What I’m Watching This Week – 20 May 2013

Bull Something….

The Dow Jones is up 16% on the year, up 1.6% last week for a record, 15,354. The S&P500 has ascended 16% so far this year, up 2.1% on the week, also at a record, 1667. The NASDAQ has gained 14% on the year, up 1.8% last week, sitting at 3499. According to Factset, the S&P500 has a valuation of 16.5 times estimated earnings. That temperature’s like Goldilocks and the three Bears’ porridge, just about right. Which leads to the question at hand…is this just the start of a multi-year Bull Market? Noticeably, there has yet to be a significant pullback (of at least 6%) in the last seven months. The few shallow ones that have made appearances were quickly disseminated away with a continuing upside rally. Could this be an alternative definition of irrational exuberance?

The bond market is having a brutal year, being mired in its first losing quarter since 2006. It’s been absolutely no fun for fixed income investors this year. The wholesale inflation rate for the last 12 months is 0.6%, its lowest since July 2012; Treasuries have dropped as investors rotate into an ascending stock market that peculiarly seems to not have a termination date. The markets ups and downs have justifiably been tied to weak corporate fundamentals, and that alone should align with a logical deference towards greater caution. More indicators than not, continue to forecasts an essential pause, even a slight to modest dip, in the market indices, that is overdue and necessary. Needless to say the drum roll for equities has continued, unabatedly. Dare I say, without a significant event sitting out over the horizon, the current momentum could take the S&P500 index above 1,700 by the end of summer.

Investors’ are shouting ‘Damn the torpedoes, full steam ahead’ even as the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy looms large, Chairman Bernanke testifies on the economy Wednesday morning in conjunction with an afternoon release of the Fed’s latest policy meeting minutes. Since last month’s meeting, the improving economic data has lessened the general fiscal weakness and has provided further catalyst to the upside for the bullish continuance of economic activity we are experiencing. However, being the contrarian that I am, I will remain cautious even with the favourable improvements. I’ll be digesting the minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to see whether sentiment is slanting towards winding down quantitative easing sooner rather than later. A quicker exit from QE is the market’s primary downside risk which would in sequence; involve that mysterious market pullback that has failed to materialize thus far this year.

I remain optimistic. The Bears have been getting their tail ends handed to them and the Bulls have continued to open champagne bottles. The CBOE VIX “fear factor” index has been down 31% to 12.45, its lowest since mid-April. Necessary awareness to consider, on Thursday ECB President Draghi makes a speech in London. Investors will be focused on the central bank’s residence in a global pecking order of forceful monetary easing, including not only the U.S. Fed, but also the Bank of Japan, Bank of England and Swiss Central Bank. I’m expectant that the positive momentum continues nevertheless I’d be a fool to not anticipate weaker overall data. I’m cautious, observant and optimistic.

Have a great week!

What I’m Watching This Week – 13 May 2013

Is everything subjective?

With 89 percent of the S&P 500 companies having reported earnings so far, 66.7% have surpassed profit expectations, above the average of 63% since 1994. However, only 46.4% have beaten revenue expectations, well under the average of 62 percent since 2002. (Factset) As I mentioned last week, when sales revenue continues to be reported as less than spectacular and earnings data are above estimates, something is incongruous here. Correspondingly, when the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment insurance falls to its lowest weekly level in more than five years, it’s a fantastic signal that the job market is improving, but still not at the speed and breadth needed to jumpstart the U.S. economy.

Last month’s string of weak economic numbers were a disappointment, to say the least, but they were to be expected, as the sequestration has been making a very prominent appearance in regards to the day to day life of millions of Americans. This week will bring a new batch of prominent economic reports and with options expiration at week’s end, I would expect a fair amount of whipsawing volatility, but I’ve been proven wrong before. The Dow and the S&P 500 carry on setting another string of record closing highs, it’s anybody guess what the outcome will actually be.

I remain optimistic. I’ll continue to have concerns regarding a technical pullback as we move through this quarter. The market’s strong performance thus far this year has increased the probabilities of equities rallying throughout the year, but I ‘m ever so cautious about the fundamentals. The market is driven by good fundamentals from corporate earnings and with sales revenue being unimpressive in our consumer based economy, I’m forced to think of it like a lingering bad taste in your mouth after eating something that was pleasant, you’re searching for a sweet lozenge to cover up that flavor.

Have a great week!

