Posts Tagged ‘Chief Investment Strategist’
Month of May: Sell and Go Away, or Hang in There? (Sonders)
Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
May 14, 2012
by Liz Ann Sonders, Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Key Points
- We believe the stock market's correction is likely to be less severe this year relative to 2010 or 2011.
- Be aware of the possible perils of following a "sell in May" trading strategy.
- For now, macro concerns—including Europe and the looming "fiscal cliff"—are trumping better micro news.
The stock market is in correction mode and investors are on edge. There are likely several reasons for the weakness, including what we pointed out in our early-April report on elevated optimistic sentiment. Since sentiment tends to work a contrarian magic on the market, we were anticipating a period of consolidation after the stellar six-month, 30% run off the early October 2011 low—and we're getting it.
Of course, we're also yet again dealing with the eurozone debt crisis, but also choppier economic indicators in the United States recently, a volatile election season and concerns about the so-called "fiscal cliff" heading into the end of this year. But one of the questions I've gotten most often recently has been about the seasonal phenomenon called "sell in May and go away," and whether the market's in store for another summer swoon like we've had the past two years.
Macro trumping micro
I'll start with "sell in May," but before I do, I want to address an important general observation. As we've noted many times recently in reports and media appearances; and as detailed in a terrific recent report by Wall Street research firm Wolfe Trahan, macro is trumping micro. One of the reasons for this is the decline in guidance investors are receiving from company managements.
In the past, guidance was often an anchor of reason in volatile times. Events like European elections or spiking eurozone sovereign bond yields might not have been such big market-moving events when we could rest on US companies' guidance as to the future. Add to that rapid-fire trading, shortened time horizons, greatly increased access to information, greatly increased speed of news' dissemination, and much more globalized economic and financial systems, and you have a recipe for increased volatility around macro events.
Sell in May?
Much is made every year of the "sell in May" phenomenon. Its basis is rooted in the fact that the best performance for the market has generally come in the November through April period, while the worst has come between May and October.
There is some truth to the adage. According to data compiled by Ned Davis Research (NDR), through the beginning of May this year the average performance for the period from May 1 through October 31 each year since 1950 was 1.2%. The average performance for the period from November 1 through April 30 each year since 1950 was 7.0%.
As compelling as those numbers may seem, there are many things to consider, especially if it's your inclination to develop a trading strategy around those seasonal patterns. First, the calendar months individually tend to fall into either the "hot" or "cold" columns for performance, as you can see in the table below. Three of the six months that fall into the "all out" period spanning from May through October are actually historically strong months, while three of the six months that fall into the "all in" period spanning from November through April are actually historically weak months.

Source: NDR, Inc. (Further distribution prohibited without prior permission. Copyright 2012 © Ned Davis Research, Inc. All rights reserved.), as of 1928-April 30, 2012.
As you can see, all of the seasons seem to be adequately represented in both columns. And what we know for a fact is that time horizons have become much shorter over the recent years, and the reaction function gets triggered more often. It's likely that many investors may find their patience tested when experiencing either a great month (or two) during the May-October "all out" period and/or a poor month (or two) during the November-April "all in" period. Of course, the seasonal trading strategy must consider transaction costs and tax implications.
Sector performance May-October
For investors who like to take a tactical approach to the seasonal tendencies, a sector bias strategy may be worth considering. Before I get to the details, let me remind our clients that we moved toward a more sector-neutral strategy back in early April when we became more cautious about the market in the short term. Presently the only outperform rating we have is on the information technology sector, while the only underperform rating we have is on the utilities sector.
As you can see in the table below, courtesy of The Leuthold Group, cyclical groups have tended to outperform during the market's traditionally strong November-April period, while defensive sectors have been the relative winners during the customarily weaker May-October period. In fact, the size and persistence of these effects have been impressive (at least since 1989, the span of the analysis).
S&P 500 Sector Seasonality

Source: The Leuthold Group, October, 1989-April, 2012. Defensive sectors: consumer staples, health care and utilities. Cyclical sectors: consumer discretionary, industrials and materials.
Buy in May in election years?
There's also the rub of this being an election year, during which sitting out the May through October period has historically not worked well. Using the Dow Jones Industrial Average because of its longer history, the market has been up 4.5% during election years in the May-October span versus 2.6% for all years (including election years). And for what it's worth, according to NDR, the market has bucked seasonal weakness even more when the incumbent president has won, with a median gain of 7.6% versus 0.5% when the incumbent president has lost.
NDR provides a clue as to why this is the case: A correction has occurred during the second quarter of election years, on average (sound familiar?). But the correction has tended to be concentrated in the second quarter, setting the stage for a summer rally.
2012's positive offsets to present weakness
I actually think the scenario noted above is more likely than not this year. Muscle memory has many investors fretting a repeat of 2011 and 2010, when economic weakness in the spring led to brutal corrections each year, to the tune of –19% and –16%, respectively. But there's a long list of positive offsets this year relative to the past two years:
- Inflation is coming down, especially among commodity prices.
- Credit growth is quite strong, especially for consumers.
- Housing has improved markedly.
- The US manufacturing sector is humming.
- NFIB's small business survey made recent upside breakout.
- Job growth is much better.
- Consumer confidence is improving.
- Private-sector leverage ratios are much improved (debt servicing costs are extremely low).
- Recovery in state/local government spending.
- The US economy somewhat decoupling from rest of world; at least Europe.
- US bank capital/health is much better than Europe's.
- The European Central Bank's Long-Term Refinancing Operations have reduced likelihood of global financial contagion.
- Germany appears more willing to accept higher inflation, opening the door to easier monetary policy for the eurozone.
- Valuations are quite cheap, especially on forward earnings.
- Investor sentiment has improved sharply with the correction to-date (meaning pessimism has kicked back in).
I don't think the present correction is over, but do believe it could be kept to within the normal 5–10% range. Since the current bull market began in March 2009, the S&P 500 has had 15 corrections of more than 5% that were preceded by at least a 5% rally (consistent with this year's pattern). The table below highlights their duration and ultimate percentage drop.
S&P 500 5% Corrections

Source: NDR, Inc. (Further distribution prohibited without prior permission. Copyright 2012 © Ned Davis Research, Inc. All rights reserved.), as of May 11, 2012.
Wall of worry being rebuilt
Tempering my short-term concern has been the aforementioned improvement in sentiment conditions. That said, I think there's likely a bit more pessimism needed to establish a short-term bottom for the market. As you can see, the well-watched NDR Crowd Sentiment Poll (CSP) has moved decisively lower, but not yet to the extreme pessimism zone:
Bye-Bye Optimism

Source: NDR, Inc. (Further distribution prohibited without prior permission. Copyright 2012 © Ned Davis Research, Inc. All rights reserved.), as May 8, 2012.
NDR noted in a recent report several key reasons to expect the correction to be within the normal 5–10% range:
- Initial reversals in CSP extremes are consistent with median declines of about 8% within six months.
- The first half of election years have shown median declines of just less than 10%.
- Once "pre-waterfall" highs have been exceeded, as occurred in February of this year, median market declines have ranged between –3% and –7% within six months.
Saving the worst for last
I think investors and the media may be underestimating the impact the coming "fiscal cliff" is having on market and business psychology. The fiscal cliff refers to the near-simultaneous January 2013 expiration of the Bush tax cuts, the payroll tax cuts, emergency unemployment benefits and the sequester (automatic spending cuts) established in last summer's debt-limit agreement.
The range of estimates for its ultimate impact are, unfortunately, quite wide. The lowest estimate I've seen comes from NDR, using Congressional Budget Office assumptions, with the impact at a relatively "low" 2.4% of US gross domestic product (GDP). Most estimates tend to cluster around 3.5% of GDP.
It's impossible to know what's right because different assumptions are being used. But the consensus is closing in on a worst-case scenario of about 4% of GDP. ISI recently put the numbers into three distinct buckets, each with about $200 billion of impact:
- Provisions likely to create a fiscal drag (approximately (≈) $221 billion or 1.4% of GDP):
- Cuts to discretionary spending (≈$84 billion)
- Tax increases on upper-income Americans included in the Affordable Care Act (≈$21 billion)
- Payroll tax cut (≈$116 billion)
- Bush tax cuts (≈$200 billion or 1.3% of GDP, although likely impact would be spread over several years)
- Items unlikely to be allowed to take affect and thus aren't likely to create a fiscal drag (≈$179 billion or 1.1% of GDP):
- Huge increase in number of Americans paying the alternative minimum tax (≈$94 billion)
- Sequester cuts (~$85 billion)
There are three additional items that don't fall neatly into ISI's three buckets, including tax extenders, extended unemployment insurance benefits and the "doc fix," which would together total about $75 billion. These items are not expected to create a significant fiscal drag.
I actually think this is having a larger impact on psychology than many believe, especially on the confidence of corporate leaders and their ability to plan (and guide Wall Street's analysts) for the future.
Muscle memory may fail us this year
In sum, there's much to fret about, and volatility is likely to remain elevated until this correction has run its course. But a lot has changed in the past two years—much for the better—particularly for domestically oriented US companies. There's at least a little bit of decoupling underway, certainly between the United States and Europe, and that's likely to assist in keeping the correction from mirroring the ones in 2010 and 2011.
Important Disclosures
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market conditions. Data contained herein from third party providers is obtained from what are considered reliable sources. However, its accuracy, completeness or reliability cannot be guaranteed.Examples provided are for illustrative purposes only and not intended to be reflective of results you can expect to achieve.
Tags: Anchor, Bond Yields, Charles Schwab, Chief Investment Strategist, Debt Crisis, Economic Indicators, Election Season, European Elections, Liz Ann, Media Appearances, Micro News, Perils, Seasonal Phenomenon, Senior Vice President, Sentiment, Stock Market, Swoon, Trading Strategy, Trahan, Volatile Times
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Balance, Grasshopper (Saut)
Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
May 15, 2012
I received so many requests to put last Tuesday’s verbal strategy comments into written form, and that’s exactly what I have done this morning. To wit, I was always entranced with the 1970’s TV show “Kung Fu” starring David Carradine as Kwai Chang Caine. The show centered on an orphaned American boy (Kwai Chang) that is admitted as a student to the Shaolin temple in China. There his mentor, Master Po, teaches him the ways of the Shaolin priests. In addition to learning the martial arts Kwai Chang, affectionately named “grasshopper,” is also instructed in the ways of life. In one such lesson Master Po says, “Balance, grasshopper, balance” – implying that everything in life needs to be “in balance.” Similarly, investors’ portfolios need to be “in balance,” or more appropriately rebalanced periodically.
Portfolio rebalancing, when done correctly, is an art form. Simply stated, portfolio rebalancing is the strategic redistribution of asset classes within a portfolio to keep said portfolio’s objectives in line with its original objective. As John Valentine, of Valentine Capital, notes:
To provide a simplified allegory, think of investment planning for the future as an automobile, conveying an investor to his or her financial goals. The investment portfolio is its motor, the asset allocation model is the fuel mixture and the assets invested are the fuel. The more efficiently the motor runs, the greater the speed with which the whole vehicle travels toward the destination. Should the fuel mixture, or asset allocation run too rich, the motor wastes precious fuel. Should it run too thin, the car has trouble achieving enough forward momentum. ... Many individuals on the road to their financial goals fail to make these periodic adjustments and still eventually arrive. Not surprisingly, the investor who rebalances his portfolio at regular intervals may arrive sooner and with more fuel in his tank. ... Rebalancing a portfolio is crucial to the investor seeking to reduce the volatility in a portfolio and increase cash flow simultaneously. ... The longer a portfolio is left unbalanced, the more compromised its asset allocation may become. There are two potentially negative repercussions associated with a compromised allocation. Being overexposed to the downside and underexposed to the upside. Don’t let this happen to you!
Regrettably, most individual investors don’t have the discipline, or the skill sets, to actively rebalance their portfolios. That’s why individuals are best advised to seek professional assistance in rebalancing their portfolios, or for that matter seek a professional advisor to help them with all of their investment needs. Manifestly, correct asset allocation can increase investment returns and lower risk when “bets” are scaled to the advisor’s skill level. Most good investment professionals have successful “hit rates” of around 60%. That means they make a lot of mistakes and therefore should make smaller allocation bets. History suggests that large bets will eventually cause large losses and the end of an asset allocation program. Nevertheless, most clients and many advisors want to make bigger bets than their provable skills justify.
Clearly, asset allocation plays a key role in the investment process; however, I have some other thoughts I think you should consider. For example, a lot of what passes for brilliance, or incompetence, in investing is the ebb and flow of investment style (growth, value, foreign, small cap, etc.) and/or sector performance. Since opportunities by style and sectors tend to regress, past performance is often negatively correlated with future relative performance. Still, many investors feel compelled to go with past performance and therefore rotate into previously strong styles, and strong sectors, which then regress leaving them with losses. A good advisor can mitigate this tendency, but a good advisor is harder to pick than a good stock.
To this point, good advisors often internalize decisions while amateurs learn all the rules and procedures. It follows that amateurs can often precisely explain what they are doing and why they are doing it. An expert, however, often just knows when they are right. Since investors typically want to hear a logical and clear-cut investment process, many tend to end up with an eloquent amateur rather than a sometimes-incomprehensible expert. Ladies and gentlemen, never underestimate the effectiveness of an eccentric or unusual advisor since “knack” tends to win out over learned skill in the investment arena. Most important is getting the big picture right and the best long-term predictor of future “big picture” equity returns is the current value of the market – things like, price/earnings, price/dividends, price/sales, price/replacement cost (Tobin’s Q ratio), etc. Currently, all of these measurements indicate the equity markets are reasonably priced.
To this rebalancing portfolios point, I recommended doing so after the “buying stampede” ended in late January. My suggestion was to raise some cash before the envisioned 5–8% correction. At last Wednesday’s intraday low the S&P 500 (SPX/1353.39) was off 5.5% from its April 2 high, and in my verbal strategy comments I recommended starting to put some of that cash back to work in equities. While the “set up” wasn’t perfect, because we never got that pornographic plunge type of hour into the 1320–1340 support zone, at Wednesday’s low of ~1343 the SPX was close enough for government work. Moreover, the NYSE McClellan Oscillator was probing oversold territory (see chart on page 3) and there was a huge downside non-confirmation. Verily, last week the SPX broke below its April 10 reaction low of 1357.38, yet all of the other indices I monitor did not violate their respective recent reaction lows (read: downside non-confirmation). Then there is the continuing divergence between the McClellan Oscillator and the pricing action of the SPX, which often occurs at an intermediate-term bottom. And, then there was this from my friend Jim Kennedy, captain of the astute Atlanta-based hedge fund consulting firm of Divergence Analysis, whose proprietary stock market analyzing software I use and embrace:
After we sent out our email prices continued to slide last Friday. At the close, our S&P 500 and NYSE models closed the day with some divergence bottoming signals. Monday should be the test as to whether prices hold here and rally, or fail (see his charts on page 3).
Plainly, I agree with Jim’s comments for as stated, “While the ‘set up’ wasn’t perfect, it was close enough for government work.” I too think the first part of this week is critical because the SPX has tested overhead resistance at 1366 twice and has not had any success in traveling above that level. This lack of rebound energy suggests the SPX could drop into the often mentioned 1320–1340 support zone, which should mark the bottom for this correction and provide another good entry point for long stock positions. Last week, however, the only major index that was positive was the D-J Utility Index ($UTIL/472.01). Meanwhile, of the 10 macro sectors only Healthcare, Utilities, and Telecommunication were up on the week. The strength in Telecommunication was likely driven by the upside chart breakouts in AT&T (T/$33.59/Market Perform), Verizon (VZ/$41.16/Market Perform), and Centurylink (CTL/$39.52/Strong Buy). Speaking to industry groups, of the 63 groups I monitor the ones currently on “buy signals” for the short/intermediate term are: REITs, Insurance P/C, Banks, Restaurants, Building Materials, Specialty Chemicals, Food, Healthcare Supply/Equipment, and Pharmaceuticals. Some names from Raymond James’ research universe that screened positively on both their fundamental and technical metrics according to my work, and are favorably rated by our fundamental analysts, include: Allstate (ALL/$34.83/Strong Buy), Simon Property (SPG/$156.08/Outperform), Abbott Labs (ABT/$62.04/Outperform), Cerner (CERN/$79.92/Outperform), Intuitive Surgical (ISRG/$558.95/Outperform), Huntington Bancshares (HBAN/$6.54/Strong Buy), and Kimco Realty (KIM/$19.61/Outperform).
The call for this week: The stock market has been consolidating its huge gains from the October 4 undercut low for roughly three months in a ~75 point range (1350–1420). That consolidation has allowed the market’s internal energy to be rebuilt and the oversold condition to be worked off. Because of that process, I continue to think the odds that we will see a move below the 1320–1340 zone remain pretty dim. Accordingly, I suspect the stock market is going to put in an intermediate bottom probably this week.
Tags: Allegory, Art Form, Asset Allocation Model, Asset Classes, Chief Investment Strategist, David Carradine, Financial Goals, Fuel Mixture, Grasshopper, Investment Planning, Investment Portfolio, jeffrey saut, John Valentine, Last Tuesday, Periodic Adjustments, Portfolio Rebalancing, Precious Fuel, Raymond James, S Tv, Shaolin Temple In China
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Panic Is Not a Strategy—Nor Is Greed (Sonders)
Monday, May 14th, 2012
Panic Is Not a Strategy—Nor Is Greed
Updated May 10, 2012
by Liz Ann Sonders, Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Key Points
- Originally publishing in 2008, it's time for a refresher about the perils of panic.
- Asset allocation, diversification and rebalancing are as close to a "free lunch" as you can get as an investor.
- In a world where time horizons have shrunk precipitously, think longer-term.
If markets are good at one thing, it's reminding investors that they don't go up uninterrupted forever. We witnessed several bruising corrections in 2011 before the market's strong rally between October 2011 and April 2012. As the chart "Fear Spikes Again" below illustrates, the CBOE Volatility Index® has picked up again, but remains below the unparalleled heights of the 2008 credit crisis and the more-recent elevation in 2011.
Fear Up, But Well Down From Highs

