Saturday, January 26, 2013

The Closing Bell--1/26/13

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The Closing Bell

1/26/13

Statistical Summary

   Current Economic Forecast

           
            2012

Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product:                      +1.0- +2.0%
                        Inflation (revised):                                                             2.5-3.5 %
Growth in Corporate Profits:                                 5-10%

            2013

                        Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product                       +1.0-+2.0
                        Inflation (revised)                                                             2.5-3.5
                        Corporate Profits                                                              0-7%

   Current Market Forecast
           
            Dow Jones Industrial Average

                                    Current Trend (revised):  
                                    Short Term Uptrend                                13140-13797
Intermediate Uptrend                              13211-18211
Long Term Trading Range                      7148-14180
Very LT Up Trend                                       4546-15148        
                                               
                        2012    Year End Fair Value                                     11290-11310

                        2013    Year End Fair Value                                     11590-11610                                          

            Standard & Poor’s 500

                                    Current Trend (revised):
                                    Short Term Uptrend                                       1430-1498
                                    Intermediate Term Uptrend                       1398-1993 
                                    Long Term Trading Range                        766-1575
                                    Very LT Up Trend                                         651-2007
                       
                        2012    Year End Fair Value                                      1390-1410

                        2013   Year End Fair Value                                       1430-1450         

Percentage Cash in Our Portfolios

Dividend Growth Portfolio                              35%
            High Yield Portfolio                                        35%
            Aggressive Growth Portfolio                           36%

Economics/Politics
           
The economy is a modest positive for Your Money.  It was a slow week for economic data; and what little we got was mixed to slightly negative: positives---weekly mortgage and purchase applications, weekly jobless claims and December leading economic indicators; negatives---the December Chicago National Activity Index and the January Richmond and Kansas City Fed manufacturing indices, existing home sales and new home starts; neutral---weekly retail sales.

These stats were certainly not on par with the data from the last month or so; however, (1) they weren’t bad; they just weren’t great and (2) they were not unexpected.  As I noted in last week’s Closing Bell ‘The temptation is to get overly jiggy with this trend (i.e. the recent string of great stats).  However, as you know the last three years have witnessed a somewhat erratic flow of data: a series of positive stats followed by a string of negative to neutral numbers.’ 

Also keeping me somewhat cautious in our outlook is (1) the negative impact on aggregate economic activity coming from the recent reinstitution of the FICA tax and (2) this week’s debt ceiling extension notwithstanding, I am not optimistic about the ultimate outcome of the debt ceiling/sequestration/continuing resolution negotiations.  Hence, our forecast remains:

‘a below average secular rate of recovery resulting from too much government spending, too much government debt to service, too much government regulation, a financial system with an impaired balance sheet. and a business community unwilling to hire and invest because the aforementioned along with the likelihood a rising and potentially corrosive rate of inflation due to excessive money creation and the historic inability of the Fed to properly time the reversal of that monetary policy.’

            The latest from Robert Shiller (4 minute video):

The pluses:

(1) our improving energy picture.  The US is awash in cheap, clean burning natural gas.... In addition to making home heating more affordable, low cost, abundant energy serves to draw those manufacturers back to the US who are facing rising foreign labor costs and relying on energy resources that carry negative political risks. 
     
     Aiding this factor, this week the Nebraska governor approved a revised route through his state for the Keystone XL pipeline---the completion of which will add to the US supply of crude oil.  That said, the completion of this pipeline is far from a sure thing as the tree huggers are gearing up to stop national approval. 

(2) an improving Chinese economy. This week, Chinese PMI came in ahead of estimates.  As you know, I list this factor with the caveat that the Chinese lie about everything including their economy.

       The negatives:

(1) a vulnerable banking system.  This week, [a] an assistant Attorney General admitted publicly that the DOJ did not pursue criminal charges against major bank managements after the financial crisis for fear of causing a panic in the global securities markets---for which he was promptly fired and [b] the world’s oldest bank {Italian} had to be rescued after incurring enormous losses in the derivatives markets whilst Mario Draghi was Italy’s central banker.  Oooops.

‘My concern here is that: [a] investors ultimately lose confidence in our financial institutions and refuse to invest in America and [b] the recent scandals are simply signs that our banks are not as sound and well managed as we have been led to believe and, hence, are highly vulnerable to future shocks, particularly a collapse of the EU financial system.’
    
Central bank failures (medium/long):

(2) the ‘debt ceiling/sequestration/continuing resolution cliff’. In a move reflective of the eurocrats, the can [i.e. the difficult task of cutting government spending] got kicked down the road again this week by our own ruling class.  The house voted to extend the debt ceiling for three months---which may leave the securities markets in blissful ignorance, but it does nothing to deal our problem [too much spending and too much debt]. 

