Friday, June 7, 2013

The Morning Call--Nibbling at Gold


The Morning Call

6/7/13

The Market
           
    Technical

            The indices (DJIA 15040, S&P 1622) bounced nicely yesterday.  The S&P traded back above the lower boundary of its short term uptrend.  That negates Wednesday’s break and re-syncs it with the Dow.  So now both are within the major uptrends: short term (14683-15389, 1613-1692), intermediate term (14081-19081, 1494-2082) and their long term uptrends (4783-17500, 688-1750).

            Volume declined; breadth improved.  The VIX was down but remains near the upper boundary of its short term downtrend---a successful challenge of which would be a negative for stocks.  Nevertheless, it finished within its short term and intermediate term downtrends.

            GLD was up again and has sustained itself for a long enough period above the upper boundary of its shortest term downtrend to suggest that the worse of its decline may be over.  Accordingly, (Subscriber Alert)our Portfolios will begin re-establishing a holding in GLD (1-2% position), but with a tighter than normal Stop Loss Price.

Bottom line: yesterday’s rebound could mean that ‘buy the dips’ still works.  On the other hand, given the degree to which the Market was oversold, I am not sure how much information value there is in this one day’s pin action. 

However, if stocks experience a strong follow through (which I define as breaking the current very short term downtrend [circa 1637]), then this thesis may still be alive and well.  It would also tell us something about the extent of support under the Market.

Also working for the bulls another Market underpinning: since January 1, stocks have not declined three days in a row.  That record was upheld with yesterday’s bounce---which also is measure of underlying Market strength.

That said, since I have absolutely no intent of Buying stocks at current levels, our Portfolios remain on the sidelines.  However, any renewed move to the upside that pushes our stocks into their Sell Half Ranges would be an opportunity to Sell.

    Fundamental

      Headlines

            There was very little economic news yesterday: in the US, weekly jobless claims were down slightly more than anticipated and May chain store sales were just on the plus side of mixed.  Overseas, the ECB left its interest rate unchanged.  Really not much to hang one’s hat on with respect to either their economic forecast or a tell on Market direction.

            In fact, the Market itself was The headline yesterday starting off weak on the heels of another drubbing in the Nikkei and then rebounding nicely as the day progressed.  As I noted above, my take is that the pin action was largely a function of a heavily oversold condition and provided little informational value.

Bottom line: the Market action of the last week has done little to ameliorate the overvalued condition of stocks..  Since ‘overvalued’ is defined by the underlying economic/political factors relative to equity prices, the two things that will bring stocks to Fair Value is either an improvement in fundamentals or a decline in prices.

As you know, our economic forecast is reasonably positive.  Indeed at the moment it is probably as positive if not more so than Street consensus.  The reason is that the data flow of late has been worrisome and some well known economists are calling for a recession.  The point being that I don’t know how I can assume an improvement in the numbers in our outlook.

Clearly, that leaves door number two---lower stock prices; and given the extent of current overvaluation, much lower stock prices (S&P 1419 = Fair Value).  So, as much time as I spend on trying to read the technical tea leaves, whether the short term uptrend holds or not is irrelevant to me in an investment strategy sense.  Stock prices need to go much lower before I get jiggy; and if they go higher, our Portfolios will watch for opportunities to Sell.

            Stock prices versus Citi’s Economic Surprise Index (short):

            And this analysis from SocGen that postulates that a recession has already begun (medium):

            Japan’s margin debt explosion (short):

            Most valuation studies I see are based on either future corporate profits or a moving average of past earnings.  This study is the S&P/current corporate profits (short):

            More updates on Doug short’s valuation studies:

     Investing for Survival

            This is a great discussion about how Argentines survive in country with high inflation and a government gone mad (medium):




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. Steve's goal at

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