Tag Archive for SPY

What My Gut Tells Me

The stock market may be in the midst of breaking out to the upside unless something disastrously creepy unfolds like nuclear war. We did make/almost make new nominal highs on the Spoos (looks like a double top from last weeks highs to me IMO) here which is a good sign in our long term chart reading, but we still aren’t sitting high enough above the old tops for my comfort. Additionally, Easter is coming up and if something evil was going to happen, I would think the creepy evil dudes would strike this weekend.

In other words, if nothing happens and the print-a-thon 3000 rally continues we may keep choog-a-loogin along on the wings of an aging equity market bubble. If there is an outside event to blame the collapse on, it will likely happen soon. Hopefully, cooler heads prevail and we drift higher giving the U.S. economy more time to heal and more cash to reinvest in new ventures. I’m almost an ex-conspiracy theorist turned Bernanke apologist right now because stocks are so bid, but the surface is hiding some pretty vast ugliness tucked underneath the 71 trillion dollar rug that is the global derivatives market. All told, the economy is crap and money printing is the only thing keeping this turd afloat — sure I hate it and the all of he manipulation and profiteering it has caused, but if everyone eating catfood can be postponed a few months, I guess I’m down with that (at least compared to the alternative, total collapse Lehman style which is what we probably need)…

In the end, we can guestimate all we want to — I know this thing smells fishy and so do you but without a way to punish the crooks all we can do is pray.

My gut still says we move lower so the market model is still negatory at the moment. We will have to adjust if Easter passes by without incident. By the way, Hedgephone lovingly wishes all of you a VERY HAPPY EASTER! Though we do believe in the separation of church and state and hate discrimination based on things like religious preferences we do believe in the First Amendment. Teaching “Creationism” in schools, scorning the use of condoms, raping little boys, etc… ar all reasons why I am non-denominationally Christian and don’t trust nice churches or most church-clergy-admin/ops folk — (half Catholic/Christian by upbringing or “half-Cath-o-nated”). God Bless America!

Nightmare On Wall Street

The sovereign debt bubble continues to expand despite the proclamation by world leaders that everything is “fixed.” While we would agree that many, if not most, asset classes are essentially “rigged” by central banks, we doubt that anything will be fixed in the sovereign debt space without write offs and write downs or currency devaluation. Saddling the people with more and more debt as a solution to the debt crisis is simply not going to work in the long run in my opinion. Sure, deficit spending and money printing are obvious, sensible responses to economic contraction but at some point governments need to deal with the underlying cause of the problem without focusing on individual symptoms in a vacuum.

Banks like Goldman Sachs (GS) are being handed billions of dollars every day by the FED and are using this money to pump up stock prices, but how long can the charade last? This is short termism at it’s pinnacle, and all of this in-your-face nouveau-pumping may eventually be followed by a dump — either of paper currencies or of risky assets. Some of the banks receiving this money are arguably insolvent without receiving this massive intervention. Surely, their assets are not entirely liquid, and without a buyer of last resort, governments around the world have stepped up and taken out many dicey bank investments at the offer price. Obviously, this is a terrible moral hazard and stinks of “Banana Republic” finance, but until the unwashed masses figure out that credit default swaps are affecting them day to day, I doubt anything will be done to break up the mega-banks.

Here is some raw data on the Fed’s “pumping” from BusinessWeek:

“The Federal Reserve will amplify record accommodation tomorrow by announcing $45 billion in monthly Treasury buying that will push its balance sheet almost to $4 trillion, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Forty-eight of 49 economists predict the Federal Open Market Committee will purchase Treasuries to bolster an existing program to buy $40 billion in mortgage bonds each month. The panel pledged in October to continue that plan until the labor market improves “substantially.”

“It’s going to be massive and open-ended in size,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York and a former New York Fed economist.”

Basically, the Federal Reserve is going to print as much money as is needed to keep the stock market up and asset prices moving higher. What does this mean for the long term? Such an unprecedented market pump has never been attempted in history and it would seem to many, including yours truly, that the Fed’s balance sheet may never be able to contract without massive consequences.

