Saturday, December 7, 2013

The Closing Bell---Oversold bounce or resumption of the trend?

The Closing Bell

12/7/13

Statistical Summary

   Current Economic Forecast

           
            2013

Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product:                        +1.0-+2.0
                        Inflation (revised):                                                              1.5-2.5
Growth in Corporate Profits:                                   0-7%

            2014 estimates

                        Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product                       +1.5-+2.5
                        Inflation (revised)                                                             1.5-2.5
                        Corporate Profits                                                              5-10%

   Current Market Forecast
           
            Dow Jones Industrial Average

                                    Current Trend (revised):  
                                    Short Term Uptrend                               15472-20472
Intermediate Uptrend                              15472-20472
Long Term Trading Range                       5050-17400
                                               
                        2013    Year End Fair Value                                     11590-11610

                  2014    Year End Fair Value                                     11800-12000                                          

            Standard & Poor’s 500

                                    Current Trend (revised):
                                    Short Term Uptrend                                   1740-1894
                                    Intermediate Term Uptrend                       1648-2229 
                                    Long Term Trading Range                         728-1900
                                                           
                        2013    Year End Fair Value                                      1430-1450

                        2014   Year End Fair Value                                       1470-1490         

Percentage Cash in Our Portfolios

Dividend Growth Portfolio                              43%
            High Yield Portfolio                                        46%
            Aggressive Growth Portfolio                           46%

Economics/Politics
           
The economy is a modest positive for Your Money.   Lots of economic data this week and most of it was neutral to positive: positives---light vehicle sales, weekly jobless claims, the ADP private payroll report as well as November nonfarm payrolls, November Markit PMI, the ISM manufacturing index and revised third quarter GDP and corporate profits, November consumer sentiment; negatives---mortgage and purchase applications, November personal income and the ISM nonmanufacturing index; neutral---the combined September/October combos of new home sales and construction spending, November personal spending, weekly retail sales, October factory orders and the latest Fed Beige Book. 

The numbers that most experts focused on were the employment figures and they were quite positive.  The reason for this attention, of course, is the Fed’s supposed employment guidelines viz a viz tapering.  Somewhat surprisingly (confusingly) the Markets had been following a good news is bad news strategy all week; then when the nonfarm payrolls stat was released stocks rallied hard (good news is good news).  That reaction aside, I continue to believe that when QE starts to be unwound, equity investors will not be happy.

The other datapoint I would point to is the latest University of Michigan consumer sentiment index which skyrocketed in November.  As you know, I have been concerned that the DC circus could negatively impact business and consumer confidence which would in turn influence plans for investment and consumption.  Until Friday, we had received a series of poor sentiment numbers that supported this worry.  This latest stat belies that notion.  In the end, what matters is whether deteriorating sentiment translates in to weaker economic results---and that happened, at least not yet.

DC in denial over deficit (medium):

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 historic inability of the Fed to properly time the reversal of a vastly over expansive  monetary policy.
                       
        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.

   
(2)   the sequester.  the economic stats continue to reflect a growing economy despite the sequester, the tax increase and the government shutdown.  So far the doomsayers have been proven wrong. 

We received some potentially great news this week---congress appears to be nearing a budget deal in which the spending reductions mandated by the sequester will be maintained but they will be applied in a more rationale, selective manner.  This is a win, win if it happens.

       The negatives:

(1) a vulnerable global banking system.  The investigations and fines continue a pace.  This week, Bank of America paid a $400 million settlement to Freddie Mac and the European Commission imposed E1.7 billion in fines on multiple banks for manipulation of the interest rate derivatives market.

And there is more coming (medium):

And the risk grows (medium and a must read):

American justice---you wonder why financial fraud keeps occurring (medium): 

‘My concern here.....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.’

      And (medium):

      Saturday morning humor (3 minute video):

(2)   fiscal policy.  As I noted above, the budget debate is in process and it looks like [hope, hope] while there is no ‘grand bargain’ [lower tax rates, broaden tax base, reduce spending] in the offing, our elected representatives will at least hold the line on the spending cuts mandated by the sequester.

I count that as good news even though [a] the national debt continues to grow            and [b] according to the CBO, even if the sequester remains in place, the deficit will start to grow again in 2016---largely a function of Obamacare. 

Speaking of which, the propaganda machine is telling us that the ‘front end’ of the enrollment site has been fixed.  Even assuming that to be correct, we continue to be inundated daily with one SNAFU after another in the overall operation of Obamacare.  Plus no one has a clue what this monstrosity is going to cost both in human and monetary terms---and that is not good news. 