Of course, there are other deadlines, i.e. that of the sequester [March 1] and the continuing resolution [April 15].  And it is anybody’s guess at which of these our politicians actually face up to my spending cut ‘the line in the sand’---if, in fact, they ever do.  That ‘line’ being whether they either put government finances on a fiscally responsible course or they don’t. 

It matters not whether these clowns avoid an emotionally charged negotiating process or a government shut down.  It matters what they agree to.  Because if they side step a budget crisis by agreeing to some half assed set of spending cuts, then we as taxpayers are f**ked long term whether or not we as investors may benefit short term from a positive market reaction to a compromise.

As you know, I don’t believe that the political will exists to return the country to fiscally responsible management. Of course, I could be wrong and I hope that I am.  But the point remains---‘I believe that the upcoming spending cut discussions are critical in the sense that they are a signpost on the direction of this country.  A failure to act fiscally responsible will likely lead to a permanent decline in the future growth rate of this country’s economy, hampered as it will be by too much government spending, too much government debt to service, too much phony money floating around the economy and too much regulation.’

To be clear, this isn’t a disaster scenario---after all, Europe has been doing it for years.  It is just not as good as it could  be and it does move the country closer to the potential for more severe usurpation of financial and individual rights.

Here is another optimist a la Krauthammer with the hope that somehow 2014 will bring the change needed to right our fiscal ship (medium):

  Counterpoint (medium):


A problem related to the ‘fiscal cliff’ is the potential rise in interest rates and its impact on the fiscal budget.  As I have noted previously, the US government’s debt has grown to such a size that its interest cost is now a major budget line item---and that is with rates at/near historic lows.  Moreover, government debt continues to increase and the lion’s share of this new debt is being bought by the Fed. 

So the risk here is two fold: [a] to the Fed---its balance sheet is levered to the point that Lehman Bros. looks like it was an AAA credit.  So if interest rates go up {and prices go down}, the very thin equity piece of the balance sheet would disappear.  The Fed would then be technically bankrupt. and [b] to the Treasury---it must pay the interest charges.  Hence, if rates go up, the interest costs to the government go up; and if they go up a lot, then this budget line item will explode and make all the more difficult any vow to reduce government spending as a percent of GDP and/or manage the fiscal cliff.
                 
(3)   rising inflation:

[a] the potential negative impact of central bank money printing.  Yesterday, the Fed announced that its balance sheet now holds $3 trillion in assets and will likely be a $4 trillion by year end.

                                And here is what we received for that $3 trillion (short):

‘The risk of a massive global liquidity infusion is, of course, inflation.  The bulls argue that thus far, all this money has gone into bank reserves [meaning it has not been spent or lent], that as long as banks are too scared to lend and businesses to borrow, it will remain unspent and unlent and therefore will have no inflationary impact.  And they are absolutely correct.  But the whole point of the Fed’s exercise, i.e. QEIII {QEIV}, is to encourage banks to lend and businesses to invest.  So on the off chance that the plan works, inflationary pressures will grow unless the Fed withdraws the aforementioned reserves before inflation kicks in.
                             
And therein lies the rub.  [a] Bernanke has already said {four times} that when it comes to balancing the twin mandates of inflation versus employment, he would err on the side of unemployment {that is, he won’t stop pumping until he is sure unemployment is headed down}.  That can only mean that the fires of inflation will already be well stoked before the Fed starts tightening and [b] history clearly shows that the Fed has proven inept at slowing money growth to dampen inflationary impulses---on every occasion that it tried.
                                                       
[b] a blow up in the Middle East.  The below link is an analysis of what lay behind the Algerian terrorist attack.  Bottom line---there is more to come and it is going to increase the cost of extracting Middle Eastern oil and gas.


(4)   finally, the sovereign and bank debt crisis in Europe remains the biggest risk  to our forecast.  The economic and financial news improved again this week with the EU PMI reported slightly ahead of expectations and larger than expected pay down of the ECB’s LTRO lending facility---providing additional ammo for investor complacency.

On the other hand, a major scandal is breaking in Italy’s banking community centered on huge losses in derivative transactions by a supposedly staid institution [see Thursday’s Morning Call for detail].

And there is more unhappy news, youth unemployment soaring (short):

That said, the euro remains strong and the European securities markets are acting as if all is well---although the latter is largely a function of less stress on the financial system [i.e. low interest rates] and has little to do with improvement in the underlying fundamentals.  In other words, the collective EU economies are a mess, countries and banks remain overleveraged and the banking community’s exposure to the derivative markets is basically unknown [witness the E700 billion problem in the Italian bank]. 

Nonetheless, as long as this far too sanguine attitude continues, it keeps our ‘muddle through’ scenario in place and buys time for the southern EU economies to heal and the eurocrats to implement corrective policies.  Regrettably, those guys are spending most of their time in self congratulatory celebration instead of attempting to fix the problem ---which keeps the odds of this risk occurring higher than it could be.