In my view, the pumpers are everywhere on the financial news media outlets and most re completely “in your face” about their stock market bullishness and investment bravado. Just look at the most recent AAII investor sentiment survey for your evidence that the bullishness is pervasive and a bit concerning:

Survey Results
Sentiment Survey
Results Week ending 1/30/2013 Data represents what direction members feel the stock market will be in the next 6 months.
Bullish 48.0%
down 4.3
Neutral 27.7%
up 4.3
Bearish 24.3%
up 0
Note: Numbers may not add up to 100% because of rounding.Change from last week:

Bullish: -4.3
Neutral: +4.3
Bearish: +0.0

Long-Term Average:Bullish: 39.0%
Neutral: 30.5%
Bearish: 30.5%

 

It’s pretty clear that “everyone” likes the market right now, which means you should probably hold more gold or cash in your portfolio mix than you would normally. We do not like bonds, and over the long term we think the (TBT) is a better investment than the (TLT).

Amazon.com (AMZN), where the company is trading for over 16X book value and a whopping 3,000 times earnings. The company badly missed earnings and sales estimates, yet investors pushed the shares to a new all time high anyway. Creating a massive, multi-billion dollar pump and dump scheme is easy if you have a trillion dollars to invest like most I-banks have to control markets with right now. While we are certain Amazon and Salesforce (CRM) will eventually roll over like Apple or worse, in the short run we think the investment community is being sold on equities by boosting these so-called “leaders” or “darlings” to new, even more obscene valuations. By pumping Amazon to astronomical multiples, Wall Street can convince anyone who is listening that the S&P 500 (SPY) is dirt cheap at 15X earnings by comparison, never-mind the fact that the overall market trades for a price to peak earnings multiple of over 18X. All of this can be accomplished thanks to the promise of never-ending FED manipulation, aka open ended Quantitative Easing.

All in all, investors have to view markets as a centrally planned pump and dump. Sure, it’s okay to play along for the ride for a while, but make sure you sell before the music stops! I suggest investors own the Sprott Physical Silver Fund, (PSLV) and (GLD) in the money call options as a hedge against central bank money printing. Keep in mind, that many skeptical investors choose to hold physical directly versus “paper” metals listed on an exchange. In other words, in the short run, we think the banks will continue “pushing down” metal prices as much as they can. In the long run, physical metals are likely the asset class of choice other than farmland, timberland, oil fields, etc…

Below is a longer term chart of the Fed’s rapidly expanding balance sheet: (when will this money move out of the banks and into middle market businesses?) Stay tuned for more of the inconvenient facts. For now, be cautious on equities and constructive on real, non paper assets.

America is Back to Even, Time to Leave the Poker Table

By Nicholas Southwick Levis, Hedgephone

The booming U.S. stock market is hitting five year highs despite a sluggish economy and the S&P 500 is finally back to pre-crisis levels. So what does S&P $1500 mean psychologically to long term buy and hold investors who held on through thick and thin since March 2009? S&P $1500 means buy and holders of large caps and index funds are just 4% away from the 2007 highs. It also means that after the horrific crash of 2008, most “buy and hold” investors have gotten most, if not all, of their money back. Like any gambler who claws his way back to even against impossible odds, American stock market investors may be thinking about taking some money off of the poker table.

Some of the most value oriented long term investors are actually up from their highs in 2007, and hedge fund managers are out in their Phantoms and Bugattis once again now that many have clawed back to their high water marks (in other words, they are earning performance fees again and buying up art they don’t understand, cars that are completely impractical, and houses with more bathrooms than a typical Marriott!).

What’s most impressive to me, is that value investors who stuck to their guns are reaping big rewards despite a lackluster economy and an increasingly stratified society. Just look at the results for some of the great mutual fund managers out there who have trounced the market over this period of time like Donald Yacktman. The Yacktman Focused Fund (YAFFX) is focused like a hawk on making money following a high quality value investing discipline. As you can see, an investment with this “Don” of value investing has turned $10,000 into $30,000 since 2003. Pretty impressive stuff for a concentrated value manager, and hard to refute (sorry, efficient markets people).

(click to enlarge)

Two of the most widely followed measures of the economy, as far as investors are concerned, are the US Dollar (and its status as the World’s reserve currency) and the U.S. stock market which is making new 5 year highs. Meanwhile, the Dollar keeps hitting multi-year lows against gasoline, foodstuffs, and raw materials prices.