Source: FactSet, as of April 20, 2012. The CBOE Volatility Index ("VIX") is a registered trademark of the Chicago Board Options Exchange. The VIX Index shows the market's expectation of 30-day volatility. For more information on the VIX, visit www.cboe.com/micro/vix/
We're always quick to remind investors that neither panic nor greed is an investment strategy, and that the best foundation to help protect a portfolio against the unpredictable is having—and sticking with—a long-term strategic asset allocation plan.
Mindset matters: strategic trumps tactical
In reality, investors should rarely, if ever, react to a dramatic short-term move in the market. As intriguing as it may seem to try to catch bottoms and get out at tops in order to reap big profits (or so you think), the "tactical" (or shorter-term) approach to investing has its limitations ... and its risks.
We believe it's the "strategic" asset allocation decision—and the ability to stick with it through the discipline of rebalancing—that will ultimately reap the greatest rewards. These decisions are not a function of short-term market gyrations or forecasts (mine, yours or anyone else's), but are tied to your risk tolerance and long-term goals. Developing and maintaining the right long-term asset mix is by far the most important set of decisions a client will ever make.
Never before has information about the global economy and markets been more readily available and disseminated. As a result, global markets have become very interconnected. In turn, our reaction mechanisms have kicked in, and investor time horizons have shortened dramatically—but not necessarily to our advantage. Yes, the long term is really just a series of short-term events, but it's how we react to them that decides our ultimate fate as investors.
Asset allocation and diversification: investors' "free lunch"
One of the most important areas where Schwab offers advice is the development of a long-term strategic asset allocation plan. Many investors assume that their position along the risk spectrum from conservative to aggressive is largely based on their age and time horizon. But a more important factor is their risk tolerance. Also important is judging the difference between an investor's financial risk tolerance (their ability to financially withstand volatile markets) and their emotional risk tolerance—a spread that's often quite wide and only acknowledged during tumultuous market environments.
I've known plenty of older investors who thrive on the risk associated with an aggressive investment stance. I've also known plenty of young investors who can't stomach any losses. Too often, investors use a rearview mirror to make their investing decisions, by looking at past performance as a guide to future results. A mirror is a valuable tool but only when turned on yourself to judge your own circumstances—tolerance for risk, time horizon, income needs, etc. As I've often said, there are very few free lunches in investing. Asset allocation, diversification and periodic rebalancing are as close as you get.
Risk tolerance: Know what you can stomach
In the chart "Schwab's Strategic Asset Allocation Models" below, you'll see our long-term recommendations regarding different asset classes for three types of investors: conservative, moderate and aggressive.1 Note the vast differences in allocations to riskier asset classes, including international equity, as you move up the risk spectrum.

Clearly, over the long term, given the better performance by the riskier asset classes, a more aggressive allocation has historically reaped higher rewards in terms of returns. But there is a dark side to an aggressive posture's higher returns—the risk taken in getting there.
Tags: Allocation Plan, Cboe Volatility Index, Charles Schwab, Chicago Board Options, Chicago Board Options Exchange, Chief Investment Strategist, Credit Crisis, Diversification, Free Lunch, Greed, Investment Strategy, Liz Ann, Perils, Rewa, Senior Vice President, Strategic Asset Allocation, Term Approach, Time Horizons, Unparalleled Heights, Vix Index, Volatility Index Vix
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Here We Go Again....or Not? (Sonders)
Sunday, May 13th, 2012
Here We Go Again....or Not?
May 11, 2012
by Liz Ann Sonders
Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.,
Brad Sorensen
CFA, Director of Market and Sector Analysis, Schwab Center for Financial Research, and,
Michelle Gibley
CFA, Director of International Research, Schwab Center for Financial Research
Key Points
- Softer economic data has prompted concerns that the market may be headed for a summer swoon—similar to the previous two years. We believe the backdrop is decidedly different (and better) this time around but investor and business confidence will continue to be important.
- Some appear to be hoping for weaker data in order to spur the Fed to enact another round of quantitative easing (QE3). We believe the bar is much higher and that the Fed should look to return to a more normal monetary stance. Complicating the overall picture and the Fed’s job is the coming "fiscal cliff" out of Washington at the end of this year.
- The political situation in Europe has injected even more uncertainty into an already tenuous environment. Public cries for a reduction in austerity, despite many proposed measures not taking affect yet, raises questions as to the sustainability of the eurozone as is. Spending cuts are important, but must be accompanied by serious structural changes that encourage growth and innovation to provide hope for the future.
NOTE: The next Schwab Market Perspective will be published one week later than normal—June 1, 2012.
We've seen this movie before … or have we? After starting out the previous two years in a positive direction, stocks experienced disappointing downturns beginning around this time of each year and continuing throughout the subsequent summers. Recently we've seen economic data soften, global concerns rise, Treasury yields fall, and stocks correct, prompting more questions as to whether we're seeing a very unwelcome sequel. We believe not.
Before getting into why we don't believe we're in store for Summer Swoon III (a sequel, like many, that no one wants to see), we want to again point out that trying to time the market is largely a losing game for investors. And we also continue to remind investors that sticking to a disciplined long-term plan is key, rather that chasing crowd psychology or past returns. We're reminded of the continued chasing mentality that almost inevitably leads to disappointment as ISI Research reported that bond mutual fund inflows were at a record high during the first four months of the year, while equity fund outflows were the third largest on record.
Currently, investor apprehension is rising, indicated by increasing volatility and a stock market in correction mode, as the possibility of a replay of the previous two years is considered. However, we believe there are several important fundamental differences that help to support a renewed market advance before too long. First, we aren't dealing with any major natural crises such as the Japanese earthquake and tsunami we saw last year; or the spike in food inflation that unleashed the "Arab Spring." In fact, commodity prices are largely moving lower, allowing central banks around the world to ease monetary policy, as we’ve seen in Brazil, Australia, and India among others. And while there are still major concerns regarding the debt crisis in Europe, discussed in further detail below, the European Central Bank (ECB) has made moves that indicate they will be aggressive to preserve some semblance of stability in the European markets. Finally, in the United States we're seeing further signs of housing stabilization, a continued improving job situation, and a rebound in auto sales, which is now a larger driver of GDP than residential investment.
But there's the impact of "muscle memory" given the past two years' volatility; and perception can become reality. There is a risk that investors increasingly lose confidence in the economic recovery, pressuring stocks, and causing businesses to again pare back. In the short term, market performance can have more to do with sentiment than fundamentals, again illustrating the folly of short-term timing.
Temporary Softness or a New Trend?
Data has been mixed lately, with regional manufacturing surveys largely disappointing: the Chicago PMI fell to its lowest level since November 2009, although remaining in expansionary territory and the Dallas Fed Index slipped into negative territory. The national index provided more encouragement as the ISM Manufacturing Index rose to 54.8, the best level since June 2011, while the forward looking new orders component rose to 58.2, the best level since April 2011. This is distinctly better than the trend in most global PMIs. However, more concern came in the form of the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index, which softened to 53.5 from 56. But while the important service sector showed some softness, we continue to see consumers improve their balance sheets, which should help to support spending going forward.
Consumers' debt position is much improved