What I’m Watching This Week – 6 May 2013

Short term thinking

The inevitable market pullbacks are out there. As we’ve seen over and over for the past few weeks and months, the whipsawing natures of the markets are keeping investors on the edge of their seats. Today’s up, tomorrow’s down…what’s the current correlation of commodities to the dollar? Europe’s finally behaving, um wait a minute, no they are not…. Asia’s recession is a headache; HA! What Asian recession? The emerging markets are leading the charge to prosperity! It’s enough to bruise your eyeball sockets and send you into a fit of misperception. Unfortunately, I see nothing that would lead us to believe that the markets won’t continue to repeat this pattern in the short term. While the Dow Jones and S&P 500 closed out on an all-time highs last week, residential housing is surging accompanied by record low mortgage interest rates, employment numbers are curiously receding to near pre-crisis levels; what does all this really tell us? Have the collective brain trust gone nutters believing that all has returned to the better?

Markets will inevitably go higher and they also, inevitably, will go lower. American industries are driven by earnings; they are the growth engine of the country. But corporations and the analysts who study them are lowering earnings expectations for Q2 2013. In terms of preannouncements, 63 S&P 500 companies have issued negative EPS guidance for Q2 2013 as noted by FactSet. Of the 400+ S&P 500 companies that have reported earnings to date for Q1 2013, 72% have reported earnings above estimates. This percentage is marginally above the average of 70% detailed over the past four quarters. Conversely, merely 47% of companies have reported sales revenue above estimates. Yup, you read that correctly, earnings are up but sales are down. No, I also haven’t become a Doom and Gloom card carrying member, but it’s hard not to notice that something is incongruous here.

Companies and analyst have lowered earnings expectations so dramatically that it’s become predictable that companies can inevitably beat them. Sales, you know, people coming in the doors and plunking down hard cash, are lower and are continuing to confirm a long term weakness. To paraphrase one of Sen. Marco Rubio’s favorite modern poets, Rakim… the American worker keeps digging into their pocket, all their money’s spent. So they dig a little deeper but still coming up with lint. 47% is below the average of 52% recorded over the past four quarters (Factset). If 47% is the final percentage, it will mark the third time in the last four quarters that the percentage of companies reporting sales revenue above estimates finished below 50%. Short term thinking and solutions aren’t solving our long term problems.

I remain optimistic. Trying to assess whether equities can continue their mighty upward run versus the reality of the Q1 earnings reports are fraying the few hairs I have left on my head. Things are getting better; they aren’t getting better rapidly however. A little less short term exuberance and a lot more long term solutions are my prescriptions for the U.S. economy. Will the market take notice and the U.S. Government get serious in treating our economies ailments? Dunno, but I remain cautiously optimistic.

What I’m Watching This Week – 29 April 2013

Itchy Trigger Finger

The preordained question of seasonality arrives once again. ‘Sell in May and go away’ has become such a common viewpoint, that in the words of Homer J. Simpson…’You say that so often, it’s lost all meaning’. Or has it? Last week’s economic calendar events were disappointing, especially in regards to existing home sales, durable goods and gross domestic product (GDP). New home sales showed strength but they certainly were not a catalyst to ward off an encroachment of bearish sentiment. The finalized GDP figure for Q4 2012 was a miserable 0.4%. Friday’s initial estimate, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that GDP posted a weaker-than-expected 2.5% uptick in the first quarter of 2013 and the Census Bureau also reported that durable goods orders dropped 5.7% in March. D’oh!!!

As we reach the peak week of the Q1 2013 earnings season, 69 percent of the S&P 500 have beaten forecasts, but let’s be honest…when you lower expectations enough that a stink bug can crawl underneath, having number’s that ‘exceed’ expectations isn’t all that remarkable. On the flip side of all the exuberance regarding positive personal consumption expenditures, private inventory investment, exports, residential investment, last Friday’s GDP report was attributable to a fall in government spending at the federal, state and local levels.

I remain optimistic. U.S. stocks have had a pretty good run thus far. The Dow recorded an all-time high in March, erasing all of its losses since October 2007 and the S&P 500 managed its own new record close. The tech heavy NASDAQ struggled in Q1 while the Russell 2000 came blasting out of the gates, and it has begun to show some fatigue as we entered into Q2. U.S. Treasury yields pushed up over the quarter and the U.S. dollar gained more than 4% against the six major foreign currencies. All fantastic news, but then again, the realist in me shouts out that the U.S. economy hasn’t fully recovered from the Great Recession as high unemployment and slow wage growth have become the new normal. Second quarter is establishing a reality check, we aren’t out of the morass just yet. There’s still a way to go, my finger isn’t on the sell trigger for May, but I’m also not so cavalier as to entrench myself deeper without justification.

Have a great week!