To the outside observer, the stock market seems to defy gravity and valuation concerns. Profit margins are at peak levels but central banks keep flooding the global economy with cheap money which the banks have used to help “melt up” the stock market — sure some companies are finding out how to thrive in today’s world, but for the average “man on the street” life has not been the same since the economy tanked. Unemployment for recent college graduates, for example, tells us a lot about what the bottom rung is like right now in America.

So what gives with the stock market? If it feels like things are worse today than ever before, that technologically savvy hustlers are in charge, and that the system is broken you are not alone. So what are investors supposed to do given the crummy economic backdrop and little to no alternatives for parking investment capital? Starting a business is a good idea for younger people, and I highly suggest this route versus trying to make a living from your stock account. I think stock market participants right now are living in a greed bubble that SHOULD pop sometime soon. What should happen, however, and what will happen could be very different outcomes thanks to global central bank currency devaluation. So, if you want to fight the tape, you might want to wait until all of the proverbial bullets are finally exhausted.

If you trade equities on the long side for a living, think about short selling in addition to your “long only” investment strategies. Stocks are a good hedge against inflation compared to holding bonds but Inflation expectations are everything and markets appear to be in a bubble for some stocks and sectors just as they were in 2007. For Bernanke, the stimulus measures and the increasing financial leverage of the Federal Reserve may be hard to unwind without an ensuing ugly mess. Central banks may have no viable exit strategy to stop QE and reverse course “down the road.” In fact, many people believe central bankers will never stop printing/QE at all — poker pro and famous bluffer Phil Collins said as much in a recent tweet: “no practical way to end QE, U.S. Bond Market would collapse.” So, we know the smart money is betting Quantitative Easing ending any time soon. In my opinion, central bankers have overplayed the QE bluff. Hopefully, the “market vigilantes” don’t come a call-in.

QE will likely mean higher asset prices for commodities and stocks, so valuation is a trickier game for short selling — we think the Russell 2000 €€(IWM) is overvalued again and that the IWM is a good short so long as you are prepared for further short term Fed driven pumps. As you can seem IWM investors are back to even and then some. The Russell is extremely overbought on both the MACD and Slow Stochastics.

Gaming the stock market means beating 80% of computer algorithms and all of the big hedge funds — for past 12 years, the overall stock market has been pretty much a zero sum game unless you stuck with the Berkshire Hathaways and Coca Colas of the world. For every winner in this QE racket, however, there is more than one loser so make sure to practice proper risk management techniques like investing with top rated value managers or by setting hard stop loss orders on all of your equity positions.

For the long book, we would look for sectors tied to farming and agriculture, solid blue chips at good prices, or equities with abnormally low valuations — hard assets are probably less risky than paper assets even if the economy recovers to full strength because of currency devaluation. We will be posting a list of cheap asset plays soon.

We urge investors to avoid pricey technology and “new media” stocks because they are speculative and currently overvalued in our humble opinion. It looks like Salesforce.com (CRM), Amazon.com (AMZN), Facebook (FB), and LinkedIn (LNKD) are all extremely expensive and speculative at current valuations. Maybe the best way to play these is to short them intra-day or at least set tight stop loss orders if you choose to short these names. Eventually value wins out, but in the short run the voting machine appears to be either rigged or badly malfunctioning!

Right now seems to be a decent time to take some profits on our Plum Creek Timber (PCL) buy recommendation, made here: the reason being that lumber prices are down some 15% from their highs while PCL is still trading at the highs of the recent move, up 20% from where we suggested buying shares last summer. Even though Plum Creek’s timber properties are valued at only $1,100 per acre 0or so, we think taking profits when stocks gain 20% or more in a short period of time is almost always a good idea. PCL is still undervalued as an asset play, and if you are looking for a basket of longs to use to hedge a basket of short positions, this is certainly a good candidate to watch.