(3)   the potential negative impact of central bank money printing:  The key point here is that [a] the Fed has inflated bank reserves far beyond any comparable level in history and [b] while this hasn’t been an economic problem to date, {i} it still has to withdraw all those reserves from the system without creating any disruptions---a task that I regularly point out it has proven inept at in the past and {ii} it has created or is creating asset bubbles in the stock market as well as in the auto, student and mortgage loan markets. 

Nothing really new on this issue this week other than the constant flow of  inconsistent policy statements from FOMC members and the endless speculation as to when, as and if tapering will begin and how disruptive to the markets it will be.    

You know my position: there are two possible ending scenarios in this tragedy: [a] the Fed remains paralyzed by the difficulty of their position and the Markets eventually take matters into their own hands, spiking upward the entire yield curve and forcing the Fed into a transition to tighter money by raising rates at the short end, [b] in desperation to be showing that it is doing something, the Fed acts and bungles the transition on its own.

Related to [a] above, the US bond markets began to weaken again this week and the Japanese bond market took it in the snoot---and it is this market that has been the funding source for much of the carry trade.  If that starts to reverse, global yield assets could be in for some negative volatility.  Finally, lurking in the background is Chinese monetary policy which appears to be tightening. 

The central point of all of this is not when but how the transition process to tighter monetary policy occurs.  My bet is that history repeats itself and the Fed bungles the process, most likely by not tightening fast enough.

(4)   a blow up in the Middle East.  The negotiations on curbing Iran’s nuclear program resumed; and there is talk of some kind of agreement.  Although no one seems to agree what the agreement is.  That doesn’t really bother me; what does, is that Obama will give away the ranch in order to generate a bit of what He at least thinks is good news.  If that occurs, it will likely put Israel and most of the sunni muslim powers on red alert and could likely be more de-stabilizing than no agreement.

(5)   finally, the sovereign and bank debt crisis in Europe.  The economic news out of Europe remained mixed this week.  My hope is that Europe is recovering in the same fashion as the US---slowly, fitfully but on a sustained basis.  That would allow our ‘muddle through’ scenario to remain in tact. 

Bottom line:  while this week’s economic data was about as good as it could get, I still believe that US economic improvement is and will be sluggish. We did receive a very positive consumer sentiment number, assuaging at least temporarily my concern about the potential impact on business and consumer confidence of the ongoing dysfunction in Washington.  Speaking of which, if the budget negotiations end up as rumored, that would be a short term positive.

There was little out of Europe this week to alter our outlook which remains that it will ‘muddle through’.

Monetary policy, more specifically QEInfinity, remains the major risk to our forecast for several reasons: (1) it fosters lousy fiscal policy, (2) the longer it goes on, the greater the risk that the transition from easy to tight money will cause severe dislocations and (3) the Fed may be in a position where it could lose control of the transition process [assuming it even has a plan and that the plan could actually work] to multiple sources---China, Japan, the Markets themselves to name a few.  My guess is that the Fed will do very little until forced to by an outside force.  The only question is how much larger will the Fed’s balance sheet be when that happens.

This week’s data:

(1)                                  housing: weekly mortgage and purchase applications were terrible; September new home sales were awful but October sales were gangbusters,

(2)                                  consumer:  weekly retail sales were mixed; November consumer confidence fell; November light vehicle sales were above expectations; weekly jobless claims fell, the ADP private payroll report was above estimates as was November nonfarm payroll; the unemployment rate fell to 7.0%; October personal income fell while spending was right on target; November consumer sentiment soared,

(3)                                  industry: the November Market PMI was stronger than estimated as was the November ISM manufacturing index; however, ISM nonmanufacturing index was below forecasts; the  September construction spending lagged but October spending more than made up for it; October factory orders fell less than anticipated,

(4)                                  macroeconomic: revised third quarter GDP was better than expected; third quarter corporate profits were slightly above consensus; the Fed Beige Book continued to report modest to moderate economic growth across all geographic areas.

The Market-Disciplined Investing
           
  Technical

The indices (DJIA 16020, S&P 1805) had a volatile week, with the Averages down five days in a row only to recapture the lion’s share of the decline on Friday and finish back above the 16000/1800 level.  Both are well within uptrends along all timeframes: short term (15472-20472, 1740-1894), intermediate term (15472-20472, 1648-2229) and long term (5050-17400, 728-1900).

Volume on Friday was down after having been up every day of the aforementioned five day Market decline; breadth improved but not as much as I expected. I am not trying to talk my book here.  Price is truth but declining volume and uninspiring breadth are not positive signs on a big up price day.  The VIX fell 8%, but remains well within its short term trading range.  A confirmed breach of this boundary would be a positive for stocks.