Source: FactSet, Federal Reserve. As of May 7, 2012. Includes mortgage and consumer debt, auto lease payments, rental payments, homeowners insurance, and property tax payments.
Key to consumer spending continuing to hold up is likely the continued improvement in the job market, which has been in question lately. Jobless claims started to creep higher before experiencing a relatively sharp reversal recently and remaining well below the critical 400,000 level. However, payroll growth continued to be disappointing as a soft reading for March was followed with another one in April. We saw ADP report a mere 119,000 private jobs were added, while the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls expanded by a weak 115,000 positions; although the previous two months were revised higher. The unemployment rate fell to 8.1% due largely to a drop in the labor participation rate, which now stands at 63.6%—the lowest level since 1981.
Tags: Austerity, Backdrop, Business Confidence, Charles Schwab, Chief Investment Strategist, Economic Data, Eurozone, Global Concerns, Liz Ann, Market Perspective, Monetary Stance, Political Situation, Positive Direction, Research Key, Sector Analysis, Senior Vice President, Sequel, Sustainability, Swoon, Treasury Yields
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Jeffrey Saut: Investment Outlook (May 7, 2012)
Monday, May 7th, 2012
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
May 7, 2012
“Toto, I have a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.”
... Dorothy; The Wizard of Oz
While most people know “The Wizard of Oz” as one of the most popular films ever made, what is little known is that the book was based on an economic and political commentary surrounding the debate over “sound money” that occurred in the late 1800s. Indeed, L. Frank Baum’s book was penned in 1900 following unrest in the agriculture arena due to the debate between gold, silver, and the dollar standard. The book, therefore, is supposedly an allegory of these historical events, making the events easier to understand. In said book, Dorothy represents traditional American values. The Scarecrow portrays the American farmer, the Tin Man represents the workers, and the Cowardly Lion depicts William Jennings Bryan. Recall that at the time Mr. Bryan was the official standard bearer for the “silver movement,” as well as the unsuccessful Democratic presidential candidate of 1896. Interestingly, in the original story Dorothy’s slippers were made of silver, not ruby, implying that silver was the Populists’ solution to the nation’s economic woes. Meanwhile, the Yellow Brick Road was the gold standard, and Toto (Dorothy’s faithful dog) represented the Prohibitionists, who were an important part of the silverite coalition. The Wicked Witch of the West symbolizes President William McKinley; and the Wizard is Mark Hanna, who was the chairman of the Republican Party and made promises that he could not keep. Obviously, “Oz” is the abbreviation for “ounce.”
It should be noted that before 1873 the U.S. dollar was defined as consisting of either 22.5 grains of gold or 371 grains of silver. This set the legal price of silver in terms of gold at a ratio of roughly 16:1 and put the country on a gold/silver bimetallic standard. Since both metals had other uses than just coinage, whenever the ratio got out of whack rational people would buy the cheaper metal and take it to the mint for coinage. That provided a natural stabilizing arbitrage. With the 1873 Coinage Act, however, the silver dollar was omitted, effectively shifting the country from a bimetallic to purely a gold standard. Other countries soon followed, and as tons of silver was unloaded, the market price of silver to gold rose from 16:1 to a ratio of 40:1. The result was that the dollar was now linked to a metal that was getting scarcer. Particularly hurt by these events were the net debtors, among them the farmers because they had to face a rising real value of their dollar/gold denominated debts combined with declining agricultural prices. Now, while there was a bunch of “noise” in between (The Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890, the panic and depression of 1893, etc.), the situation hit its zenith in 1896 culminating with William Jennings Bryan’s “Cross of Gold” speech at the Democratic National Convention.
Plainly, the turmoil following the “1873 Coinage Act,” the “Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890,” and the subsequent panic, and depression, of 1893 left the phrase “time for a change” swirling across the country as citizens struggled to correct the numerous wrong-footed schemes that were so hastily conceived by the country’s elected leaders. While I have digressed, I find monetary history truly fascinating and would note that the value of our current dollar, measured in 1900 dollars, is worth roughly $0.03. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why you want to have your dollars in productive assets that have healthy cash flows, hopefully pay dividends, and will keep up with the inflation that is most certainly coming our way.
I revisit the dollar/gold topic this morning because I think the most important chart in the world may be in the process of breaking down. The chart in question is that of the U.S. Dollar. Since January of this year the Dollar Index ($DXY/79.59) has reversed its pattern of making higher highs and higher lows, as can be seen in the chart on page 3. Interestingly, the last short-term dollar “top out” occurred on last month’s bad employment report, so given Friday’s poor employment report the dollar’s path this week should be watched closely. Moreover, despite the official line from the powers that be, I think Ben Bernanke actually wants a lower dollar. Not only would it bring about the whiff of inflation that is needed, it also would increase our exports and allow us to pay back our debts with cheaper dollars. A breakdown below February’s intraday reaction low of 78.12, which would also break the index below its 200-day moving average (DMA) at 78.36, would likely confirm the dollar’s downside. The quid pro quo is I think a weaker dollar would be bullish for the equity markets.
Speaking to gold, I have been bullish on gold, and stuff stocks in general (energy, cement, timber, agriculture, water, electricity, precious metals, etc.), ever since China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001 on the assumption that when per capita incomes rise people consume more “stuff.” We rode that theme to large profits until the Dow Theory “sell signal” of November 2007 where said investments had grown into such large “bets” that we recommended selling 30% — 40% of our stuff stocks to rebalance portfolios. The strategy was to allow long-term capital gains to accrue to portfolios, and raise some cash, going into what we thought was going to be a difficult 2008. Since the stock market’s bottoming process began in October 2008 (actually on 10/10/08 when 92.6% of all stocks traded made new annual lows, a statistic I have not seen in more than 40 years in this business) gold has been on a tear, having rallied from $681 into last summer’s closing reaction high of $1891.90. At that time I warned investors I was putting “in” gold’s short/intermediate high, and recommended adjusting precious metals positions accordingly, when I bought six of our son’s gold coins to help fund his summer excursion to Europe. The result was I paid slightly over $1900 per coin; and, so far that has proven to be the peak price. While I think gold is in a consolidation pattern that will eventually be resolved with higher prices, I don’t think that will happen for a while.
Turning to the stock market, the S&P 500 (SPX/1369.10) and the NASDAQ Composite (COMP/2956.34) suffered their worst week of the year, falling 2.44% and 3.68%, respectively. The weekly wilt left both indices near their lows for the week, as well as below their 50-DMAs. Such action brings into view the intraday April reaction lows of 1357.38 for the SPX and 2946.04 for the COMP. A confirmed close below those levels would represent a break below what a technical analyst would term a “spread triple bottom” with short-term negative implications. That caused one old Wall Street wag to exclaim, “Triple bottoms rarely hold!” This week should hold the key for that statement. Last week’s consternations centered around economic and earnings reports. As we have been warning since the beginning of April, the economic reports have taken a decided turn towards the softer side. Last week that skein worsened since of the 21 reports released only seven came in better than expected. Likewise, the 1Q12 earning report “beat rate” has been softening over the past three weeks, having fallen from a 73% reading to last week’s 61% level for the S&P 1500. Even worse is the decline in companies giving positive forward earnings guidance. Of course, that is causing analysts to reduce their expectations. Accordingly, of the 10 S&P macro sectors the best upward earnings revision ratios are in Consumer Discretionary (+19.1%), Financials (+18.6%), and Industrial (+17.7%). Meanwhile, Energy has the worst ratio (-36.3%), likely driven by falling energy prices and bulging inventories.
The call for this week: If the spread triple bottom around SPX 1358 holds this week there should be another rally attempt, albeit still within the range-bound environment we have seen for the past eight weeks. If the 1358 level fails to hold, then we might just get what I have been looking since the beginning of February, a quick dip into the 1320 – 1340 support zone. If that occurs, it would most certainly leave the NYSE McClellan Oscillator very oversold, as well as finally raise my daily and weekly stock market internal energy indicators back to levels that would register a full load of energy, something I have been waiting for the past eight weeks. And this morning, given the “throw the bums out” election results in the EU, it looks like the SPX’s 1358 is at least going to be tested if not violated. Personally, I would like to see a plunge into the 1320 – 1340 zone, but they don’t run Wall Street for my benefit. As for vehicles under consideration for your “buy list,” in addition to the index exchange-traded product of your choice, in last week’s verbal strategy comment we listed three companies that are favorably rated by our fundamental analysts and are “triple plays.” Triple plays are companies that have beaten earnings/revenue estimates and have raised forward earnings guidance. Those names were: Abbott Labs (ABT/$62.41/Outperform); Equinix (EQIX/$158.94/Strong Buy); and Intuitive Surgical (ISRG/$565.16/Outperform).
Tags: American Farmer, Chief Investment Strategist, Cowardly Lion, Democratic Presidential Candidate, Dollar Standard, Economic Woes, Investment Outlook, jeffrey saut, L Frank Baum, Mark Hanna, President William Mckinley, Price Of Silver, Prohibitionists, Tin Man, Traditional American Values, Wicked Witch Of The West, William Jennings Bryan, William Mckinley, Wizard Of Oz, Yellow Brick Road
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Late Bull Stampede Turns Bears Into April Fools (Coté)
Monday, May 7th, 2012
by Douglas Coté, Chief Investment Strategist, ING Investment Management
The bears grew hopeful early in the month, as global markets were spooked by goings-on in the euro zone: Spain briefly brought back fears of bailout Armageddon, the Dutch government collapsed, and PMI numbers for the region came in weaker than expected. April Fools! The bull market remains intact and offers compelling value for those looking to build wealth.
At its April trough, the S&P 500 was down 3.5% for the month. However, the bull awoke mid-April, prodded by relentless corporate strength that continues to confound Wall Street. Blockbuster corporate profits were led by financials, followed by industrials and put over the top by technology. With a meager 0.89% consensus expectation for first quarter earnings growth, Wall Street got it wrong; in fact, considering that first quarter earnings growth, at press time, stands at an explosive 8.8%, “got it wrong” is a serious understatement. The S&P 500 surged into the end of the month, making up nearly all its lost ground.
This performance is no joke for those who are missing out on an extraordinary bull market that has just entered its fourth year. It is not too late for savers to turn into investors, but this market’s persistent and determined march forward will not wait for the hesitant. Investors must resist the all-ornothing approach to risk; a moderate risk posture has been handsomely rewarded over the past three years despite pockets of extreme volatility.
The questions for investors to ask are how and when to invest. We get into the “how” below. The answer to “when” is more straightforward — immediately! Don’t delay, because every day is a good day to invest during a bull market.
ING Global Perspectives Monthly Commentary May 2012
Tags: April Fools, Armageddon, Bailout, Blockbuster, Chief Investment Strategist, Corporate Profits, Corporate Strength, Dutch Government, Earnings Growth, Euro Zone, Extreme Volatility, Fourth Year, Global Markets, Global Perspectives, Industrials, Ing Investment Management, Moderate Risk, Press Time, Quarter Earnings, Stampede
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Roller Coaster Returns (Sonders)
Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012
April 27, 2012
Key Points
- Despite an earnings season that has been much better than expected so far, investors appear to be again focusing on more macro concerns. Europe and China are dominant concerns but US growth sustainability is also being questioned. We remain optimistic on the ultimate direction of the stock market.
- The Fed meeting provided no changes but did show a slightly more hawkish tilt in their economic forecasts. Meanwhile, the US government continues to play a dangerous game of chicken as election season is already in high gear and the so-called "fiscal cliff" looms.
- Confidence is again waning regarding the ability of Europe to make the reforms needed to solve its debt crises, many of which we believe are structural in nature. But despite fears of a hard landing in China, growth continues and stocks have outperformed.
After an extended, and almost unprecedented period of relative calm, resulting in robust stock market gains from October 2011 through March 2012, we have seen some volatility return. Concerns over global growth have reemerged as Chinese economic data has disappointed, the European debt crisis again is gaining headlines as the merits of austerity are being questioned, and US economic data has been less impressive.
Volatility has picked up

Source: FactSet, Chicago Board of Trade. As of Apr. 24, 2012.
One potential benefit of this rise in consternation has been the long-awaited correction in stocks that many had been calling for. In fact, we have been comforted by numerous investor sentiment readings now showing elevated bearishness (remember that investor sentiment is a contrary indicator). The American Association of Individual Investors’ (AAII) bull ratio recently moved decidedly below the 50% mark for the first time in 2012. The percentage of respondents saying they are bearish has moved from just under 28% to nearly 42% between April 4 and April 11; and the percentage of bulls dropped to 28% from over 38% over the same time period. We believe this change in sentiment was needed in order for the market to reestablish a sustainable uptrend going forward.
The recent mild increase in volatility again reminds us that it's important to maintain a long-term focus and to maintain a diversified portfolio. It's vital that investors review their portfolio holdings on a regular basis, while also looking at how correlations among asset classes change over time. A well-diversified portfolio in one year may not be nearly so two years later, even if the positions are roughly the same—the interaction between asset classes changes over time. One final note on portfolio construction: The drumbeat of bearish bond commentary has grown over the past month as yields remain near record lows. While we again remind investors that investing in bonds for speculative or capital appreciation purposes has become more risky; it is also true that for diversification, income, and capital preservation purposes, bonds will still have a valuable place in many portfolios. Again, balance is the key.
Macro concerns again trumping micro story
Investors' attention is again focused on the macro rather than the micro over the past couple of weeks—the height of first quarter earnings season. The reporting period has been much better than expected, although admittedly from a lower bar—83% of companies have beaten expectations so far, which is an all-time record high. But market reactions to good reports have been more muted relative to the punishments doled out to those that disappointed. It appears Chinese developments, European debt and growth concerns, and some softening in US economic data has led to increased volatility.
In the United States, the economic expansion continues, but we may be in yet another soft spot. This isn't surprising given the likely pulling forward of some economic activity that was influenced by the unusually warm weather during the winter months. We believe this is a relatively modest and temporary phenomenon and that activity will again pick up in the coming months. Concern has grown that 2012 will be a repeat of the previous two years when the market declined beginning in April on softening economic data after decent starts to the year. We believe the story is different this time as jobs, lending and housing have improved and inflation has eased, allowing global central banks to keep policy loose; leading to our view that history won't repeat this year.
Recently, we've seen regional manufacturing surveys disappoint, although remaining in territory depicting growth. The Empire Manufacturing Index fell from 20.2 to 6.6 and the Philly Fed Index dropped to 8.5 from 12.5. Encouragingly, the employment expectation component of Philly Fed jumped six points to its highest level in a year, while March retail sales increased 0.8%, above estimates, indicating that the American consumer remains engaged. Commodity costs have also leveled off recently, which should help to bolster discretionary income.
Lower commodity prices should help consumers

