Archive for October, 2011

One Eye on the Exit

Although the S&P 500 has managed to break through its short term obstacle, setting up a Bear Market Rally, the fundamental picture darkened just a bit more over the weekend.

The Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) is now calling for a recession. While there is a chance that they are wrong, the ECRI has a pretty impressive track record both for calling the major turns in the economy and for not issuing false alarms. For those of us without a full membership, we need to rely on articles from the New York Times. But, the ECRI calls are generally ahead of the pack so even hearing about them a few days late puts one ahead of market concensus.

ECRI One Eye on the Exit

Source: ECRI

As you trade the Bear Market Rally, be ready to head for the exits as soon at momentum starts to fade.

Crunch Time

Although we look for fundamental reasons to explain the results that the Fund King System kicks out, occasionally we must cast a glance over the charts to see what they are telling us.

The first chart which stands out as we get ready for the week’s trading is a point and figure chart of the S&P 500 Index. As the leading index for risk assets, we would expect most other risk assets to follow the SPX’s lead in the short term.

SPX PFP Crunch Time

Source: Bloomberg

The beauty of the Point and Figure Chart is that it removes time as a variable and concentrates on the absolute movements and reversals in the market. As you can see at the tip of the big arrow, we are at a crucial psychological juncture for the SPX index. If the market reverses and starts putting red O’s down, market participants are likely to interpret that as a continuation of the trend of lower highs and lower lows. If, on the other hand, it can break through to the 1190/1200 level, we could see a trip back up to the 200 day moving average.

SPX1 Crunch Time

Source: Bloomberg

A word of caution, though. With the Euro Crisis far from resolved and signs that China’s property market is in a cooling mode, the market for riskier assets is still looking at more potential negative than positive developments in this low GDP growth environment (particularly amongst developed economies). Current conditions seem to echo the first part of 2008 when the markets recovered from the initial shocks of what became to be known as the Global Financial Crisis.

SPX2 Crunch Time

Source: Bloomberg

What should investors do?

The current readings on the various Fund King Systems that we monitor still suggest a cautious stance. That is unchanged since the beginning of May which means that hopefully we have all set aside some cash which is ready to jump on a good opportunity.

As suggested above, we could be approaching an inflection point which would allow investors to participate in a strong counter-trend rally. That strong rally would not be out of place as we approach the back part of the year and into January. However, one should keep an eye on the index vs. the 200 day moving average. Unless we see some movement towards solving the big Sovereign Debt issues that plague the market, the rally should run out of steam as it approaches the 200 day MA mark.

Speculating on Europe

The last few days have seen a strong counter cyclical rally. Will it continue?

I like Point and Figure charts because they remove the element of time. As you can see, the last few movements in the market have been very bearish (lower highs and lower lows). If this rally (represented by the green “X”s can break out and form a new trend, then perhaps this rally will prove to be sustainable.

If, as is likely, the Europeans get hung up on their most recent efforts, the market is very likely to resume its downward trend.

The point and figure chart makes it very clear what the S&P500 has to achieve if it is going to get out of its recent bearish rut.

SPX PandF Speculating on Europe
Source: Bloomberg

Packard, Edsel…now RIM

All companies die. RIM is still a large player in the smartphone space, but its edge is shrinking.  A Bloomberg article today shows that the insiders have not purchased any shares since July 2010, and are preparing for the end (or at least not doubling up on the loads of stock they already have been granted).
Apple was called, “…obsolete, irrelevant…” in 1994, and almost went bankrupt. So reversals can happen rapidly. But these days it is unwise to underestimate the speed with which software can neuter the strongest hardware advantage.

 

Hooked on Growth

Growth is something that politicians, bankers, investors and economists pretty much take for granted. In the 30 years that I have been involved in investments, the game has been growth. Of course, one vaguely remembers that the 70’s were not a time of growth but then again there are many things (hair styles, wardrobes, cars, etc.) which are better left vaguely remembered from that period.

The headline indicator on any economy, sector or individual company is the growth of the top line. Countries have sustainable growth rates. Markets have potential sizes (always bigger than today) which can be divided into shares to be captured by companies. We divide the world into winners (those in growing markets) and losers (those whose prospects are diminishing). The investment decision for most is how to hitch one’s wagon to the winners and avoid tying up with too many losers.