Bottom line:  the US economy continues to grow (slowly) with the recent month long burst of solidly positive economic reports giving way to the longer term trend of more erratic progress.  That’s OK, because that fits our forecast---an economy struggling to grow.

Our ruling class continues to make no headway in resolving our fiscal problems.  The GOP did come up with legislation this week that while extending the debt ceiling till May stipulated that the budget would be balanced in ten years and if there is no budget, the senate doesn’t get paid.  That sounds great on paper but (1) so far the closest the republicans have come to a balanced budget is Ryan’s version and that didn’t balance the budget for over twenty years and (2) Reid agreed that the senate would pass a budget but it would include tax increases.  In other words, it is business as usual among our ruling class. 

I opined last week that the negotiations on the debt ceiling/sequestration/continuing resolution were, in my mind, a line in the sand as related to the future course on our economy, i.e. either these clowns gut it up and put this country on a path to fiscal responsibility or the US slides inevitably toward the European socialist, nanny state model.

My money is on the latter, though Charles Krauthammer suggests that the current standoff could last until the 2014 elections, in which the electorate realizes the error of its way, returns a GOP dominated senate to complement the house and that marks the beginning of a return to lower spending, lower taxes and smaller deficits. Even if he is right (and I think that the odds are well short of 50/50), that does nothing to alter our forecast for the next 18-14 months---an economy on a long term growth path that is below average for this country, impaired as it will be by excessive spending, taxing, money printing and regulations.

The biggest risk to our Models is multiple European sovereign/bank insolvencies.  While our forecast is ‘muddling through’, it concerns me that the eurocrats have done little to nothing to address the underlying causes of the fiscal imbalances in Europe.  Even worse, the magnitude of this risk is unknowable as the current fiasco in Italy illustrates.

This week’s data:

(1)                                  housing: weekly mortgage and purchase applications were up; December existing home sales fell more than anticipated as did new housing starts,

(2)                                  consumer: weekly retail sales were mixed; weekly jobless claims were quite strong,   

(3)                                  industry:  the December Chicago Fed National Activity Index was well below expectations; both the January Richmond and Kansas City Fed manufacturing indices were disappointing,      
                
(4)                                  macroeconomic: December leading economic indicators rose more than forecast.


The Market-Disciplined Investing
           
  Technical

The indices (DJIA 13894, S&P 1502) had a good week: (1) their break out above the 13682/1474 resistance level was confirmed, (2) both closed above the upper boundary of their short term uptrend [13140-13797, 1420-1498] and (3) both finished well within their intermediate term uptrend [13211-18211, 1398-1993].  Blue skies smilin’ at me.

The upper boundaries of the Averages short term uptrends have clearly not hampered the rate of advance---which suggests the underlying momentum is super charged and probably assures that the indices will at least test the 14140/1576 resistance level.

Volume on Friday was up slightly; breadth continued strong.  On the other hand (1) the VIX was up---a little unusual for a good up day in prices.  It also looks like it is trying to form a bottom in the 12-13 level---‘trying’ being the operative word because it is much too soon to confirm, (2) sentiment indicators are reaching dicey levels and (3) perhaps ominously, some of the bond indices and ETF’s that I follow are starting to breakdown technically.  Again it is too soon to know if rates [prices] are finally starting up [down]; but if they are, then one of the main arguments that equity investors have been using of late to rationalize chasing stocks up [i.e. there is no other asset in which I can earn a competitive return] would disappear.

Credit Suisse indicator of risk appetite (short):

GLD was down and remains in a short term downtrend and an intermediate term trading range.  It closed right on the lower boundary of a very short term uptrend.  How it handles this support level with tell us something about the strength of the underlying bid.

            Bottom line:

(1)   the Averages are in a short term uptrends [13140-13797, 1430-1498] as well as intermediate term uptrends [13211-18211, 1398-1993].

(2) long term, the Averages are in a very long term [78 years] up trend defined by the 4546-15148, 651-2007 and a shorter but still long term [13 years] trading range defined by 7148-14198, 766-1575. 

   Fundamental-A Dividend Growth Investment Strategy

The DJIA (13893) finished this week about 22.6% above Fair Value (11325) while the S&P (1502) closed 7.1% overvalued (1403).  Incorporated in that ‘Fair Value’ judgment is some sort of half assed compromise on the fiscal (debt ceiling/sequestration/continuing resolution) cliff, continued money printing, a historically low long term secular growth rate of the economy and a ‘muddle through’ scenario in Europe.

I continue to that think the upcoming debt ceiling/sequestration/continuing resolution  discussions will probably not lead to a shutdown in the government---saving us from the kind chicken-little-the-sky-is-falling-panic-sell-off that often accompanies these events.