The long Treasury was up fractionally, finishing well within a short term trading range and an intermediate term downtrend and continuing to build a head and shoulders formation.

GLD was also up but that doesn’t soften its terrible pin action of late.  It closed within its short and intermediate term downtrends and lingers near the lower boundary of its long term trading range---a breach of which would be very bad news for GLD holders.  If there is any good news in this sorry tale, it is that it is holding above that lower boundary.

Bottom line:  all trends of both indices are up.  Every time that there is a hint that a correction is near (the earlier two ‘outside’ down days and recent five day decline), prices snap right back.  True, the bounce had a lot to do with the Market being oversold and the number of divergences continues to grow.  But so far, price is truth and the truth is stock prices are going up. 

Nevertheless, I continue to believe that the most likely upside targets are the upper boundaries of the Averages long term uptrends (17400/1900).  If that is the case and the downside is simply Fair Value (11600/1440), then the risk reward from current levels is not all the attractive.

If one of our stocks trades into its Sell Half Range, our Portfolios will act accordingly.

               
   Fundamental-A Dividend Growth Investment Strategy

The DJIA (16020) finished this week about 38.1% above Fair Value (11600) while the S&P (1805) closed 25.3% overvalued (1440).  Incorporated in that ‘Fair Value’ judgment is some sort of half assed attempt at getting fiscal policy under control, a botched Fed transition from easy to tight money, a historically low long term secular growth rate of the economy and a ‘muddle through’ scenario in Europe.

The economy continues to track our forecast.  Indeed, this week’s data was especially positive including the employment numbers. Plus the terrific University of Michigan consumer sentiment report was a relief in view of my concerns about business and consumer confidence. 

Even better, our political class seems to be on the verge of doing the right thing for a change---if the budget negotiations end as rumored.  That said, we have no clue what Obamacare could cost in both human and monetary terms; and until we do, this thing is like a turd in a punch bowl.

Economic news out of Europe continue to be mixed but there is nothing to indicate that our ‘muddle through’ scenario isn’t operative.

The wild card in our economic/Market future is QEInfinity.  The debate continues within the Fed and among market participants on when to taper, by how much and what the likely consequences will be.

The Market’s rather sanguine view of this problem notwithstanding, I continue to believe that (1) QE has to end, (2) what prompts the end is not necessarily in the hands of the Fed, (3) but when it does end, the Market impact is likely to be ugly and (4) the longer it goes on, the uglier the impact.

Bottom line: the assumptions in our Economic Model haven’t changed; though we received positive news on almost all fronts this week save the only one that counts, i.e. monetary policy.

Nor have they changed in our Valuation Model.  I remain confident in the Fair Values calculated---meaning that stocks are overvalued.  So our Portfolios maintain their above average cash position.  Any move to higher levels would encourage more trimming of their equity positions.

          What has to be confusing for many (including moi) is Market reaction to the economic news flow.  Prior to Friday, psychology appeared to be operating on a good news is bad news thesis.  Then on Friday, good news became good news.  Of course, we have intermittently experienced an any news is good news environment this year.  If that continues then clearly we are in store for another leg up---which seems the most likely scenario given the current positive calendar bias.  On the other hand, Friday’s pin action could have been nothing more than a bounce from an oversold condition.  Hence, the confusion.

That said, I can’t emphasize strongly enough that I believe that the key investment strategy today is to take advantage of the current high prices to sell any stock that has been a disappointment or no longer fits your investment criteria and to trim the holding of any stock that has doubled or more in price.

          To that end, this week the Aggressive Growth Portfolio Sold its holdings in two stocks (ATRI and ALTR) that failed their recent investment review due to deteriorating financials.
       
DJIA                                                    S&P

Current 2013 Year End Fair Value*                11600                                                   1440
Fair Value as of 12/31/13                                 11600                                                  1440
Close this week                                                16020                                                  1805

Over Valuation vs. 12/31 Close
              5% overvalued                                 12180                                                    1512
            10% overvalued                                 12760                                                   1606 
            15% overvalued                                  13340                                             1656
            20% overvalued                                 13920                                                    1728   
            25% overvalued                                   14500                                                  1800   
            30% overvalued                                   15080                                                  1872
            35% overvalued                                   15660                                                  1944
            40% overvalued                                   16240                                                  2016
           
Under Valuation vs.12/31 Close
            5% undervalued                             11020                                                      1368
10%undervalued                                  10440                                                  1296   
15%undervalued                             9860                                                    1224

* 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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