Politicians like growth as well and will happily pile on promises to voters, confident in the assumption that, on aggregate, those same voters will work hard to provide the economic growth required to pay off those promises in the distant future (ie. past the next election date). With growing populations and rising productivity, leveraging the country made sense.

Lesser Depressions, Great Recessions or Long Stagnations present a big problem to the Growth approach. In these tough times, the Global GDP “Top Line” does not grow fast enough to spread the magic growth dust far and wide amongst the multitude of investment opportunities which present themselves. The problem is doubly hard for the politicians who have to contend with shrinking tax revenues (which make past promises harder to fund) and increased demands for the safety net (which has been extended to “too big to fail” enterprises as well as those who face dire employment circumstances). Japan is a 22 year cautionary tale of how things can go from “Japan as Number One” by Ezra Vogel to “a bug in search of a windshield” by John Mauldin.

So, leaving aside the issue of debt (I agree with those who say we are still overleveraged but others with PhDs and Nobel prizes say we just need more debt to kick start a recovery), the real question is:

How can we find growth to invest in?

The answer is that we will need to be opportunistic for now and in the foreseeable future.

Because the size of the overall pie is not growing rapidly, the answer lies in finding out who has figured out how to take a bigger slice. That bigger slice could be in terms of producers vs. consumers, new innovations that wipe out established players or consolidators who manage to roll up a significant corner of a market at what will come to be seen as fire-sale prices. And, the winners and losers are likely to change positions a few times before we are finished with this segment of the business cycle.

Speaking of opportunities, the catalyst for the next round is just around the corner.

The chance of a major European banking crisis in the coming six months is very high. Why? Because Basel 2 allowed banks to stack up sovereign debt without allocating any capital against those positions. And just like the rogue trader at UBS, the European banks drove huge amounts of euros through that loophole. When banks buy an asset that goes badly (a liar loan mortgage packaged as a Triple A tranche or a Greek Government Bond), there is a severe hit to capital where one was not expected. Since banks still have to maintain capital against their “risky” loans, there is very little cushion when the “safe” assets crater.

Now that the world has reacquainted itself with the concept of sovereign default, we get the spectacle of European politicians making desperate promises that Greece’s bonds (and Spain’s and Portugal’s and Ireland’s and Italy’s…) will not default. Unfortunately, the math doesn’t work. Greece will default in the not too distant future. The only issue now is how (not whether) German taxpayers will pick up the pieces. Oh yeah, and whether investors get 50, 40 or 10 cents on the dollar.

Will a Greek default impact the TBTF banks in the US? Absolutely. Will it sink one or two of them? Hard to say. On the one hand, the FED takes a very different approach to the FDIC when it comes to banks in trouble. On the other hand, the electorate has seen alot of money showered on the TBTF banks with very little to show in return. Save your “bottom fishing” hooks for opportunities other than the IYF’s of the world.

Big things are shaking elsewhere as well. Just in the technology/consumer products area alone, we have seen three household names undergoing significant corporate restructuring. HP is thinking of pulling itself apart, Motorola spun off cellphones and Kodak is trying to avoid bankruptcy by selling off patents. Google and Apple are circling like Great White sharks trying to decide whether to acquire, sue or both. But there are plenty of other companies looking to take advantage of the upheaval. History suggests that the next Google is out there waiting to be discovered.

But for now, the Fund King System is telling us to continue to keep our powder dry. The weakness of our methodology is that the System is almost guaranteed to miss the real bottom by several weeks. The strength is that it will help you avoid perhaps a dozen “false bottoms” while we wait for the real one to emerge.

In the meantime, when you hear a politician, central banker, economist or corporate leader speak, ask yourself the simple question: “Is there anything here that points to growth?” If there is, take note and perhaps investigate. If not, don’t waste your time and move onto the next idea. Investing now is not about spreading your sails wide to smooth out the bumps in your double digit investment returns (diversifying, buy the dips, think 80’s and 90’s) and more about avoiding the sharp rocks that threaten to rip holes below the waterline of our portfolios (think Titanic).

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