What I’m Watching This Week – 22 April 2013

Tell-tale signs

The Doom and Gloom crowd are crowing that the economy appears to be dramatically decelerating, as data point after data point indicates that a likelihood of economic slowdown has appeared over the last several months. This past week, unfortunately, presented some catalyst to that via some released earnings reports.  Regrettably, that news isn’t to be ignored (I absolutely loathe hearing ‘I told you so’) as the market recorded the worst week of 2013.  For the week the S&P 500 was down -2.11%, the Dow Jones followed with -2.14%, the NASDAQ fell -2.70% and the Russell 2000 registering a whopping fall of -3.22%.

Last week’s tell-tale feebleness also showed that most of the disappointing numbers came from within the Manufacturing Sectors.  The Empire State Manufacturing Survey, Philly Fed Survey and the Industrial Production Report all indicated slowing growth or downright contraction.  I’m not joining the ‘Recession is coming’ brigade but these facts should cause some reflection as to what the Sequestration (read as abject US government incompetence) has in store for us this quarter.

A number of reporting corporations are either reporting weaker than expected results or have already warned of developing turbulence. Justified skepticism of the U.S. economy has remained at the forefront, as the warning signs were varied last week across sectors of the economy.  Unquestionably Europe continues to weigh on multinational companies, and growth was again, made known to be sluggish in China last week as they continue to reform their economy from an external to an internal model.

I remain optimistic.  Even with continued U.S. economic weakness as well as lowered consumer expectations; strength remained in areas where the Fed and the government provide synthetic support. It’s not the best of news, but I’ll take it for what it’s worth.  Also noteworthy in our current slowdown is the expiration of the payroll tax break from the start of the year.  Decreased personal income is directly attributable to our current economic conditions.  The Doom and Gloom throng enjoys proclaiming that the U.S. economy is deteriorating.  I don’t buy it; one month does not substantiate a trend.  I’m confident and optimistic that the D&G bunch has arrived too soon for a second quarter pity party, and I’m giddy that it gets shut down before it even begins.

Have a great week!

 

What I’m Watching This Week – 15 April 2013

Sprung….

The S&P 500 and the Dow have recorded new highs, Q1 2013 earnings season began, manufacturing data continues to be mixed, geopolitical strife continues to create new headlines, employment data continues to whipsaw, and wait for it…those investors who have been in the market responded by looking for reasons to take profits and head for the closest exits.  What…are you not being entertained?   With individual stocks ascending into uncharted territory and a whole bag of news approaching from the edges; it’s a health indicator that the 2nd quarter of 2013, by and large, is eyeing a necessary and efficient pullback.

The bullish sentiment we have seen over the last few months looks to be taking a pause for the moment.  Depending upon your risk strategy, pullbacks are opportunities to add to positions or take your profits and sit on the sidelines.  As the markets have moved higher, smaller investors have started to move in, eager to participate.  In my opinion, they are buying tops right now and may be best served to sit on the bench a little longer.  You know that old saying, buy low-sell high?  I’m seeing signs that the little guy is buying high and not realizing that his exuberance just might be very ill-timed.  However, there will be those willing to take more risks.  Right now I’m not one of them.

The economic data both home and abroad isn’t aligning with my expectations that current market activity should be noticeable more robust right now.  The U.S. economy hasn’t achieved a ‘break free’ velocity to sustain itself, just yet.  It’s still quite vulnerable and the real impacts of sequestration haven’t begun to be demonstrated in many sectors.  The Eurozone remains in a recessionary posture, Kim Jong Un of North Korea continues to be an irrational man-child and the potential destabilizing of the world economies by aggressive monetary policies only aggravate and substantiate my analysis that this near term pullback is arriving just in the nick of time.  Some hedging strategies for the risk tolerant and aggressive are my guidance for the moment.  There are many bargains to be found, especially with dividend paying stocks, so take what the market is giving you.

I remain confident.  As we move deeper into earnings season, I’m expecting some changes, especially due to the mix of policy changes in Q1 and I’ll be keeping a sharp eye on companies that show declining margins but are also beating earnings estimates; they will be getting the stink eye, to be blunt.  After Tax Day, April is historically prone to exhibiting weakness in the stock market.  A little caution, continued optimism and enduring confidence are my attitudes this week.

Have an outstanding week!

 

What I’m Watching This Week – 8 April 2013

Q2 begins with a whimper

Stock Markets started Q2 with a whimper, certainly not with a bang, ending the week lower with global weakness getting more and more noticeable. These last few sessions, it’s been up then down then up again.  Almost like a cheap carnival ride, by the way, when do I get to collect a big, overstuffed, counterfeit Garfield from dealing with this nausea?   The media hyped and announced, blind rush into stocks and the full retreat out of bonds didn’t materialize.   The market euphoria is still there, however, like a winded athlete, it’s bent over and gasping for as much air as it can inhale.