In conclusion, we think it’s time to lighten up on stocks or at least hold 40% in uncorrelated assets like real estate, hedge funds, gold, silver, timberland, etc… Gold and silver are down significantly from the highs and are investable here versus Dollars. Investors should consider raw timber land, farming, mining, oil and gas, and fishing businesses as a productive way to hedge against inflation and QE infinity. Stagflation may end up getting the better of the Russell 2000 over time and we are certainly skeptical of the parabolic move higher. If you are going to buy stocks, consider letting a pro at Yacktman, Tweedy Browne, or Sequoia (SEQUX) do it for you. We don’t think you should abandon the stock market altogether, but you should consider hedging market risk and these three mutual funds as a lower risk/higher returning investment than a blind bet on the Russell 2000.

Hedgephone Market Model Switches From Neutral to Cash After Close 8/7/2012

The setup looks pretty promising for the short side… Are we setting up for a major double top into election season? Remember, Democrats don’t own stocks and Republicans can come up with lost lists of things to complain about during the election campaigns — a falling market helped oust Bush… Obama better hope that Bernanke can keep the peddle to the metal or his job may just be in jeopardy…

At Hedgephone we are politic and market neutral, though as a Christian, I tend to be more interested in the well being of others and the environment we all share…. Funny how the Christian Right support the same people that brought us Guantanimo Bay, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc…!

In any event, until next time remember the Golden rule and watch out for falling stocks!

Chart forSPDR S&P 500 (SPY)

 

 

 

Even Though Technicals and Fundamentals Remain Dicey

we are sticking on the sidelines in our model… That said, more aggressive traders may want to take out a small short position on the QQQ via put options as a directional bet or as a hedge against existing long positions.

Hedgephone has been MIA this summer, as I am deep in the forest working on real estate holdings (think log cabin and other improvements). I will even post a pic when I get things finished.

As an aside, the Presidential election is coming up and of course there should be some serious and severe fireworks ahead. Another reason to consider owning some volatility. One way to play it would be to buy QQQ puts while shorting the VIX exchange traded ETF (I think its TVIX or whatever)…. Triple levered funds always blow up when the stuff hits said fan.

All in all, we have a fairly overbought RSI at around 58 or so, a slow stochastic in the overbought range, and a FED that appears to be sitting on its hands (probably a good thing considering the market is much higher than many future free cash flows analysts are valuing the S&P when those free cash flows are discounted to a present day value.

We think $1362 for the S&P is a little rich, but this is a political animal controlled by bankers, the FED, the Treasury, and by partisan politics. (Politics as usual!)…

So whatever you do, don’t get too emotional around election season. Things may end up going to the extreme either one way or another. Interesting to see the Facebook (FB) implosion… Could our prediction about Facebook’s stock price drop be correct and the broader market is the next proverbial shoe to drop? I sure hope not, but hope is a pretty crummy investment strategy!

Own Things Which are Outside the Wall Street Game

Investors are turning to things Like farmland, residential real estate (rentals), commodity producing businesses like gold and silver mines, etc… to hedge their inflation risks without throwing money at paper assets like stocks. I think the risk of inflation is becoming more and more obvious to the FED and that stock traders should be trading from the short side here.

The Hedgephone Market Model is still in NEUTRAL!

Hedgephone Market Model Switches to Neutral

Basically, this means we are moving from short the market to cash. The reason for the switch is technical in nature and also because we want to lock in solid 3-4% or so gains since the Model switched to short the afternoon of July 5th. We’ll take the gains and sit on the sidelines because we want our readers to appreciate solid risk adjusted gains without risking investor portfolios in the event of an unforeseen Bernankification of the U.S. stock market tape. Dr. Bernankenstein’s stock market creation lives, but it looks to me like it’s not that long for this world at current valuations. We suggest sitting this one out and enjoying a Stephen King novel instead of losing your recent earnings from the short side of the tape if and when QEXXXXXXX is announced and the market roars ahead on a falling U.S. (and all other paper currency nations) Greenback.

Why “Buy On Tuesday” Works and Why You Can Cover Your Short

Our proprietary market direction model switched to short after the July 5th rally because many of the technical indicators the system follows went into overbought territory.

Based on a few more rules we abide by at Hedgephone, we would suggest covering a portion (if not all) of your short position today, Tuesday, on weakness because of the recent pattern of markets bottoming out on Tuesdays and producing annoying “snap-back” rallies which are short-lived and based on short covering.