Source: FactSet, Standard & Poor's. As of Apr. 24, 2012.
Despite this still-positive picture, recent job and housing data has weakened a touch. The March payroll report disappointed despite the unemployment rate dropping and recent initial jobless claims have crept a bit higher. We remain relatively unconcerned given that seasonal adjustments around the Easter holiday can be difficult and the level still remains well below the key 400,000 number. Jobs are a vital cog in the economy and we believe that increasing retail demand and a declining ability of companies to squeeze additional productivity out of existing workers should allow for continued improvement on the labor front.
Tags: Austerity, Charles Schwab, Chicago Board Of Trade, Chief Investment Strategist, Dangerous Game, Debt Crisis, Earnings Season, Economic Data, Economic Forecasts, Election Season, Fed Meeting, Global Growth, Investor Sentiment, Liz Ann, Relative Calm, Roller Coaster, Sector Analysis, Senior Vice President, Stock Market Gains, Unprecedented Period
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James Paulsen: Investment Outlook (May 2012)
Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012
Is it Déjà Vu all Over Again?
April 30, 2012
by James Paulsen, Chief Investment Strategist, Wells Capital Management (Wells Fargo)
After nearly six months of persistently better-than-expected economic reports and a regularly rising stock market, metrics on the economy have turned a bit more mixed lately while stock market prices have struggled in recent weeks. This has caused many to wonder whether the economy and the stock market are headed again toward another “spring swoon” like those experienced during 2010 and 2011.
Spookily, conditions do seem remarkably similar today to those which preceded the last two spring thaws. In 2010, the stock market peaked on April 23 and in 2011 it peaked on April 29. Well, it’s April again and stocks are struggling? Moreover, in each of the last two years, just like this year, the spring stalls were preceded by improved economic reports and by a surge which carried stock prices to new recovery highs. Finally, rising gas prices have again played a dominant role in recent months as they did leading up to both of the last two spring swoons.
So, is everyone best advised to simply “Sell in May and Go Away”—something which worked well in each of the last two years? Although similarities to past swoons are troubling and while the recovery will inevitably “ebb and flow,” there are several critical differences evident this year which should help keep the economy and the stock market out of “swoon’s way” during the balance of 2012.
Economic Policies are More Accommodative
Economic policies are notably more accommodative today compared to either 2010 or 2011. In 2010, the pace of the M2 money supply had slowed to a restrictive 1 percent annual pace, and in early 2011 it was only rising at a very modest 4 to 5 percent pace. By contrast, today, the annual growth in the M2 money supply has persisted about a robust 10 percent clip since last fall!
In both early 2010 and early 2011, the 30-year national average mortgage rate (Chart 1) rose above 5 percent prior to the spring swoons. Today, the mortgage rate is near an all-time record low below 4 percent! Significant accelerations in consumer inflation ravished household real incomes prior to both the 2010 and 2011 economic stalls. As illustrated in Chart 2, the annual rate of consumer price inflation jumped from –2 percent (deflation) in mid 2009 to about +2.5 percent by early 2010. Similarly, the annual inflation rate rose from about 1 percent at the end of 2010 to about 3.5 percent by 2011 springtime. These spikes in consumer prices significantly reduced real household income gains. Today, by contrast, real incomes are being boosted by a decline in the consumer price inflation rate from about 4 percent last fall to 2.7 percent currently!
While the Japanese tsunami had ravished U.S. manufacturing supply chains last year, today the “Japan bounce” is helping revive U.S. industrial activity. Finally, global economic policy officials are almost universally accommodative today. Until last fall, euro-zone officials refused to ease interest rates or expand the ECB balance sheet. Recently, however, both policies have been eased significantly! Similarly, until late last year, most emerging world economic policy officials were attempting to moderate recoveries by tightening policies. Now, nearly all of the emerging world is easing conditions to reaccelerate recoveries.
In both 2010 and 2011, economic policies were decidedly more restrictive and probably played a significant role in the resulting economic and stock market swoons. Today, however, much more accommodative global economic policies should bring a more favorable outcome.
U.S. Economic Recovery More Mature
The spring swoon in 2010 hit before the economic recovery had even reached its first anniversary. Today, the recovery is much more mature and therefore less vulnerable to swoons than it was in either 2010 or 2011.
Several recent economic reports portray a maturing economy. In the first quarter, average monthly job gains were in excess of 200 thousand for the first time in this recovery. Initial weekly unemployment insurance claims have finally fallen below 400 thousand and the unemployment rate is enjoying its most persistent decline of the recovery. Additionally, the present situation consumer confidence index (Chart 3) has risen to a new recovery high, the economy has enjoyed the most robust retail spending of the recovery, auto sales have again recovered to about a 15 million annual pace, and an array of recent housing reports suggest the greatest level of housing activity since the industry collapsed. Finally, bank loans (Chart 4), absent during much of the first two years of this recovery, have risen steadily during the last year!
While the economic recovery has not yet surged ahead with strong momentum, many of the traditional engines of growth which often suggest a sustainable recovery (e.g., job creation, consumer and business confidence, improvement in big ticket spending propensities on cars and homes, and better bank lending) are now increasingly evident. With the economy simultaneously firing on so many more cylinders than it was in early 2010 or early last year, it appears much better equipped to weather adversities.
Household Fundamentals Much Improved
The U.S. household is also much less vulnerable to shocks compared to earlier in this recovery. Consumer fundamentals have improved markedly in the last year. The job market has finally come to life, consumer confidence has risen to its highest level of the recovery, and real wages and salaries are rising by about 2 percent in the last year compared to a negative growth rate in early 2010. The U.S. personal savings rate has averaged 5.1 percent in the last four years which represents the highest persistent savings rate in more than a decade, and the U.S. household liquidity ratio (cash holdings as a percent of net worth) has been hovering about a 20-year high since the start of the recovery. Moreover, despite virtually no recovery yet in housing prices, households have already regained almost two-thirds of the loss in net worth experienced during the crisis.
Tags: April 29, Chief Investment Strategist, Critical Differences, Dominant Role, Economic Policies, Economic Reports, Investment Outlook, M2, Market Metrics, Money Supply, Pace, Rising Gas Prices, Six Months, Spring Thaws, Stock Market Prices, Stock Prices, Swoon, Swoons, Wells Capital Management, Wells Fargo
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The Income Hunt: Opportunities Abroad
Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012
by Russ Koesterich, Chief Investment Strategist, iShares
Investors often have a home country bias when it comes to their fixed income portfolios, which means they are generally too reliant on domestic issues. Today, however, there are a number of reasons why investors should consider maintaining a strategic benchmark allocation to emerging market debt.
In recent posts, I’ve highlighted some of these arguments, including the increased stability and improving fundamentals of emerging market countries. But since so many investors are asking me lately about emerging market debt, I figured I’d expand on the case for this asset class in this post. Here’s a bit more on four arguments favoring exposure to emerging market fixed income.
Better fiscal positions: Emerging markets exited the financial crisis in a far better position than their developed market counterparts. The average debt burden of emerging markets is less than 40% of gross domestic product, while developed market debt has soared to more than 100% of GDP on average. This greater fiscal stability is partly why emerging market bonds should now be less volatile relative to their developed counterparts than in the past.
Fading inflation risk: While investors in emerging markets were reasonably concerned about inflation in 2011, inflation appears to be a fading risk in most of the large emerging market countries, the exception being India. Chinese inflation is currently running at 3.6%, roughly half the level of last July. In Russia, inflation has fallen to 3.7% in March from nearly 10% last May. Even in Brazil, a country with a history of stubbornly high inflation, consumer price inflation has dropped to 5.2% in March, down from 7.3% in September. International Monetary Fund estimates suggest that this trend should continue, with emerging market inflation expected to fall throughout 2012.
High premium: Despite emerging markets’ improving fundamentals, emerging market bonds are offering a significant, and historically high, premium over most developed market debt. Currently, emerging market bonds are yielding roughly 350 basis points over the 10-year Treasury, close to a record high.
Diversifying hedge: Emerging market bonds add diversification and a hedge on the dollar, although they are more volatile than domestic bonds. And for those wishing to avoid the foreign currency exposure associated with international bonds, there are dollar denominated emerging market bonds and funds that offer the incremental yields without the foreign currency risk.
In short, most investors are arguably underweight emerging market bonds in their fixed income portfolios though there’s a strong case for considering increasing exposure to this asset class through vehicles such as the iShares J.P. Morgan USD Emerging Markets Bond Fund (NYSEARCA: EMB) and the iShares Emerging Markets Local Currency Bond Fund (NYSEARCA: LEMB).
Source: Bloomberg
Disclosure: Author is long EMB
Diversification may not protect against market risk. Bonds and bond funds will decrease in value as interest rates rise. International investments may involve risk of capital loss from unfavorable fluctuation in currency values, from differences in generally accepted accounting principles or from economic or political instability in other nations. Emerging markets involve heightened risks related to the same factors as well as increased volatility and lower trading volume. Narrowly focused investments typically exhibit higher volatility and are subject to greater geographic or asset class risk. The Fund may be subject to credit risk, which refers to the possibility that the debt issuers will not be able to make principal and interest payments.
Tags: asset class, Bias, Chief Investment Strategist, Consumer Price Inflation, Counterparts, Debt Burden, Emerging Market Bonds, Emerging Market Countries, Emerging Markets, Estimates, Financial Crisis, Fiscal Positions, Fiscal Stability, Fixed Income, GDP, Gross Domestic Product, Inflation Risk, International Monetary Fund, Portfolios, Russ
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“Truth or Consequences?” (Saut)
Monday, April 30th, 2012
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
April 30, 2012
“I have opted for more conservative ideas and not aggressive ones.”
After 28 years at this post, and 22 years before this in money management, I can sum up whatever wisdom I have accumulated this way: The trick is not to be the hottest stock-picker, the winning forecaster, or the developer of the neatest model; such victories are transient. The trick is to survive. Performing that trick requires a strong stomach for being wrong, because we are all going to be wrong more often than we expect. The future is not ours to know. But it helps to know that being wrong is inevitable and normal, not some terrible tragedy, not some awful failing in reasoning, not even bad luck in most instances. Being wrong comes with the franchise of an activity whose outcome depends on an unknown future (maybe the real trick is persuading clients of that inexorable truth). Look around at the long-term survivors at this business and think of the much larger number of colorful characters who were once in the headlines, but who have since disappeared from the scene.
The aforementioned quote, from the brilliant Peter Bernstein (author, historian, economist, and investor), hangs on the wall of my office, for in this business one is often wrong. But, as Bernstein notes, “Being wrong comes with the franchise of an activity whose outcome depends on an unknown future.” My redeeming feature is that when I am wrong, I tend to be wrong quickly. Or as stated by William O’Neil, “The majority of unskilled investors stubbornly hold onto their losses when the losses are small and reasonable. They could get out cheaply, but being emotionally involved and human, they keep waiting and hoping until their loss gets much bigger and [that] costs them dearly.”
Indeed, we are always trying to manage the “risks&rdquo inherent with investing (or trading), for as Benjamin Graham wrote, “The essence of investment management is the management of risks, not the management of returns.” And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why we often “wait” on an investment until its share price is at a point where if we are wrong, we will be wrong quickly, and hopefully the incidence of “loss” will be small and manageable. To be sure, we always consider the consequences of being wrong. This is when risk management lives up to its real meaning. Again as Peter Bernstein wrote in a New York Times article:
The key word is ‘consequences.’ I learned this lesson many years ago from studying Blaise Pascal, a French mathematical genius in the 17th century who spelled out the laws of probability more clearly than anyone before him. This was a thunderclap of an insight that, for the first time, gave humanity a systematic way of thinking about the future. Pascal was both a gambler and a religious zealot. One day he asked himself how he would handle a bet on whether ‘God is or God is not.’ Reason could not answer. But, he said, we can choose between acting as though God is or acting as though God is not. Suppose we bet that God is, and we lead a life of virtue and abstinence, and then the day of reckoning comes and we discover that there is no God. Well, life was still tolerable even if less fun than we might have liked. Here, the consequences of being wrong would be acceptable to most people. Suppose, however, we bet that God is not, and lead a life of lust and sin, and then it turns out that God is. Now being wrong has put us into big trouble.
RISK management, then, should be a process of dealing with the consequences of being wrong. Sometimes, these consequences are minimal – encountering rain after leaving home without an umbrella, for example. But betting the ranch on the assumption that home prices can only go up should tell you the consequences would be much more than minimal if home prices started to fall.
To this “truth or consequences” point, after being wildly bullish at the October 4, 2011 “undercut low” I turned cautious on the equity markets in late January when the “buying stampede” ended. Since then I have been waiting for a price decline that would produce another good risk-adjusted “buy point” like the ones identified on August 8th and 9th of last year, as well as the aforementioned “undercut low.” That does not mean I have not been featuring certain investments when the risk/reward metrics were deemed as being tipped decidedly in our favor. Rather, I have opted for more conservative ideas and not aggressive ones. Case in point, in last week’s verbal strategy comments 3.5%-yielding Rayonier (RYN/$45.51/Strong Buy) was again featured with these comments from our fundamental analyst:
We are upgrading REIT Priority List member Rayonier to Strong Buy (from Outperform) as we believe RYN shares currently offer one of the most compelling risk/reward profiles in our REIT coverage universe. In our view, the underperformance of RYN shares year-to date (RYN shares are down 1%, while the RMZ and S&P 500 are both up 10%) present an attractive entry-point for investors ahead of the company’s highly accretive cellulose specialties expansion project, which is on track to come online in mid-2013.
Another name featured was 7%-yielding LINN Energy (LINE/$39.86/Strong Buy). As stated by our fundamental analyst:
The partnership delivered another strong quarter beating our EBITDA and distribution coverage forecast, proving that not only does it know how to buy assets but it does a good job of operating them too. Speaking of operations, lightning has now struck twice in the Granite Wash with the partnership’s horizontal Hogshooter play having the potential to be one of the highest rate of return oil plays in the country. Based on our continued bullish outlook for the acquisition market, our forecasted distribution growth (5%+), and its solid hedge book, we reiterate our Strong Buy rating.
Last week this conservative strategy looked somewhat foolish (again) with the D-J Industrials (INDU/13228.31) up 1.53% and the S&P SmallCap 600 Index (SML/462.02) better by 2.58%. The real weekly winner, however, was Natural Gas’ 9.67% sprint. The best performing macro sectors were: Financials (+2.21%); Technology (+2.56%); Energy (+2.67%); and Consumer Discretionary (+2.76%). The Consumer Discretionary performance is interesting because last week’s economic reports continue to soften as of the 15 reports released only six were above estimates. Also disappointing were earnings reports with 65.6% of reporting companies beating earnings estimates and 65.1% bettering revenue estimates. This was a pretty big drop from the previous week’s ratio. Even more troubling is that forward earnings guidance turned negative, which was a decided negative swing week over week. The two sectors that have telegraphed the best forward earnings guidance are Healthcare and Industrials. Meanwhile, many of the indices I follow are breaking down from what a technical analyst would term a rising wedge chart pattern (read: negatively), the D-J Transportation Average (TRAN/5267.39) continues to struggle with its double-top often referenced in these comments (that would be negated by a move above ~5390), the NYSE McClellan Oscillator is back in overbought territory (see the chart on page 3), the Buying Power/ Selling Pressure Indicator suggests the rally from the April 10th low has been more about reduced selling pressure rather than increased demand, the Operating Company Only Advance/Decline has never confirmed the upside, and my weekly internal energy indicator still does not have enough energy to support a new leg to the upside. Regrettably, all of this continues to leave me in cautious mode.
The call for this week: In this business when you’re wrong you say you’re wrong; at least that’s what the pros do. Clearly, I have been somewhat wrong by being conservative, but not wrong by much because the INDU is actually 70 points lower than where it was at the April 2, 2012 intraday high. Given the aforementioned litany of cautionary indicators, my sense remains the S&P 500 (SPX/1403.36) will spend some more time below 1425 while the short-term overbought condition is alleviated and the stock market’s internal energy is rebuilt. Friday’s market action only reinforced that belief with the indices gapping higher and then closing well below those highs on lower volume.
Tags: 22 Years, 28 Years, Bad Luck, Benjamin Graham, Chief Investment Strategist, Colorful Characters, Conservative Ideas, Economist, Forecaster, Franchise, Historian, Instances, jeffrey saut, Money Management, O Neil, Peter Bernstein, Raymond James, Stock Picker, Term Survivors, Truth Or Consequences
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“Dow Direction Dictates” (Saut)
Tuesday, April 24th, 2012
“Dow Direction Dictates”
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
April 23, 2012
“The absolute price of a stock is unimportant. It is the direction of price movement which counts.”
During major sustained advances in stock prices, which usually occupy from five to seven years of each decade, the investor can complacently hold a list of stocks which are currently unpredictable. He doesn’t worry about the top because he knows he is never going to sell at the top. He knows that the chances are overwhelming in favor of the assumption that he will get far better prices by waiting until after the top is passed and a probable reversal in trend can be identified than he will ever get by attempting to anticipate the top, and get out on the nose.
In my own experience the largest profits we have ever taken have come from stocks purchased while they were making a new high in a market which was also momentarily expecting the top. As I have already pointed out the absolute price of a stock is unimportant. It is the direction of the price movement that counts. It is always probable, but never certain, that the direction of the price movement will continue. Soon after it reverses is time enough to sell. You should sell when you wish you had sold sooner, never when you think the top has arrived. That way you will never get the very best price—by hindsight your individual transactions will never look daring. But some of your profits will be large; and your losses should be quite small. That is all that is necessary for a satisfactory, enriching investment performance.
Stock Profits Without Forecasting – by Edgar S. Genstein
These are two of the most important paragraphs I have encountered in 45 years of studying markets. DO NOT read them just once. Go off to a quiet spot that invites contemplation and READ THEM SEVERAL TIMES. Then reflect on all of the mistakes you have made in trading and investing. Bells will ring, and curses will be uttered, if you are truly honest with yourself. My advice is to keep this quote handy, read it over, and study it every time you get ready to make an important buy or sell decision; especially if your emotions reign.
Obviously, I agree with Mr. Genstein’s advice, but over the years have added a “twist” to his sage strategy. That twist has been to be a scale-up seller in select stocks that have appreciated when I think I should raise some cash. This does not mean I sell the entire position if I continue to find the fundamentals to be favorable. But, scale selling partial positions accomplishes a number of things. Firstly, it allows capital gains to accrue to the portfolio (sometimes long-term capital gains and sometimes not). Secondly, it rebalances said stock position back towards the original portfolio weighting intended. Thirdly, it tends to give me the “margin of safety” mentioned in Benjamin Graham’s book “The Intelligent Investor.” To wit, this strategy allows me to hold some of my original investment positions until I “wish I would have sold them sooner.”
I revisit this topic this morning after spending last week in Colorado speaking at several events and seeing institutional accounts. Unsurprisingly, most of the institutions have had a difficult time over the past few months. As one portfolio manager put it, “While we make money in one position we give more than that back in another.” Indeed, since the “buying stampede” ended on January 26th it has been a market in which it has been pretty easy to lose money. For example, at the intraday high of January 26th the D-J Industrial Average (INDU/13029.26) traded at ~12842. Last Friday the senior index closed at ~13029 for a 12-week gain of 0.015%. Meanwhile, many individual stocks have fared far worse. As for retail investors, my presentations to them last week found most frozen like a deer in the headlights of a car buffeted by the recent decline and the negative “spin” from the media; so let me address the recent action.
Recall that we advised raising some cash following the cessation of the “buying stampede” in anticipation of a 5% — 8% pullback in the major averages. That said, our mantra was, “You can be cautious, but do not get bearish.” Some took that “raise cash” advice, but most did not, imbibed by the Dow’s 14.3% rally from mid-December, and its 23.4% rally since the October 4, 2011 “undercut low” that we actually recommended buying. Now, however, the Dow’s 4.4% decline from its April 2nd peak into its April 10th reaction low has brought back memories of last year’s May to August angst, which lopped 17.6% off the Industrials. While the recent news backdrop is less appealing than that of October – February, it is still not a reason to believe we are going to see another May through June swoon of over 17%. Let’s examine why.
In the last tactical bull market of October 2002 through October 2007 (60 months) there were nine such 4% or greater pullbacks, yet stocks traded higher after each correction. In the current tactical bull market of March 2009 to present (37 months) there have already been eleven 4% or greater pullbacks and each time stocks have also subsequently traded higher. Clearly the frequency of corrections/pullbacks has increased in the current cycle likely driven by memories of the Dow’s 54.4% massacre between October 2007 into the March 2009 bottom that at the time we deemed would be similar to the “nominal” price-low of December 1974 (that was the “nominal” price low of that wide-swinging, trading-range 1965 – 1982 affair). More recently, we have likened last year’s October 4th “undercut low” to the valuation-low that occurred in August 1982 since valuations last October were at levels not seen in decades. Whether we have begun a secular bull market like that of August 1982 – January 2000 is debatable, but we doubt last October’s low will be violated.
Nevertheless, since the beginning of February there have been a number of gleanings that left us in cautious mode. The parade looks like this: an upside non-confirmation by the D-J Transports (TRAN/5234.25), the small-caps also failed to confirm the upside with the Russell 2000 (RUT/804.05) subsequently experiencing a 7.5% decline, weakness in the market-leading Financial SPDR Fund (XLF/$15.18), worsening Advance/Decline and New High/New Low figures, a 90% Downside Day on April 10th, waning Buying Power, an exhaustion of the stock market’s weekly internal energy, softening economic reports, and the list goes on. On the positive side: the stock market’s daily internal energy has a full charge of energy, an 8.53% drop in the price of gasoline last week, an earnings reporting season that has so far seen 72% of companies beating estimates and 70% beating revenue estimates (more importantly, after two quarters of reducing guidance companies are now raising future earnings guidance), late Friday the IMF announced it has raised another $430 billion to be used if Euroquake worsens, a U.S. dollar that looks like it is breaking down (read: a positive for stocks), and hereto the list goes on. All of this continues to leave us chanting, “You can be cautious, but do not get bearish!”
This week we will see more major companies reporting earnings. From our research universe, stocks that are favorably rated by our fundamental analysts and appear positive on our proprietary algorithms are: Brinker (EAT/$27.90/Strong Buy); Baidu (BIDU/$144.91/Strong Buy); Pultegroup (PHM/$8.37/Outperform); and Caterpillar (CAT/$107.73/Outperform – covered by Raymond James Ltd.).
The call for this week: For the past few weeks I have wrongly suggested that my sense is the S&P 500 (SPX/1378.53) will remain mired in the 1385 – 1425 consolidation zone. As paraphrased:
I think the SPX needs to convalesce in the 1385 – 1425 zone while the short-term overbought condition is alleviated and the market’s internal energy is rebuilt. Interestingly, while my daily internal energy indicator now has more than a full charge of energy, the weekly energy indicator is nowhere near being fully recharged. The implication is that the downside should be contained, but the SPX is also not likely to breakout above 1425 without spending more time consolidating. ... Importantly, all of the pullbacks in the SPX this year have been between 25 and 35 points. Accordingly, measuring from the recent reaction high of ~1419 produces a level of 1394 for a 25-point correction, and 1384 for a 35-pointer. Hence, anything more than a 45-point pullback would put the SPX below the bottom of our 1375 – 1385 support zone and suggest something has changed, potentially bringing into view the 1320 – 1340 zone.
Subsequently, the SPX dropped below that envisioned zone, yet has rallied back into the 1375 – 1385 zone, which has now become an overhead resistance level. And for these reasons we counseled for caution before leaving for Colorado last week. Our advice was not to sell short, not to add to existing long positions, not to raise cash since we have already raised cash, but rather to sit tight because the downside should be contained in the 1320 – 1340 zone. Confidence that downside objective will be achieved grows if the April 10th intraday low of 1357.38 is violated. And this morning that pivot point looks like it is going to be tested with the preopening futures off some 14 points. Indeed, “The absolute price of a stock is unimportant. It is the direction of price movement which counts.”
Copyright © Raymond James
Tags: 45 Years, Assumption, Bells, Chief Investment Strategist, Contemplation, Curses, Dow, Edgar, Hindsight, Investment Performance, jeffrey saut, Nbsp, Paragraphs, Performance Stock, Quiet Spot, Raymond James, Seven Years, Several Times, Stock Prices, Stock Profits
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Concern or Correction?
Wednesday, April 18th, 2012
April 13, 2012
by Liz Ann Sonders, Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.,
and Brad Sorensen, CFA, Director of Market and Sector Analysis, Schwab Center for Financial Research,
and Michelle Gibley, CFA, Director of International Research, Schwab Center for Financial Research
Key Points
- Economic data has softened a bit lately but still indicates growth in the United States. After a long stretch of relative calm in the markets, we've seen the markets pull back, possibly fulfilling the correction that was overdue. We believe the longer-term trend is higher but near-term risks continue to be elevated and earnings season could bring more volatility.
- After a couple weeks of shifting perceptions regarding what the Fed's next move may be, the minutes from the most recent meeting seemed to solidify the notion that another round of quantitative easing (QE3) is not in the offing. Although the stock and bond markets initially reacted negatively, we are heartened by the rhetoric.
- European debt fears have flared up again in Spain and Italy and we believe risks are elevated and may not be fully appreciated. Meanwhile, China's response to slowing growth has been surprisingly slow and risks of a misstep are rising, although we still remain optimistic in the longer term.
After the best first quarter stock performance since 1998, based on the S&P's 12% return, and the recent pullback in the markets, investors may be wondering what’s next. Can the market resume its move higher? Was the correction enough to heal overbought conditions and elevated investor sentiment? What will be the catalyst for the next move?
There hasn't been a shortage of commentary suggesting that a pullback in equities was overdue and needed for the next leg higher. But now that we've seen a pullback, concerns are suddenly growing that we could be in for an extended downturn. Although risks are elevated, currently we don’t believe the correction to-date represents a shift in the recent upward trend in stocks. In fact, we can look back at similar periods and find some heartening information. According to our friend Ed Yardeni at Yardeni Research there have been 17 times in the last 66 years that each of the first three months have posted positive S&P 500 returns. The average total yearly return for those 17 years was 20.2%, with none of those years posting a negative return. But with such a great head start, that might not be all that meaningful for the rest of the year. However, according to Ned Davis Research, there have been 11 instances since 1930 where the S&P 500 posted returns above 10% in the first quarter. The median return for the following three quarters was 6.95%, with all but two posting positive returns for that time period.
Additionally, the recent correction has helped push the Ned Davis Research Daily Sentiment Composite into excessive pessimistic territory, sharply reversing the overly optimistic sentiment seen just a few weeks ago. Negative investor sentiment has tended to be a contrary indicator and we believe is a positive development for the market as we move forward.
One more bit of historic data regarding the interplay between stocks and bonds. Bonds have had a decade-long run that has seen interest rates sink to historically low levels and we have warned investors that may be overallocated to bonds that a reversal to the mean may be in store. Capital appreciation on bonds is by definition capped as interest rates can only go to zero, which we’re not that far away from on Treasury securities. Furthering that warning, according to Bespoke Investment Group, when equities have outperformed bonds substantially (above 10%) for two quarters in a row, which just occurred and has happened nine previous times, the average equity return in the following quarter has been 4.6%, while bonds have averaged a decline of 0.5%. And we may be seeing that shift from bonds to equities begin as the week ended March 23rd, according to EPFR Global, saw outflows from long-term government bond funds of $1.01 billion, the largest amount on record (thanks to Barron’s for pointing this out). However, we must caution investors that are investing in bonds and bond funds for income purposes that they still remain the most appropriate predictable income investment vehicle in most cases, and the vast majority of investors should maintain at least some exposure to bonds based on income needs and risk tolerances.
Earnings to take the reins?
Recent US economic data has raised some questions among investors as to the sustainability of the economic expansion. We share some of those concerns as confidence remains tenuous, the political situation is messy, the European debt crisis rages on, and Chinese growth has slowed. But we maintain confidence that the economic expansion is continuing and should continue for the foreseeable future. The Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) manufacturing survey rose to 53.4, with a reading above 50 indicating expansion. Additionally, the employment component moved to 56.1 from 53.2, and while new orders dropped slightly, it still remains solidly above 50. The service side of the ledger also continues to show expansion as the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index posted a reading of 56.0.
The job picture got a little murkier with the latest report. Although ADP reported that March private payrolls expanded by 209,000 positions and February was revised higher, the Labor Department said that only 120,000 jobs were added, below expectations and contributing to the pullback in stocks. Positively, the unemployment rate dropped to 8.2%, still elevated but well off its high. Leading indicators of job growth such as initial unemployment claims continue to suggest that the March reading may prove to be an outlier and/or a natural pullback after the strong weather-related gains in the first two months.
In fact, the improving job picture appears to be bolstering the consumer, as retail sales numbers have been relatively positive and we’ve seen auto sales continue to rebound after a sharp drop-off.
Auto sales indicate increased confidence