On the other hand, I also fear that our political class is unable or unwilling to deal with their past profligacy---which means that our three to five year outlook is about the same as our 12-18 month forecast: an economy managing to grow at a sub par rate in spite of the burdens of too much government spending, too high taxes, too high debt, too much government regulation and too much money sloshing around in the system.  This will remain our base case for the assumptions in our Valuation Model until/unless our elected representatives prove otherwise.   

The latest from Marc Faber:

 I recognize that mine is a minority view as witnessed by the current Market run; and I accept that the Krauthammer thesis (see above) is possible.  However, I have to deal today with the arithmetic of run away government spending and a Fed determined to break the intergalactic speed record for printing money and their impact on both the economy and security valuations.  To date, the results of that analysis haven’t changed.  I simple can’t get an economy growing any faster than it is currently and I can’t get stock valuations higher. 

Europe continues to ‘muddle through’ aided by investors’ belief that the eurocrats have contained the continent’s sovereign/bank debt problem.  Of course, they are doing nothing to fix the economic disaster that is southern Europe; so I don’t believe for a second that the economic risk of recession or the financial risk of serial derivative defaults by EU banks have diminished.  But as long as the Markets give the eurocrats a free ride, the danger of some imminent calamity is held at bay and time is bought for the eurocrats to hopefully do something meaningful.’
           
       My investment conclusion:  sub par growth of the US economy will continue.  While this is certainly not a bad news scenario, the valuation of equities on that forecast is below present levels---and the difference is getting more pronounced.  While I have slow played the move to higher cash positions in the last month, it doesn’t change the necessity of continuing the process.

       I noted last week that I believe ‘that our dysfunctional political process has reached an important crossroad---either the ruling class ceases its profligate spending and recognizes that it is not omniscient regarding how its citizens regulate their own lives or the wise course is to start distancing ourselves from that government.’ 

       I have started that process.  I am now doing the analysis on other asset classes that can provide some diversification away from US equities.  These include both foreign and domestic REIT’s, hard assets plays such as straight commodity or oil ETF’s and  foreign ETF’s that focus on dividend growth.

       In addition, an associate will be going to Panama next month as a first move in exploring that country’s banking and real estate laws and gaining a more general look at the political, social environment as well as established ex pat communities.  Further trips are planned to Costa Rica, Ecuador and Bermuda.
            
       That said, I want to reiterate these steps are precautionary.  It is part of the process of thinking through the investment and life style alternatives available if the current monetary, fiscal and regulatory polices continue and when, as and if their consequences began to seriously threaten our hard earned economic security.  We may never need to avail ourselves of any of these potential alternative strategies.  But forewarned................

       Getting back to the present, our Portfolios will continue to raise cash from overvalued, overextended stocks with the intent of redeploying the proceeds into the aforementioned asset classes.

            Last week, our Portfolios Sold additional shares and left the proceeds in cash equivalents.

          So far this earnings season is a disappointment, investor euphoria notwithstanding (medium):

       Bottom line:

(1)                             our Portfolios will carry a high cash balance,

(2)                                we continue to include gold and foreign ETF’s in our asset mix because we continue to believe that inflation is a major long term risk [which is now under review].  An investment in gold is an inflation hedge and holdings in other countries provide exposure to better growth opportunities. 

(3)                                defense is still important.

DJIA                                                    S&P

Current 2013 Year End Fair Value*                11600                                            1440
Fair Value as of 1/31/13                                   11325                                                  1403
Close this week                                                13894                                                  1502

Over Valuation vs. 1/31 Close
              5% overvalued                                 11919                                                    1473
            10% overvalued                                 12457                                                   1543 
            15% overvalued                             13023                                             1613
            20% overvalued                                 13590                                                    1683   
            25% overvalued                                   14156                                                  1753               
Under Valuation vs.1/31 Close
            5% undervalued                             10758                                                      1332
10%undervalued                                  10192                                                  1262     
15%undervalued                             9626                                                    1192

* Just a reminder that the Year End Fair Value number is based on the long term secular growth of the earning power of productive capacity of the US economy not the near term   cyclical influences.  The model is now accounting for somewhat below average secular growth for the next 3 to 5 years with somewhat higher inflation. 

The Portfolios and Buy Lists are up to date.


Steve Cook received his education in investments from Harvard, where he earned an MBA, New York University, where he did post graduate work in economics and financial analysis and the CFA Institute, where he earned the Chartered Financial Analysts designation in 1973.  His 40 years of investment experience includes institutional portfolio management at Scudder. Stevens and Clark and Bear Stearns,  managing a risk arbitrage hedge fund and an investment banking boutique specializing in funding second stage private companies.  Through his involvement with Strategic Stock Investments, Steve hopes that his experience can help other investors build their wealth while avoiding tough lessons that he learned the hard way.









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