouble. It 
was, even then, more overvalued than at any time in 
history. A correction was, even then, inevitable. 
 
We also concluded, long before Tuesday, that the largest 
credit-financed bubble in the history was about to pop. 
Economic growth in the U.S. was about to go flat or turn 
negative. And America's economic dominance of the 
globalized world was already in question. Tuesday's 
tragedy only compounds the effect. 
 
The Economics of Terror 
 
In past crises, decisive military action helped bolster 
public confidence. Markets responded in kind. I fully 
believe confidence will eventually return to America's 
markets, too. Eventually. But not without complications. 
 
First, there is the situation I've already described: Debt 
burdens are at record highs. This week's job report shows 
jobs at risk. And large, automatic stock gains are - by now 
- barely a memory. The American consumer has a very 
slender reed to lean on. 
 
Second is the uncertainty principle. This will be a war 
unlike any we have ever fought before. We are fighting an 
enemy without borders. An enemy we cannot invade. An enemy 
who does not distinguish between combatants and civilians 
because in his view, we are all combatants. 
 
The closest comparison is the designated"war on drugs." 
The true enemies are hard to lock in the crosshairs. We 
are essentially declaring war on thousands of private 
citizens of dozens of different nations. This will prove, 
as the drug war has, to be a difficult war to fight. 
 
Public sentiment is strong right now. Americans are 
understandably in favor of a decisive military response. 
But commanding this war, winning it, or even fighting in it 
will be more difficult that many people around the world 
expect. 
 
This prolonged uncertainty will prove a drag on the 
markets. A war without clear results will only heighten 
investor anxiety, reveal America's increasing 
vulnerability, and frustrate the recovery of the stock 
market. 
 
What's more, war or no war, America's economy will still be 
left to work out the imbalances built up during the Great 
Bull Market of the 1990s. In short, no amount of military 
action can repair the decade-long damage done to America's 
balance sheets. 
 
A Mean New World Ahead 
 
Your best strategy right now is to secure and protect your 
assets. There are steps you can take. 
 
No Short-term Trading: 
In the short term, avoid trying to"trade" the market next 
week. It will be too volatile to do so. If the Dow moves 
between 5% and 8% like foreign markets, it could close 
anywhere between 8,836 and 9,124. The market will be trying 
to reestablish a fair price for securities. And to do that, 
it will move up and down rapidly between panic sellers and 
buyers. It is tempting to try and trade these rallies and 
sell-offs. But it's also costly. Avoid the temptation. 
 
Buy Gold Stocks and Treasuries: 
In the longer term, gold, bonds, select natural resource, 
and foreign stocks should outperform battered U.S. stocks. 
Already the flight to quality and safety has begun. The 
yield on the 2-year treasury note fell five basis points on 
Friday to 2.93%, the lowest level since 1958. The yield 
moves inversely to the price, which means bonds are moving 
up as investors look for a safe haven until the market 
sorts itself out. Look for gold, big oil stocks, and some 
foreign blue chips to match the gain in bonds. 
 
Hedge Against The Dollar: 
Readers of The Daily Reckoning Blue Service should stay 
alert next week for e-mail updates on our Dollar and Euro 
trades. The dollar has fallen 1.3% against the euro since 
Friday. That brings it to a 6-month low against it's main 
currency rival. We'll be looking to take profits as the 
dollar reacts to the stock market's opening next week. We 
may also add to our two gold positions as gold moves about 
$280. A higher bullion price should directly benefit our 
two main holdings. 
 
In the meantime, there is quiet reflection. 
 
In the three minutes of silence we just observed here in 
France, I had time to collect my thoughts. Time to 
prepare, perhaps, for a future that seems a little more 
sinister, more daunting than it did just a week ago. I 
hope you'll find time to do the same. 
 
I also hope you'll have the chance - as I have -- to take 
heart in the faith and perseverance of your friends and 
neighbors; to remember that our country is stronger than 
steel and concrete; and that our spirit can be stronger 
than the swords of fanatics and madmen. We are made of 
that quality which builds dreams and realizes 
opportunities. We are optimists. We will not be stopped by 
malice and terror. 
 
Have a safe weekend and God bless. 
 
Dan Denning 
 
P.S. I hope to return from Paris tomorrow and arrive in 
Baltimore tomorrow evening. But in the event air traffic is 
still snarled, I'll continue to update Blue Service 
subscribers from wherever I can, especially as U.S. markets 
open and start to react. Until then, best wishes to you 
and yours. 
 
 
 
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