Source: FactSet, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. As of April 10, 2012.
And we'll be getting more information at the corporate level over the next several weeks as first quarter earnings season heats up. There appears to be more uncertainty heading into this season than we've seen recently, but we have seen analyst forecasts revised higher recently. This reporting season could provide the next near-term catalyst for the markets as some positive surprises and commentary could provide further fuel, while disappointment could move stocks lower. One advantage we may have is that expectations entering the season appear relatively low, with Yardeni reporting that as of April 6 analysts are expecting S&P 500 companies' earnings to only grow 2.4% over last year, which would be the slowest rate since the third quarter of 2009, providing the opportunity for upside surprises. Additionally, according to Strategas Research Partners, the negative-to-positive preannouncement ratio was 3.0 for the first quarter and they note that when the ratio has been above 2.1, the stock market in the month after the end of the quarter has risen 2.2%, while declining 0.3% when the ratio is below 2.1. One thing we'll be continuing to watch will be commentary surrounding the massive cash that being stored on balance sheets and how it may be used in the future.
Corporate liquidity near an all-time high

Source: FactSet, Federal Reserve. As of April 10, 2012.
Fed continues to confound
The above chart helps to illustrate why we believe that another round of quantitative easing (QE3) seems unnecessary. There is plenty of liquidity in the economy and pumping more in would seem to us to do little good. It appears the Federal Reserve may be starting to move toward that view as well, or at least they're becoming more confident in the economic recovery. The recently released minutes from their March meeting indicates that there isn't much appetite on the Committee for QE3. Although stocks and bonds had an initial negative response, much like a child wobbling on a bike after a parent lets go for the first time, we believe Fed support needs to slowly be withdrawn so the economy can ride on its own.
European debt risks flare up
Contrarily, The European Central Bank (ECB) appears anxious to shove its kid on a bike as soon as possible with lagged and tepid responses to the ongoing debt crisis. That said, its three-year loan liquidity injections early this year did buy time for banks and governments and reduced the imminent threat of a banking system collapse. However, the sugar high may have lulled investors into a false sense of security, as the eurozone debt crisis was merely put on pause.
While it may be an oversimplification, the elevation to a crisis situation boils down to confidence. Loss of confidence can become a self-fulfilling prophesy, as we witnessed with Lehman Brothers in 2008. Therefore, in order to maintain investor confidence, European policymakers have to continue to make progress toward reducing deficits, meeting fiscal targets, making structural changes to provide a foundation for growth, and implement backstops in case things deteriorate.
However, instead of making progress, confidence is being slowly eroded by backward moves:
- In Italy, Prime Minister Mario Monti’s labor reform proposal has been watered down.
- France’s presidential election on April 22 and May 6 could result in a change of leadership to presidential candidate Francois Hollande, who has pledged to renegotiate the eurozone fiscal pact.
- Greece’s general election, which could occur around May 6, could result in a weak coalition government, increasing the possibility of missed quarterly bailout funding targets.
- Even the Netherlands, considered a core country and a strong proponent of fiscal discipline, admitted it too would run afoul of the European Union’s 3% deficit target in 2012, resulting in the need for austerity cuts.
But due to the size of its economy and debts, weak economic outlook and banking system, Spain is the elephant in the room that cannot be ignored. Eurozone debt concerns flared up after Spain announced it would miss its 2012 deficit target.
The Spanish economy has an uncertain and risky outlook as evidenced by unemployment still rising from an already high 24% and a housing bubble that is still deflating. Additionally, private sector debt in Spain grew dramatically during the housing boom and the risk is that Spanish banks could face more problems in the future because losses on private sector debt are likely to rise. As a result, bank problems could be inherited by the sovereign, because banks could need government aid.
The interaction between the economy, the banks and the sovereign can feed off each other and exacerbate the situation, and it may take only a minor deterioration in one or two areas for a negative spiral to take effect in Spain. We believe Spanish banks likely need more capital as a buffer, but we don’t believe Spain’s government is in imminent need of a bailout. However, markets are nervous that Spain’s situation could deteriorate, necessitating a bailout over the next couple years.
Eurozone concerns remain, particularly for Spain

Source: FactSet, iBoxx. As of Apr. 10, 2012.
We are discouraged that the combination of deterioration in Spain and the ECB reiteration that emergency measures are temporary has been able to have such a large impact on Italian yields. While the region's bailout funds were somewhat boosted by combining the temporary European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) with the longer-term European Stability Mechanism (ESM) for a year, an even bigger firewall may be needed.
Global growth moderating
The focus on austerity in the eurozone misses the need to foster the absent ingredient– growth. Economic releases over the past month have shown a generalized renewed economic weakness in Europe and continued declines in credit indicate growth will be difficult to achieve.
Meanwhile, the Asia/Pacific region is also under downside pressure. As discussed later, China’s economy continues to soften. Many Asian nations have close ties to the Chinese economy, and a slowdown in commodities and goods exports to China is reducing their growth.
As for Japan, the world's third largest economy, economic data has been mixed. Japan's leading index has continued to trend higher and there has been a recent rebound in machinery orders. However, Japanese household spending remains weak and despite an increase in the Bank of Japan's (BoJ) asset purchase program in February, money supply dropped in March, and the quarterly Tankan survey showed business confidence has failed to improve. In contrast to the BoJ holding off on new measures in its April meeting, we believe the BoJ needs to do more and make good on its promise of pursuing “powerful easing” to create inflation and weaken the yen.
Likewise, somewhat disheartening is a slight change in tone by central banks elsewhere. For example, despite downside risks to economic growth, the Reserve Bank of Australia and the ECB also held off on easing at their recent meetings amid signs of inflation picking up. We believe inflation pressures will continue to ease globally as we move through the year, as food prices have fallen and oil prices could have downside risks as global growth slows and geopolitical pressures ease. This could give central banks more leeway to ease in the future.
China continues to slow, but crash unlikely
We believe markets had been underestimating the risks in Europe and over-emphasizing the possibility of a hard landing in China. Growth has slowed, but has defied the bearish calls for a crash. However, monetary easing has been disappointingly slow. We had believed that a sharp drop in inflation and money supply would allow stimulus to be enacted sooner. Typically an economy needs growth in money supply and lending to grow. Money supply has been growing at a slower pace than nominal economic growth, pressuring economic growth.
China likely slows amid modest money supply growth