Where I’m suspecting to perceive the proverbial canary in a coal mine is with U.S. small caps.  The last three sessions have begun to indicate some significant weakness.  The underperformance in the Russell 2000 has raised my eyebrows, given that small-cap stocks are more profoundly tied to domestic growth prospects than the large-caps.  Large caps get to leverage their global coverage, Small caps, not so much.  Their market capitalization of between $300 million and $2 billion doesn’t allow much wiggle room during domestic economic weakness and therefore, basically neutering the opportunity to beat the institutional investors.  Small caps closed down last week by almost 3%.  That sets my alarm bells off and I’ll be watching how the U.S. Treasuries perform this week.  I’m expecting a decent uptick as large investors, looking for safety via low yield, move in that direction with a definable quickness.   Last week’s very poor job’s numbers also didn’t help; with an overall feeling that growth is slowing and the economy remains flimsy.

I remain optimistic.  In 2011 and 2012, each had outstanding first quarters which dovetailed into lousy 2nd quarters.  Also similar are the earnings forecast from those previous years and 2013 Q1’s haven’t been the most inspiring thus far; nevertheless the actuals have yet to begin to truly filter out.  That begins tonight with the Alcoa release.  Corporate earnings will be the decisive catalyst once again.  Stocks, I believe, will remain exuberant and bond holders will endure worrisome but not panicked circumstances.  I do not sense any overbearing fear for the global markets, unless you happen to reside near the Korean Peninsula, and even then, having served in the US Army right smack on the DMZ, most of the bloviating coming from North Korea is just that.  North Korea knows it would be suicide to let even a minor conflict begin.  The regime of Kim Jong Un can’t sustain a prolonged engagement alone and China and Russia certainly do not want to have Western forces sitting on their eastern borders, as the resolution of conflict would present.  I remain cautions, confident and optimistic.

Have a great week!

What I’m Watching This Week – 1 April 2013

Second Quarter already?  Well that was quick!

The markets continued their upward swing in the first quarter, much like they did in Q1 of 2012.  Seeing the Dow Jones and the S&P 500 basically gaining, percentage wise, what they accomplished in the entirety of 2012; gives investors a reason to celebrate. But I hope they aren’t getting drunk with the revelry.  There’s nine more months to go, so let’s not get too out of sorts.  With the end of first quarter, 86 companies in the S&P 500 issued negative guidance for what they expect to report in earnings for Q1 2013, in little over a week from now, while only 24 issued positive guidance for the quarter.   Yes, that was a collective D’oh! you just heard.

The U.S. economy endures, while Europe’s weakness continues, and uncertainty in Asia has dragged market performance down in that region.   Europe’s problems are far from being resolved, not that you haven’t noticed the last few weeks.   I firmly believe that U.S. economy has enough momentum to produce a reasonable GDP number without all the Gloom and Doom crowd harping on about inflation.  But if economic conditions improve at a much faster pace, inflation will present an uncomfortable situation across the board and of course the G&D crowd will be all over the networks with their “I told you so” chant.  Read that again, if the economy improves faster, the Gloom and Doom gang will be cheering.  See the disconnect with logic there?

I remain confident.  One massive bright spot I see (and have been preaching about for years now) is the energy sector.   It’s, in my opinion, undervalued, and U.S. natural gas could be the play of the century.  The fundamentals make it even more obvious, after ages of depressed natural gas prices, production and infrastructure growth is readily apparent.  Opportunities to ride the coming natural gas tsunami, at prices this relatively affordable, won’t last forever.  In my opinion this is a once in a generation chance to participate and at the same time watch the U.S. become more energy independent.  I remain confident, cautious and eagerly optimistic.

Have a wonderful week!

What I’m Watching This Week – 25 March 2013

Ides of Cyprus (yeah I just invented that)

On the Roman calendar, March 15th marks the day of the assassination of Caesar, thus the Ides of March became a turning point in Roman history.  The 25th of March shall forever now be known as the day of last-minute rescue to prevent a complete collapse of the Cypriot economy.  The Eurozone has agreed to a €10B bailout in which the country’s second-largest bank, Laiki, will be closed and its operations merged into Bank of Cyprus.  Those with deposits of over €100,000 ($130,000 US dollar equivalent) will be assessed with a hefty tax, perhaps 30% or more, while those below that level will be left unscathed.  Laiki’s senior bondholders will be wiped out, while Bank of Cyprus’s creditors will also be affected.  That’s a heavy cost to those who stashed their cash in the countries banks.