Much of the buy on Tuesday theory works right now because it coincides with another well known stock market theory devised by famed commodity trader W.D. Gann — “Never be short on the third day of a correction.” For whatever reason, Gann believed that the third day of any market sell off was a bad time to be short as skilled traders will be covering and going long for a rebound rally.

What really matters most to us at Hedgephone is what the FED will be doing to combat falling stock prices (their new unstated policy objective) and what traders like you can do to prepare for what is ABOUT to happen as opposed to reacting to what JUST happened in the stock market.

Because the short trade we advised entering on the 5th is now a 2.3% or so winner, wise traders may want to take the money and sit around in cash for a day or so until we get some more clarity on Europe, Bernanke, etc…

Overall, the market is a lousy place to put your money nowadays because corporate insiders, CEO’s, directors, and unions have completely corrupted the U.S. market and most of the international equity markets. Today, what you should think of is a cesspool of standing water where flies and mosquitos are hatching like crazy. Sure, you have the American Dream burning inside you and you are thirsty, but you may want to boil that standing water before you risk drinking it! Fraud by corporate insiders is so rampant that it may be worth sitting it out.

 

Window Dressing or Mr. Market’s Blessing?

So was last weeks whipsaw Friday some typical “Big Boy” manipulation game which conveniently occurred on the last day of the quarter or are things really that much better on Main Street and Wall Street…? I’ll let you be the judge, but the last day of the month and the first day of the new trading month are usually pretty interesting and enjoyable to watch… from the sidelines… The big action in oil and commodities also suggests that the strength in the Dollar may be waning.

Of course, anything can and will happen in markets and Hedgephone has been admittedly slacking on its duty to keep readers ahead of the tape. That said, it is summer, I am chopping wood on my spread here and frankly am not all that      intrigued by the long or short side of this market. The stock game is dominated by robots and their twenty something hipster programmers today so unless you are an HFT gobot you really have to wonder whether investing in the stock market for the long term is actually an investment rather than speculation….

We still like the KO, BRK.A, PG, MCD, PEP, SEB, COP, CVX type of stuff right now and we would stick with a dividend portfolio like this with covered calls written against the portfolio if we wanted more equity exposure….

Currently, the small Jag fund is 80% in cash (SNOOOOOOOOOOOR) and 20% in silver (hedging our cash? maybe…)

In any event, we will be updating this page more frequently… If you get super bored check out the music section for some tunes or the video page for some good old fashioned mid west conspiracy theory knowledge!

Till next time…. (We are still neutral but leaning bearish based on trading ranges)

Stocks Up On Oversold Bounce, Fundamental Vs. Technical Analysis, and Investment Ideas

We didn’t bottom tick it exactly, but we almost did with our market model switch to neutral… we also got lucky exiting SIVR at around $29 after buying it for around $28 or so…All in all, the bears are running scared right now because of the TA and the chart setup… We will likely see some more action at the 50 day moving average and could very well see a resumption of the bear leg down toward more reasonable price to peak earnings multiples… Until we get a break either way we are sticking with our “sidelines” call.

I saw nothing in this weeks “Just For Men Ben” minutes that excites me regarding the money printing so I cannot recommend that people speculate on a fully valued stock market even though the technical chart signals look quite promising for a continued rally as we have discussed here for some time.

Look, many of the best and brightest in the hedge fund community think technical analysis is a complete waste of time and a total joke. I think that it works because enough traders and robots think it works and their thinking makes it so… Either way we want to blend solid fundamental and technical analysis here for our readers. Look for a new series of SeekingAlpha.com articles by us in the near future as we will be returning to our desks for the rest of the sleepy summer trading session and the fireworks that this fall’s election season should bring to the stock, real estate, currency, and commodity markets.

Right now our favorite place to invest is in real estate. If you are super wealthy, consider buying a private company where management is willing to stay on board for a few years. Also, don’t buy something that is “for sale” — many times the guy trying to sell you the hardest is desperate because he knows business is slowing just around the corner and wants to find a bagholder. In other words, it’s very easy to sign up a seller who knows the end is near for their enterprise.