Source: FactSet, National Bureau of Statistics of China, People's Bank of China. As of Apr. 10, 2012.
* Excess liquidity is M2 money supply less nominal GDP
The Chinese government is playing a balancing game that has increasing risks of missteps. We are encouraged by early signs of a reacceleration in lending that could boost economic growth. Elsewhere, the government is trying to reduce imbalances in the economy and transition away from dependence on exports as well as building factories and infrastructure. While removing imbalances may be good over the long-term, the ability of the government to micro-manage an economy that is now the world's second largest is becoming more difficult. Real progress toward a transition is likely to require tough political decisions and reforms, and miscues could make for a bumpy ride.
Read more international research at www.schwab.com/oninternational.
Important Disclosures
The MSCI EAFE® Index (Europe, Australasia, Far East) is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the United States and Canada. As of May 27, 2010, the MSCI EAFE Index consisted of the following 22 developed market country indexes: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.The MSCI Emerging Markets IndexSM is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure equity market performance in the global emerging markets. As of May 27, 2010, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index consisted of the following 21 emerging-market country indexes: Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Egypt, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand and Turkey.The S&P 500® index is an index of widely traded stocks.Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses and cannot be invested in directly.Past performance is no guarantee of future results.Investing in sectors may involve a greater degree of risk than investments with broader diversification.International investments are subject to additional risks such as currency fluctuations, political instability and the potential for illiquid markets. Investing in emerging markets can accentuate these risks.The information contained herein is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy or completeness is not guaranteed. This report is for informational purposes only and is not a solicitation or a recommendation that any particular investor should purchase or sell any particular security. Schwab does not assess the suitability or the potential value of any particular investment. All expressions of opinions are subject to change without notice.The Schwab Center for Financial Research is a division of Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Copyright © Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.,
Tags: Bond Markets, Charles Schwab, Chief Investment Strategist, Couple Weeks, Downturn, Earnings Season, Economic Data, Investor Sentiment, Liz Ann, Long Stretch, Misstep, Pullback, Qe3, Quarter Stock, Relative Calm, Sector Analysis, Senior Vice President, Stock Performance, Term Trend, Volatility
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“Be Conservative, Not Conventional!” (Saut)
Tuesday, April 17th, 2012
“Be Conservative, Not Conventional!”
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
April 16, 2012
Here’s the paradox: the odds are overwhelming I will end up richer by aiming for a good return rather than a brilliant return – and sleep better en route. Folks who seek a killing usually get killed. Gunslingers get shot, and often in the foot, with their own guns. While there is always some guy around on a red-hot streak, his main function is to tempt the rest of us into becoming fools and paupers. A return of 15% to 20% annually is a lot more than most folks realize, or need. If a 30-year old with $10,000 in an IRA gets 15% annually, he’ll be a millionaire before normal retirement. That’s the power of compound interest. If that same 30-year old were to sock away another $2,000 per year at 15%, he would end up as a 65-year old $3 million fat cat. At 20%, it’s an incredible $13 million. That’s a lot, but it’s not too much to ask. The two most definitive studies ever on long-term returns, the Ibbotson/Sinquefield and Fisher/Lorie studies, both point to average annual returns for stocks of 9% plus per year going back to the mid-1920s. So 15% to 20% per year is really 66% to 100% better than the market as a whole. That’s tough but doable. Consistency is the key. It is close to impossible to get a good, long-term, rate of return if you suffer serious negative numbers en route. It’s the math. A single year that is down 30% means you have to get 30% per year positive returns for the next four years to get back on track for a 15% annual average. Or, if you score 20% annually for four years, and then suffer a 30% decline, your five-year average return is only 7%.
... Ken Fisher, Forbes, 1989
I have often republished Ken Fisher’s sage advice ever since first reading it in 1989 because it speaks to the centerpiece of my investment philosophy. To wit, “The odds are overwhelming I will end up richer by aiming for a good return rather than a brilliant return – and sleep better en route.” Or as Benjamin Graham wrote, “The essence of investment management is the management of RISKS, not the management of RETURNS.” Indeed, if you manage the downside the upside will take care of itself. Avoiding the big loss is, and always has been, the key to investment success. Accordingly, when the odds are not tipped in my favor I tend to not be very aggressive, a stance I took a few months ago.
Recall, it was around the end of January that, at least by my work, the “buying stampede” ended when the D-J Industrial Average (INDU/12849.59) closed lower for four consecutive sessions. Interestingly, at the “buying stampede’s” intraday peak of January 26th the senior index changed hands at ~12842. At last week’s intraday low it was some 131 points below that level, consistent with my statement, “Except for a few stocks, I don’t see where a whole lot of money has been made since the end of January.” Given that strategy, I have preferred to focus on select mutual funds and exchange-traded products with “conservative not conventional” investment styles. One such mutual fund is Goldman Sachs’ Rising Dividend Growth Fund (GSRAX/$14.85), whose investment style is to invest in companies that increase their dividends by 10% per year on average for 10 years in a row. Accordingly, the fund seeks capital appreciation and current income. Another investment idea is the Yorkville High Income MLP ETF (YMLP/$19.53). YMLP is structured for an outsized current yield by investing in master limited partnerships. Yet because of that structure no tax-cumbersome K-1 is issued since the dividend distributions are classified as return of principal. Granted, my conservative stance looked pretty foolish when the INDU tagged ~13265 on April 2nd, but has not looked as foolish since then with the Dow surrendering roughly 4% into last week’s lows. That declined sparked the question, “Hey Jeff, is the correction over?”
Well, as repeatedly chronicled in these comments, all of the pullbacks in the S&P 500 (SPX/1370.26) this year have been between 25 and 35 points. Accordingly, measuring from the recent closing reaction high of 1419.04 produces a level of 1394 for a 25-point correction, and 1384 for a 35-pointer. Importantly, anything more than a 45-point pullback would put the SPX below the bottom of our 1375 – 1385 support zone and thus would suggest something has changed. It would also represent a breakdown below a spread triple-bottom for most of the major averages. While there is minor support around 1360 – 1365, my hunch is that breaking below 1375 brings into view the 1320 – 1340 level. Nevertheless, coming into last week I thought the SPX would remain mired in the 1385 – 1425 consolidation zone while the short-term overbought condition was alleviated and the stock market’s internal energy was rebuilt. And at last week’s low the NYSE McClellan Oscillator was indeed back in a fully oversold position. Moreover, my daily internal energy indicator also had more than a full charge of energy. Therefore, at Tuesday’s lows one should have expected some kind of “throwback rally,” and that’s exactly what we got. Unfortunately, Friday’s Fade left the SPX back below the aforementioned 1375 – 1385 zone and consequently still vulnerable. This would be especially true if last week’s lows at ~1358 are breached this week.
Since the SPX’s April 2nd peak the two worst performing sectors have been Energy and Financials, which have fallen more than 5%. While this is not surprising for Energy, because that group did not act well during the entire 1Q12 rally, Financials was one of the best performing sectors of the quarter, suggesting their weakness since early April may be telegraphing a change in the investment environment. Also concerning was last week’s 17% leap in the Financials’ Credit Default Risk Index. Then there was market-leading Apple’s (AAPL/$605.23) weakness over the past four sessions, a four-day downside skein not seen since last year. With such “tells,” and given the fact that the INDU and SPX have fallen below not only their envisioned support zones, but their respective 50-DMAs, we continue to counsel for caution, believing early this week should provide better clarity on the near term directionality of stock prices. Verily, “Be Conservative Not Conventional!”
The call for this week: Earnings season commenced last week with 75% of the reporting companies beating estimates. This week will show increased earnings reports with many of the major companies reporting. Our sense is the earnings environment will continue to be pretty good, which should limit the stock market’s downside to the 1320 – 1340 level. Moreover, the SPX held above its weekly uptrend chart line at 1358 last week, leaving the technical setup not as vulnerable as it was in May 2011. However, the December to late January upside runaway appears to be over until the stock market’s weekly internal energy is rebuilt. Unfortunately, the weekly internal energy indicator is nowhere near being fully recharged. The implication is that the downside should be contained, but the SPX is also not likely to break out above 1425 without spending some more time consolidating.
P.S. – I am in Colorado this week and will return next week.
Copyright © Raymond James
Tags: Centerpiece, Chief Investment Strategist, Consistency, Definitive Studies, Fat Cat, Fools, Forbes, Hot Streak, Investment Philosophy, jeffrey saut, Ken Fisher, Lorie, Mid 1920s, Millionaire, Negative Numbers, Power Of Compound Interest, Rate Of Return, Raymond James, Sage Advice, Wit
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Pigs and Panics! (Saut)
Tuesday, April 10th, 2012
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
April 9, 2012
“When prices of pork products begin to rise, farmers naturally begin to increase the breeding of pigs, hoping to profit from the rising market. Each farmer considers himself astute and novel in concept, quite certain that prices will continue to rise. However, the same idea occurs to a large number of farmers simultaneously. It takes about one and one-half years for a pig to reach maturity, and the same one and one-half years for the market to become saturated with the flood of recently bred pigs. Inevitably, prices fall, farmers sadly take losses and reluctantly cut back production. Finally, as a result of the reduced breeding, shortages develop and the cycle begins anew.”
... Panic & Crashes And How You Can Make Money Out Of Them; Harry Schultz 1972
Harry D. Schultz wrote a book at the top of the massive secular “pork market peak” of 1972 titled “Panics & Crashes And How You Can Make Money Out Of Them.” He pointed out that business, and panic-to-pig cycles, follow pretty much the same pattern. The typical cycle consists of seven phases: 1) shortages, 2) the development of a concept, 3) profitable production, 4) overproduction and oversupply leading to losses, 5) losses, 6) cutbacks in production, 7) shortage and the start of a whole new cycle. Over the years Wall Street has also had a series of pig-to-panic cycles for those of us old enough to remember them. The sequence went something like this: bowling alleys, color TVs, conglomerates, Alaskan oil stocks, double knits, air pollution, CB radios, mobile phones, soft contact lenses, Wankel engines, one-decision growth stocks, gambling casinos, Internet insanity, eyeballs per minute valuations, and most recently social media stocks. The lesson throughout the decades is that shortages eventually lead to oversupply. Last week that observation came into plain view.
Indeed, last week the entire stuff-stock complex cratered. Recall, I have been bullish on “stuff” since China joined the WTO in December 2001 on the premise that when per capita incomes rise people consume more “stuff” (oil, gas, coal, water, electricity, timber, cement, agriculture, base/precious-metals, etc.). That has been the history of rising per capita incomes throughout history. We rode that theme until November/December 2007 when those investments grew into such large positions in portfolios that we recommended selling 30 – 50% of them to raise cash and allow long-term capital gains to accrue to portfolios as we entered 2008 very defensively positioned. Following the March 2009 bottoming sequence, however, stuff-stocks returned to prominence until April of 2011.
Since April of 2011 the Continuous Commodity Index (CCI/565.15) has been in decline having fallen from its high of ~691 into December 2011’s tax-loss selling “low” of ~546 as can be seen in the attendant chart. From there the CCI rallied into late February where it peaked and began selling off. The selling intensified last week seemingly due to the Federal Reserve’s inference that QE3 is effectively off of the table. With that, the U.S. dollar soared and the CCI plunged. That action caused one old market maven to exclaim, “Have commodities begun another ‘leg’ down, or was this just a pullback within the context of a new upward trend?” My sense is it is the latter, and I would invest that way using the Exchange Traded Product of your choice with last December’s “low” as a failsafe point.
As for ideas in the commodity complex, a good starting point might be the commodities that performed best in 1Q12. To this point, the insightful Minyanville organization notes (as paraphrased by me):
“For those looking for the next cheap buy, or commodities that have been on a tear, we outline some of the best and worst performing futures from the first quarter of this year: Soybeans (+24%), Soybean Meal (+17%), Gasoline RBOB (+21%), Canola Oil (+18%), Crude Brent Oil (+16%), and Platinum (+14%). And then there were the losers: Natural Gas (-30%), Coffee (-18%), and Milk (‑9%).”
For specific ways to play those select commodity themes, I suggest you contact our Exchange Traded Products research department.
Like commodities, stocks swooned on the Fed’s statement; and, that swoon accelerated on Wednesday as participants pondered a botched Spanish debt auction that showed decidedly higher funding costs for La Furia Roja (the red fury, aka Spain). The result left the S&P 500 (SPX/1398.08) lower by 10.39 points, but still above the first ledge of support often referenced in these comments between 1375 and 1385. Interestingly, all of the pullbacks in the SPX this year have been between 25 and 35 points. Accordingly, measuring from last Monday’s closing reaction high of ~1419 produces a level of 1394 for a 25 point correction, and 1384 for a 35 pointer. Importantly, anything more than a 45 point pullback would put the SPX below the bottom of our 1375 – 1385 support zone — and suggest something has changed. It would also represent a breakdown below a spread triple-bottom for most of the major averages. While there is minor support at 1365, my hunch is that breaking below 1375 brings into view the 1320 – 1340 level.
This week should be the decision point for the market’s near-term directionality as this morning stocks will have to deal with Friday’s disappointing employment report. In last Monday’s letter I opined the employment report was anticipated to be disappointing; and, disappointing it was. Indeed, non-farm payrolls increased a very modest 120,000 for March versus consensus estimates for a 205,000 gain. The report was exactly half of the previous month’s gain of 240,000 and well below the December through February average payrolls increase of 246,000. Our economist, Dr. Scott Brown, had this to say about Friday’s report:
“Disappointing, but not a disaster. This is largely a weather story. Mild weather inflated payrolls figures for January and February and generated excessive optimism about the job market. The weather was still mild in March, but January and February were much milder than usual. The three-month average payroll gain, at +210,000, is not bad. The unemployment rate fell, but that was due to people exiting the labor force (likely as their unemployment insurance benefits expire).”
So, this week should be the test for stocks. My sense is that following this morning’s jobs-induced drop, the SPX will remain mired in the 1385 – 1425 consolidation zone I have been commenting on for the past few weeks. As stated, I think the SPX needs to convalesce while the short-term overbought condition is alleviated and the market’s internal energy is rebuilt. As seen in the nearby chart, the overbought condition has been corrected with the NYSE McClellan Oscillator back in oversold territory (Energy and Materials are the two most oversold sectors). Moreover, my daily internal energy indicator now has more than a full charge of energy. Unfortunately, the weekly internal energy indicator is nowhere near being fully recharged. The implication is that the downside should be somewhat contained, but the SPX is also not likely to break out above 1425 without spending some more time consolidating.
The call for this week: As stated, this is a key week for the equity markets and we continue to wait and see how the equity markets resolve themselves on a short-term basis, a trading stance we have been in for weeks. Meanwhile, for investors, I met with a portfolio manager last week whose investment style I think is suited for the current stock market climate. The investment style of Troy Shaver, PM of Dividend Asset Capital, sub-advisor to Goldman Sachs Rising Dividend Growth Fund (GSRAX/$15.05), is to invest in companies that increase their dividends by 10% per year on average for 10 years in a row. Accordingly, the fund seeks capital appreciation and current income. The other insight of the week was a conference call on the Yorkville High Income MLP ETF (YMLP/$19.85). YMLP is structured for an outsized current yield by investing in Master Limited Partnerships. Yet because of that structure no tax-cumbersome K-1 is issued. For further information please contact our Exchange Traded Product research department.
P.S. – I am traveling the balance of this week, and while I will try to do at least one strategy call, it is going to be pretty difficult to accomplish given my schedule. Accordingly, this may be the only strategy comment for the week.
Tags: Air Pollution, Alaskan Oil, Bowling Alleys, Casinos Internet, Cb Radios, Chief Investment Strategist, Color Tvs, Growth Stocks, Harry D Schultz, Harry Schultz, Internet Insanity, jeffrey saut, Market Peak, Media Stocks, oil stocks, Pork Market, Pork Products, Profitable Production, Soft Contact Lenses, Typical Cycle
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Comfortably Numb: Have Investors Become Too Complacent?
Wednesday, April 4th, 2012
Comfortably Numb: Have Investors Become Too Complacent?
April 2, 2012
Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Key Points
- The market has had its best first-quarter start in 14 years!
- But with the rally has come elevated optimism, a contrarian indicator.
- The market may be vulnerable in the short term, but we think optimism longer-term remains warranted.
Let's get right to the point: It was the best first quarter for the stock market since 1998. The total return of the S&P 500 index® was 12.6% for the quarter; up nearly 30% from the October 3, 2011 low. What was particularly notable about the surge since then has been the attendant plunge in volatility.
Complacency?
As you can see in the chart below, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) has dropped dramatically from its high of 48 last August (when Washington's fearless leaders failed to construct a debt deal, leading to Standard & Poor's downgrade of US debt) to 15 recently.
Plunging Volatility