Much of the cash deposited in the country’s banks belongs to wealthy Russians; some say the Russian mobs, which are expected to lose billions of dollars of ill-gotten gains.  I think it’s safe to assume that the Russian gangsters probably aren’t very happy with this situation, as the banks will remain closed and accounts frozen until sometime next week to delay, what almost unavoidably, will be a run on them.   The deal also calls for Cyprus to radical modification its banking sector, privatize state assets, and slash their austerity budget even further.   Call it what you will, but ultimately this is essentially the EU and IMF making an example of Cyprus without the catastrophe of having the Euro imploding, at least for an interim period.

I remain optimistic.  Back on this side of the ‘pond’, the end of March is screaming at me to prepare to switch strategies.  Your own specific situation and risk tolerance will define how you proceed, but April has historically been a great month to be in the markets, since 1950.  But before jumping in with eyes closed and adding to bullish positions, cautionary measures must be taken into account.  Stocks have generally peaked during the month of April before pulling back over the next few months.   So far in 2013, the stock market, in my opinion, is an overheating radiator; hopefully you’ll have a couple of gallons of water stashed in the trunk and are prepared to spend some time on the side of the road, letting things cool off.   Uninspiring fundamentals and the renewed threat of crisis from Europe, demand a reassessing of exposure to many large cap, value stock and technology sectors.  As I mentioned last week, if stocks do peak in April (if not earlier) and sell off over the next few months, have confidence to take some profits off the table and wait it out.  I expect it to be a short and shallow pullback-not a full-blown correction.  If the market turns on a dime and goes higher, you’ll have missed out on some performance but if it does not, you’ll be in position to offset some or all the losses in positions more effected by market swings.  If the S&P 500 moves more than 5% to the downside, I’ll expect a few thank you letters for the warning.   I’ll remain optimistic, cautious and aware that the Ides of March (Cyprus) mark a historic transition, and one to be acutely aware of.

Have a great week!

What I’m Watching This Week – 18 March 2013

Back to the Big Picture

I’m back after a self-imposed hiatus.  Call it a brain break where I took out the tissue, gently massaged it and placed it back into residence.   It was a long overdue.  And now back to our previously scheduled program.

All eyes are on Cyprus this morning as the proposed tax on savings accounts (10% on accounts over 100K euros and 6.75% on accounts below 100K) has brought the European debt crisis back into focus.  Who has culpability in this situation?  Guess who… the banks.  Leading the parade, are the banks in Cyprus.  With the banks in Greece and the Euro Zone coming up quickly behind; but wait, this is turning out to reveal a parade to rival Macy’s Thanksgiving in length, pomp and circumstance.   So what’s the knee jerk reaction to a tax imposed on deposits?  Ahem, you are sitting down aren’t you?  Since the banks are closed in Cyprus today, the citizens can’t dash to the bank and take their money and run.  Some other day perhaps but not today fortunately; and what if other EU countries decide to adopt this type of tax in order to get help from the Euro Zone, aren’t bank runs in other countries a serious probability?  Ultimately, March Madness has been redefined and this is what the week will be all about.  Brace yourself ladies and gentlemen; we are only witnessing the pre-game warm up.  Tip-off is just around the corner.

The U.S. market is a bit extended and susceptible to a necessary pullback, I don’t think we are entering into correction territory.  Why?  We may be looking at going on the offensive while Europe plays defense.  There will be movements of capital into the safest areas.  The EU doesn’t seem to be that warm and fuzzy place today; Switzerland maybe and the U.S. definitely.  How does this affect you, the small investor?  You have two choices:  Door number one – Bet that the pullback will be short and shallow for the near term and ride it out (but smartly take some of your profits off the table).  Door number two – prepare for a deeper and longer corrective action.  I’m going with door #1 along with moving some assets into the alternative space as a hedge (insurance in case something goes bad).  Yes, if the market turns on a dime and goes higher, I would have missed out on some performance but if it does not, I’ll be in position to offset some or all of the losses in positions more effected by market swings.  If the S&P 500 moves more than 5% to the downside, I’ll consider door number two but I don’t see a confirming trigger to set my hair on fire (I’m darn near bald anyway) and run for the hills, carrying all the gold, guns and canned goods I can.  Plus my time in the US Army completely ruined the whole camping aesthetic for me.   I’m no longer a fan of living underground, digging holes and living with moles.

I remain optimistic.  I’m keeping my eye on the big picture of the American economy continuing to improve, Washington has become a rather large speed bump, but growth is there, regardless of the political mayhem.  The new European worries are unsettling and deserve a watchful eye as we observe the EU react but I’ll remain steadfast, cautions but entirely optimistic.  Have a great week!