Source: FactSet, as of March 30, 2012.
Many investors—notably those painfully on the sidelines—have suggested this shows a high level of complacency. And the fact that trading volume has been weak has been another pillar in the bears' case for why the "rally isn't for real." (See more on trading volume later in this report.)
Most readers know I have been optimistic, and remain so. But, the contrarian in me does have some sympathy for the case that optimism has become elevated enough to offer a headwind for the market in the near term.
I am a big fan of the sentiment work done by Ned Davis Research (NDR) and SentimenTrader.com. NDR noted recently in a report that the recent backup in Treasury yields has accompanied a rise in optimism by investors, and this combined indicator did flash a short-term sell signal for the market. That said, NDR argues, and I concur, that yields remain extremely low and as such, are not "biting" stocks yet.
Elevated optimism = near-term headwind
Below is NDR's most widely-followed sentiment measure, its Crowd Sentiment Poll, and as you can see, accompanying the market's rally has been a surge in optimism into the "uncomfortable" zone. Given a bit choppier action lately by stocks, I am hopeful we will see a waning of this optimism, at least back into the neutral zone.
Elevated Optimism

Source: FactSet, Ned Davis Research (NDR), Inc. (Further distribution prohibited without prior permission. Copyright 2012 © Ned Davis Research, Inc. All rights reserved.), as of March 27, 2012.
Another sentiment metric showing elevated optimism is SentimenTrader's Smart Money/Dumb Money Confidence index, shown below.
Smart Money Warming Up to Market

Source: FactSet, SentimenTrader.com, as of March 30, 2012.
Although no where near the recent extremes of smart money pessimism and dumb money optimism, it bears watching. The good news is that the gap has begun to narrow in a favorable way. Remember, as the labels suggest, the smart money tends to be right at extremes of sentiment, while the dumb money tends to be wrong.
Crash worries still abound
But not all sentiment metrics are created equal. One I discovered recently is put together by the folks at Yale and it measures the perceptions about the likelihood of a stock market crash among individual and institutional investors. I quibble with the way they pose the question, making the chart a little difficult to decipher, but let me explain. First, see the chart below:
Crash Likelihood Still Seen as High

Source: FactSet, Yale School of Management/International Center for Finance, as of February 28, 2012.
The question is asked in a way that the reading expresses the percentage of survey respondents that believe a crash will not occur. In other words, as per the latest readings, less than 25% of the survey's respondents, either individual or institutional, believe the market won't suffer a crash. Put another way, more than 75% believe there's a high likelihood of a crash. This is a clear sign that the "wall of worry" the stock market likes to climb is still very much intact.
Investors loving bonds
Much of what I've highlighted above are sentiment measures of attitudes, not actions. One clear way to judge the latter is to look at mutual fund flows. Given that the past five years have seen a record $1.3 trillion spread in favor of bonds over stocks, I agree with the notion that investors have yet to become overly enthused by stocks.
All About Bonds

Source: FactSet, Investment Company Institute, as of February 28, 2012.
I also think fund flows help explain why trading volume has been so low. Simply, the retail investor has not been engaged with this market rally and much money has remained on the sidelines. Add to that the fact that high-frequency traders (HFT), which accounted for over 70% of last year's trading volume at times, are under a magnifying glass held by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for questionable trading practices. This has likely kept many of the HFTs in hibernation.
Businesses happy; consumers less so
Let me step off the market path for a moment and share another interesting sentiment analysis. Last Wednesday, the Business Roundtable recently released its first quarter CEO Economic Outlook Survey, preceded the day before by the release of the Conference Board's measure of consumer confidence. CEOs are now as optimistic as they were during much of the pre-recession period. Although they cite headwinds including Europe, China, oil prices and US political uncertainty, they do not believe they will materially impact their business.
On the other hand, consumer confidence pulled back from a still-weak reading in the latest report. It had risen sharply in February. The level of confidence, with a headline of 70, is well below where the index stood during prior economic expansions.
For what it's worth, CEO confidence has historically acted in a similar manner as the aforementioned "smart money" and its high level of confidence is comforting. On the other hand, very weak periods of consumer confidence have typically been accompanied by higher stock market gains, as the consumer has historically acted in a similar manner as the aforementioned "dumb money."
Schwab's survey says
Finally, we have a new survey from Schwab of its active traders. The latest Charles Schwab Active Trader Sentiment Survey polled 421 individual investors who trade frequently and found 51% now consider themselves bullish—the highest level since we began tracking active trader sentiment in April 2008. This is up from only 25% in October 2011. Only 14% say they are currently bearish.
In sum, my optimism in the medium-to-long-term has not been dented by the latest sentiment readings. Last week was the 26th consecutive week of better-than-expected economic news. Of the 17 indicators that ISI tracks that did a good job tracking 2010 and 2011 double-dip recession concerns, only two are presently weakening, with First Call's earnings revision index notably strong. However, I do think the market has become more vulnerable to negative news in the short term.
Important Disclosures
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.
All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market conditions. Data contained herein from third party providers is obtained from what are considered reliable sources. However, its accuracy, completeness or reliability cannot be guaranteed.
Examples provided are for illustrative (or "informational") purposes only and not intended to be reflective of results you can expect to achieve.
The S&P 500 index is an index of 500 widely traded stocks.
The CBOE Volatility Index® (VIX®) is a measure of market expectations of near-term volatility conveyed by S&P 500 stock index option prices.
Indexes are unmanaged. One cannot invest directly in an index. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Tags: Cboe Volatility Index, Charles Schwab, Chief Investment Strategist, China, Complacency, Contrarian Indicator, Debt Deal, Factset, Fearless Leaders, Headwind, Liz Ann, Ndr, Ned Davis Research, Optimism, Plunge, Senior Vice President, Sentimentrader, Sidelines, Stock Market, Treasury Yields, Volatility Index Vix
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“Shrugging Off Bad News!” (Saut)
Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012
“Shrugging Off Bad News!”
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
April 2, 2012
Most traders, and investors, seem to become convinced of the genuineness of a movement in either direction only when it approaches a culmination. . . . One reliable indication of the start of an upward swing is afforded when, after a period of declining prices or, less frequently, dullness, the market advances or refuses to go down following the receipt of bad news. News can seldom be utilized by the public for market purposes, even when its authenticity is beyond question. For instance, if tomorrow morning’s newspapers should announce the death of the President or the failure of a great ‘corner house,’ or the complete destruction of Gary, Indiana, it is more likely that stocks sold on the news would bring the lowest prices of the day, for the very good reason that each seller would be competing with thousands of other sellers who would have learned the news at the same time.
... One-Way Pockets, by Don Guyon; 1917
One of my early mentors in this business was Lucien Hooper; strategist, analyst, economist, stock market historian, the longest contributing columnist to Forbes, and my friend. I can hear his sage words like it was yesterday. The year was 1971, and we had just walked across the floor of the American Stock Exchange. As we headed down the attendant staircase for lunch at “Harry at the Amex” Lucien said, “Jeffrey, when markets ignore bad news, that’s good news!” Said statement has stuck with me ever since; and, it is just as true today as it was 41 years ago. Fast forward, over the past few weeks the equity markets have had to endure a plethora of bad news – China’s slowing economy, rising interest rates, $4.00 per gallon gasoline, a dysfunctional government, Iran, etc., yet the equity markets have refused to surrender much ground. Last week was no exception, for despite the negative news backdrop the senior index (INDU/13212.04) gained 1%. Such action remains consistent with my mantra for this year, “You can get cautious, but DO NOT get bearish.” However, many investors are either bearish, or frozen like a deer in the headlights of a car, having been stung in last year’s June – August angst because they didn’t manage the risk when they should have.
Recall, it was in March/April of last year that I recommended raising cash. At the time the major “push back” from accounts was, “The stock market is going up, why should I raise cash?” And that was the exact reason you should have been raising cash and rebalancing portfolios. Most did not heed that strategy and subsequently suffered through a ~20% decline only to liquidate their portfolios around August 8th when the equity markets were in the process of bottoming. At the time I was actually recommending putting cash back to work based on the fact that we were experiencing a climactic capitulation of historic proportions. Indeed, at the August 8th “low” less than 2% of all stocks traded were “up” on the day. As written, “You have to go back to May 13, 1940 to find another session whereby less than 2% of all stocks traded were ‘green’ on the day. Interestingly, on 5/13/40 the German army punched a 60-mile wide hole in the Maginot Line and invaded France, leaving everyone thinking, “It’s the end of the world as we know it!”
Luckily, at those August lows, I began using the analogy of the declines that occurred in October 1978 and October 1979 (see the charts on page 3). Those late-1970s October declines came out of the blue, and were equally as debilitating as the June – August 2011 affair. They also ended with a selling climax like that seen on August 8, 2011. As written at the time, post the selling-climax the subsequent trading patterns of October 1978 and 1979 saw a bottoming sequence that left the senior index bobbing and weaving for seven to eight weeks followed by an “undercut low” (a low below the selling-climax low) that was for buying. Studying the attendant charts shows the correlation between the October 1978 and 1979 bottoming sequences and last year’s bottoming sequence, which is what gave me the conviction to recommend buying the October 4, 2011 “undercut low.” Since then, I have been pretty bullish, save my caution of the past number of weeks. Indeed, for the past month I have averred that the overbought condition of the indices could be corrected in one of two ways. They could either correct with the perfunctory 5–8% pullback, or they could trade sideways while the stock market’s overbought condition was corrected, and the market’s internal energy was rebuilt. Obviously, at least so far, it has been a sideways affair, which brings us to the start of the new quarter.
So, what’s in store going forward? I believe the Federal Reserve wants Wall Street to inflate; and, with the Presidential elections looming, President Obama will likely do everything in his power to keep the stock market ebullient. Thus, investors should be prepared for further policies designed to stimulate the economy, which should allow stocks to travel higher even if they do pause, or stumble, in the near-term on concerns the fundamentals are turning squirrelly. Nevertheless, what many investors don’t understand is that in the short/intermediate-term there is not a linear relationship between the fundamentals and the stock market’s directionality. Manifestly, it is the dilution of our currency, with a concurrent decline in its value due to a massive increase in the money supply, which is causing money to flow into assets of all kinds, including stocks. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the natural reaction to the flood of liquidity injected into the system by the world’s central banks. I don’t think it will end anytime soon.
Meanwhile, the overbought condition, as reflected by the NYSE McClellan Oscillator, that got us worried following the end of the “buying stampede” at the end of January, has been corrected; and the stock market’s internal energy is being rebuilt. Verily, our daily internal energy indicator has lifted from a “totally used up” 30 reading on March 19th to 50 as of last Friday. For a full charge of energy that indicator needs to be above 55. The weekly energy indicator, however, is still around the 30 level. Hereto, for a full charge of energy the weekly needs to be above 55. Accordingly, my sense is that the equity markets need another few weeks of convalescing, probably in a range between 1385 and 1420 basis the S&P 500 (SPX/1408.47), before they are ready to re-rally. The big test for this week should be Friday’s employment report, which is anticipated to be bad. Still, as long as the SPX resides above 1385 the bullish case remains intact.
Speaking to the economy, while last week’s +3% GDP report was in the forefront, less noticed was the GDI report. Surprisingly, the Gross Domestic Income report rose a larger than expected 4.4%. This is not an unimportant observation because the GDI measures all the wages and profits in the economy while the GDP measures only spending. Theoretically, the GDP and GDI reports should be the same. To me, this is just further evidence that the economy is not sinking back into recession. Another boost for the equity markets last week seemed to be the tone of the questioning by the Supremes suggesting Obamacare may be in more trouble than expected. Such news continues to be a nightmare for the underinvested crowd; and the world remains profoundly underinvested in U.S. equities.
The call for this week: March came in like a bear, but went out like a bull, capping the best first quarter since 1998. For the quarter the SPX gained 11.99% for its 10th best start of the year ever. For me it was almost like déjà vu as I recalled the best first quarter of my lifetime, which was 1975’s surge of 21.59%. Why déjà vu? Well, it is because I began writing strategy In November of 1974 with the line, “I believe now is the time to accumulate stocks.” At the time the Dow was trading below 600, having fallen from its March high of 891 for a 34% decline. Similarly, on October 3, 2011, in a report titled ”Undercut Low” I recommended buying stocks following the Dow’s decline of ~20%. As stated at the time, “I have been adamant since March 2009 that like the ‘nominal’ price low of December 1974 this wide-swinging trading range market saw its nominal price in March 2009. Last October I suggested what we could currently be experiencing is similar to the “valuation” low of August 1982 because the SPX was trading below 10x forward earnings estimates with an earnings yield of over 10%, rendering an equity risk premium of more than 8% for valuation metrics not seen in decades. I still believe that is the case.
Copyright © Raymond James
Tags: American Stock Exchange, Amex, Bad News, Chief Investment Strategist, China, Culmination, Don Guyon, Gary Indiana, Genuineness, Hooper, India, jeffrey saut, Lucien, Negative News, One Way Pockets, Plethora, Raymond James, Rising Interest Rates, Sage Words, Stock Market, Time One, Upward Swing
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Shifting Winds-Turbulence Ahead? (Sonders)
Monday, April 2nd, 2012
Shifting Winds-Turbulence Ahead?
March 30, 2012
by Liz Ann Sonders,Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., and,
Brad Sorensen, CFA, Director of Market and Sector Analysis, Schwab Center for Financial Research, and
Michelle Gibley, CFA, Director of International Research, Schwab Center for Financial Research
Key Points
- Treasury yields have moved somewhat higher, while stocks have largely continued to rise. Some recent correlations appear to be breaking down, which could lead to some increased volatility but we remain relatively confident in the equity market. Perception as to the next potential moves by the Federal Reserve appeared to be shifting, but Chairman Bernanke reiterated their easy monetary stance. Uncertainty is rising and the Fed’s goal of increased clarity through more transparent communication is under increased scrutiny.
- Liquidity concerns in Europe have eased but economic risks remain elevated, while Spain and Italy face deal with their ongoing debt crises. Meanwhile, fears remain about a hard landing in China, although we have a more sanguine view.
Are we starting the return to a more "normal" market environment? It's too early to tell but we are beginning to see lower volatility and asset class correlations. Contributing to this more stable environment is a shifting of Fed expectations and increased investor confidence about US economic expansion. However, we acknowledge that such a shift will likely cause some near-term turbulence in the market, especially given elevated bullish investor sentiment (a contrarian indicator). The market has also become technically extended after its roughly 30% rally since early October 2011, and could be due for a breather. Additionally, an uncertain earnings season is approaching, oil prices continue to be concerning, and the siren song of "sell in May" is likely to be heard again. We believe any consolidation is likely to be shallow and could bring back some of the "wall of worry" that the market loves to climb.
One of this year’s earlier trends had been stocks moving higher, but Treasury bond yields remaining near record lows, indicating both continued concern about the sustainability of the economic expansion, and the confidence that the Federal Reserve would continue its extremely accommodative monetary stance for the foreseeable future. Recently, we’ve seen Treasury yields move up from those record lows, while stocks continued to move higher. This could be the beginning of a shift in investor attitudes as confidence in the economic expansion may be growing leading to skepticism that the Fed can maintain its current policy stance through 2014.
Yields Move Higher—For Positive Reasons

Source: FactSet, Federal Reserve. As of Mar. 27, 2012.
While it's too early to say this is the start of a trend of yields moving inexorably higher, it does appear that the retail investor could begin to shift some assets from bond funds and cash into equities. This could feed the next leg up in the equity rally.
Economic Transition
Part of the impetus behind the retail investor warming up to equities may be the improvement in economic data—especially as it relates to jobs and housing. But here too we may be entering a transition phase as year-over-year comparisons become more difficult and substantial gains become harder to come by. Housing data continues to be mixed and although initial jobless claims recently hit their lowest level in three years, the pace of the recovery in jobs could slow. This could contribute to near-term volatility, but we do believe in the sustainability of the economic expansion, which should help to support equity prices through the balance of 2012.
Jobs picture continues to improve

Source: FactSet, U.S. Dept. of Labor. As of Mar. 27, 2012.
Housing is not off to the races and likely won’t see a sharp bounce off of the bottom, but we are seeing encouraging signs. Although existing home sales fell 0.9% month-over-month in February, it was still the best February reading in five years and sales were up 8.8% over a year ago. Meanwhile, housing starts fell 1.1% but forward-looking building permits rose 5.1%, to the highest level since October 2008. And while housing remains extremely affordable based on historical levels, mortgage rates have moved modestly higher. Somewhat counter-intuitively this could contribute to further improvement of the housing market as the prospect of rates actually moving higher may push potential purchasers who had been sitting on the fence toward action.
Other economic data continues to show growth in the economy, although there are some potential chinks that we are watching closely. The Empire Manufacturing Index moved to its highest level since June 2010 while the Philly Fed Index rose to its best reading since April 2011. However, the forward looking new orders component of both reports moved lower. While not overly concerning yet, it’s something we’re keeping an eye on.
Additionally, the Index of Leading Economic Indicators rose 0.7% in February, marking the fifth-straight month of improvement. The National Federation of Independent Businesses Index moved higher, indicating improving small business confidence. Finally, retail sales moved 1.1% higher; while ex-autos and gas they moved 0.6% higher and the previous month was also revised upward, indicating the American consumer continues to spur activity.
Fed Stance Shifting?
This continued improving data may be contributing to a shift in the perception of the future of Fed policy. While the recent Fed meeting kept policy the same and continued to predict near zero interest rates through at least late 2014, they did upgrade their outlook of the economy slightly. Also, several Fed members have said they believe higher interest rates may be needed sooner than currently officially predicted. The fed funds futures market has the first rate hike coming at least six months before the end of 2014. And finally, during Chairman Bernanke’s recent testimony on Capitol Hill, he did nothing to indicate another round of quantitative easing was in the cards, leading investors to believe the Fed's confidence in the economic expansion may be growing. However, in a subsequent speech, he reiterated his belief that the economy and job market would continue to need Fed assistance, throwing a little more uncertainty into the equation. We are encouraged at these glimmers of hope and believe that a return to more normal policy sooner rather than later would be appropriate.
Europe’s debt crisis merely on pause
The second Greek bailout was completed on March 20 with markets hardly batting an eye. But the eurozone sovereign debt crisis is far from over—it is merely on pause and there is still risk of future outbreaks.
Where could sovereign debt concerns arise?
- Greece and Portugal could need additional bailouts;
- Ireland could ask for debt forgiveness to bolster a public vote for the fiscal pact;
- France’s general election could result in a change of leadership from Sarkozy to Hollande.
However, we feel these potential events are unlikely to result in a broad contagion outbreak. On the other hand, Spain and Italy have the ability to heat up concerns and risk aversion due to their large debts and economies. Italy’s economy has grown less than the eurozone average over the past decade and reforms are needed to improve competitiveness and enhance growth prospects. Italian Prime Minister Monti needs to keep making progress to maintain investor confidence, and watered down labor reforms may not have a lasting effect.
However, Italy has some positive attributes, including a wealthy private sector with a per capita net worth more than three times higher than the other European peripheral countries, according to BCA Research, giving them the ability to fund debt locally. As such, Italy’s debt tends to be in stronger, longer-term, hands. Additionally, Italy has a primary budget surplus – a surplus before debt payments – as well as long debt maturities.
Spain's housing bubble still deflating

Source: FactSet, S&P/Case-Shiller, Bank of Spain. As Mar. 27, 2012. Indexed to 100 = 1/1/1996.
Spain on the other hand has a more uncertain and risky outlook. While Spain’s current government debt load is smaller than Italy’s as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), it has an elevated deficit, high and rising unemployment and a housing bubble that is still deflating. A risk is that the large amount of private sector debt could incur more losses for banks, potentially requiring cash infusions from the government. Additionally, instead of making deficit-reduction progress, Spain has backpedaled; now targeting a higher deficit to end 2012 than envisioned a few months ago.
Positively, European policymakers are doing their part to contain risks, from the European Central Bank's three-year loans and Germany's recent willingness to combine the temporary European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) with the longer-term European Stability Mechanism (ESM) that comes into effect in July. However, an even bigger firewall may eventually be needed.
Europe dragging down global growth
The lingering effects of the sovereign debt crisis on the European economy continue. The renewed downturn of eurozone purchasing manager indexes in March indicate the economy is still fragile and it could take some time before growth reaccelerates. A hobbled European banking system remains at the heart of the slowdown. Bank balance sheets likely don't have enough excess capital to expand lending and banks have responded by tightening lending standards. Lending is the lifeblood of economic growth and a severe reduction in lending is likely to restrain activity.
In terms of investment implications, the outlook for European stocks is mixed. Valuations appear attractive and we believe correlations will decline and investors will differentiate across markets. Markets with stronger economies such as Germany could do better, while those with weaker economic outlooks, like Spain, could lag. The Italian stock market falls in the middle, as a negative economic outlook is offset by high private sector wealth.
Should we worry about China?
There are plenty of bearish stories about China these days and China remains a puzzle to many. The lack of transparency and the view that news is filtered and managed helps fuel the fears.
We believe the truth lies somewhere between the bearish and bullish case. We still believe that a hard landing is unlikely and that markets are at times over-reacting to data that is really not new news. Examples include the 7.5% growth target for 2012 when the Five-Year Plan issued a year ago envisioned a 7% rate over the full period; and comments from BHP Billiton that demand for iron ore would drop to single-digits, which was not significantly different than what they had said in the past.
Even reports that China's manufacturing purchasing manager index (PMI) is in contraction territory are a misnomer. The PMI survey is a diffusion index—a reading below 50 indicates more people say things are slower versus last month than faster—in other words, below average activity. In a fast growing economy such as China, this does not necessarily equate to a contraction.
Manufacturing in China slowing

Source: FactSet, Markit. As Mar. 27, 2012.
We have believed for some time that China's economy would continue to slow, but that a sharp drop in inflation and money supply would allow stimulus to be enacted that could reaccelerate growth later in 2012. However, we are discouraged by so far modest policy easing amid signs of accelerated slowing.
In particular, the report that profits for Chinese industrial companies fell 5.2% during the first two months of 2012 was worse than we expected. Granted, this figure was after profits gained 34.3% a year earlier and is during a seasonally weak period, so it may not be a lasting trend, but is concerning.
The Chinese government typically takes gradual moves, but the slow pace of response while economic data is moving faster indicates the government could slip behind the economic momentum, then struggle to gain ground. China’s economy is now the second-largest globally and is becoming tougher to micro-manage – the risk of a policy mistake is growing. We’re not ready to change our view as we believe we’re still in the early innings of the slowdown, but have a wary eye on policy response.
An event that could have longer-term implications is the coming political changeover at year's end. Concerns have arisen after the party chief in Chongqing, one of China's biggest cities, was sacked in March. This is the highest level official removed in over two decades. There appears to be increasing strains within the Communist party about whether to move toward reforms or tighten control. We'll be monitoring this over the coming year.
Read more international research at www.schwab.com/oninternational.
Important Disclosures
The MSCI EAFE® Index (Europe, Australasia, Far East) is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the United States and Canada. As of May 27, 2010, the MSCI EAFE Index consisted of the following 22 developed market country indexes: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.The MSCI Emerging Markets IndexSM is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure equity market performance in the global emerging markets. As of May 27, 2010, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index consisted of the following 21 emerging-market country indexes: Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Egypt, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand and Turkey.The S&P 500® index is an index of widely traded stocks.Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses and cannot be invested in directly.Past performance is no guarantee of future results.Investing in sectors may involve a greater degree of risk than investments with broader diversification.International investments are subject to additional risks such as currency fluctuations, political instability and the potential for illiquid markets. Investing in emerging markets can accentuate these risks.The information contained herein is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy or completeness is not guaranteed. This report is for informational purposes only and is not a solicitation or a recommendation that any particular investor should purchase or sell any particular security. Schwab does not assess the suitability or the potential value of any particular investment. All expressions of opinions are subject to change without notice. The Schwab Center for Financial Research is a division of Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
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James Paulsen: Does Gold Still Glitter?
Friday, March 30th, 2012
Does GOLD Still Glitter?
by James Paulsen, Chief Investment Strategist, Wells Capital Management (Wells Fargo)
Gold has been an investment darling in recent years. Indeed, it is often perceived as the cure for any investment worry. Whether you are concerned about inflation, deflation, government deficits, war, a U.S. dollar collapse, recession, or depression—GOLD is the answer!
The extraordinary popularity of gold today is easy to understand—it has done so well for so long! Since the end of the 1990s, the price of gold has risen almost six-fold from less than $300 to its current price of almost $1,700. Many expect the price of gold to rise considerably higher in the next several years and perceive the modest decline in the gold price since its all-time peak last September as a buying opportunity. While owning some gold is fine for all investors (diversification is paramount), we think gold weightings should be scaled back in most portfolios. The yellow metal may soon lose some of its luster as its struggles with its newly elevated valuation and with the likelihood that confidence throughout the economy is beginning to improve.
Gold is OVERVALUED!
Unlike stocks or bonds, gold has always been more difficult to value since it produces no cash flow (i.e., earnings or coupons) that can be discounted to arrive at a present (fair) value. However, Exhibit 1 illustrates a simple “relative valuation” methodology providing an historical perspective against most other investment classes (e.g., stocks, bonds, commodities, and real estate) and relative to the value of labor and a basket of consumer goods and services. In each of the six charts shown, the price of gold on a relative basis is either nearing or is at one of its highest valuations of the last 50 years. At the end of the 1990s, it took almost 5.5 ounces of gold to buy the S&P 500 Stock Price Index. Today, it only takes 0.8 of a single ounce to buy the stock market. Relative to stocks, gold is almost as expensive today as it was in the late 1970s when the price of gold had surged after its peg was eliminated and after the stock market was ravished by a decade of runaway inflation.
Relative to Treasury bonds, the price of gold currently trades near an all-time, post-war record high surpassing its old relative valuation record established in the late 1980s when bonds were incredibly cheap. It is indeed remarkable that gold today is this expensive relative to an asset class (bonds) which most agree is probably itself extremely overvalued.
In recent years, while gold prices have soared, U.S. home prices have collapsed. Although the price of gold relative to U.S. homes is not yet as high as it reached in the late 1970s, its current relative valuation compared to house prices leaves little optimism about the future potential for gold prices. Gold is also expensive relative to worker pay. In 2000, it took less than 20 hours of work (at the average hourly wage rate) to purchase a single ounce of gold. Today, by contrast, it takes almost 90 hours of labor to buy an ounce of gold! In a similar fashion, the price of gold relative to the basket of consumer goods and services comprising the Consumer Price Index is near its all-time record high reached in the early 1980s.
Finally, even compared to other commodity prices, the price of gold is nearing its all-time record relative price reached in the late 1980s. Even though commodity prices in general have increased significantly in the last decade, the price of gold has risen even more dramatically.
While valuation metrics have not traditionally been a good investment timing tool, they have provided a useful indication of the future upside/downside price potential of an investment. Relative to other investments, the charts in Exhibit 1 not only suggest upside is probably limited for gold but also cautions that downside price risk could be significant. At a minimum, these charts do not seem to support the widespread popularity and optimism concerning gold investing.
Gold and the “Fear Premium”?
Exhibit 2 shows the price of gold relative to other commodity prices. Although gold has been a spectacular investment since 2000, so have other commodities. Surprisingly, since 2000, the price of gold has only significantly outpaced other commodity prices during a few months in late 2008 when the “Great Financial Crisis” erupted. Between 2000 and late 2008, the relative price of gold to other commodities remained flat at about 1.5 implying both gold prices and other commodity prices rose by equal amounts during the period. Similarly, the relative price of gold was also unchanged between early 2009 and today. That is, “all” commodity prices rose just as much as gold prices between 2000 and late 2008 and again between early 2009 until today (despite this, however, general commodities remain a much less popular investment than gold).
The only time gold significantly outpaced other commodity investments was when investor “fear” surged. Exhibit 2 illustrates the “fear premium” the price of gold received relative to other commodity prices during the 2008 crisis and how much of this premium is still embedded in its price today. Between 2000 and late 2008, the price of gold oscillated in broad range about 1.4 times the value of the S&P GSCI Commodity Price Index. Today, gold trades at about 2.4 times the value of this commodity index. The risk or fear premium embedded in the price of gold (i.e., about 1.0, the difference between the relative price of gold today at 2.4 and where it used to trade prior to the 2008 crisis at about 1.4) is quite large and needs to be assessed when considering an investment in gold. A primary risk for gold investors is the potential for decay in this fear premium.
Gold’s Best Friend (Fear) May be Fading?!?
Exhibit 3 illustrates the challenge gold investors may face in the next few years should confidence slowly improve and “crisis fears” fade. This exhibit compares the relative price of gold to the Consumer Confidence Index. The confidence index (dotted line) is shown on an inverted scale so a rise (fall) in the dotted line illustrates periods when confidence is declining (increasing).
While not a perfect relationship, the relative price of gold relative to other commodity prices seems importantly driven by confidence. Gold’s best friend in recent years has been fear! As confidence collapsed in 2008, the relative price of gold far outpaced other commodity investments. Likewise, the decline in confidence after the tech wreck and after 9/11 in the early 2000s produced a similar “fear premium” in the relative performance of gold prices. However, between 2003 and 2007, the “fear premium” embedded in gold eventually evaporated once confidence again revived as the economic recovery matured. A similar revival in economic confidence may be emerging today. If the Consumer
Confidence Index does recover to at least 100 in this recovery, a good portion of the “fear premium” embedded in the price of gold may evaporate producing disappointing results for gold bugs.
Summary
Maintaining some gold exposure within portfolios makes sense. Should crisis fears continue to periodically flare in the next several years, gold should provide the portfolio with some defensive properties. However, we believe investors should consider reducing gold exposure. This is an investment which today seems far too popular among the masses, appears extremely overvalued relative to most other asset classes and faces a challenging environment should economic confidence slowly improve in the next several years. The valuation of gold relative to virtually any other asset class (stocks, bonds, real estate or commodities) seems to suggest the price of gold is either extremely rich today and at risk of significant decline or suggests most other asset classes are very cheap. Either way, it is probably time to position portfolios to benefit from a slow but steady revival in confidence rather than in an asset which only “glitters” when fear predominates.
Copyright © Wells Capital Management
Tags: Chief Investment Strategist, Commodities, Commodity, Consumer Goods, Diversification, E G Stocks, Glitter, Gold, Gold Price, Government Deficits, Historical Perspective, Last September, Luster, Price Of Gold, Relative Basis, Relative Valuation, Stock Market, Stock Price Index, Stocks Bonds, Time Peak, Valuations, Wells Capital Management, Wells Fargo
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"Patience" (Saut)
Tuesday, March 27th, 2012
“Patience”
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
March 26, 2012
“If there is ever a time when speculators should exercise patience, it is in waiting for a proper opportunity to buy stocks. The desire to make money is at the foundation of all commercial and financial transactions, but the mere desire to make money should never be the mainspring of speculative action. Knowledge or belief based on intelligent analysis that a speculative opportunity presents itself is the only safe basis for making purchases of stock. It is in forgetting that principle that so many speculators err. They do not ask when they are preparing to buy stocks, ‘is the stock cheap and is it selling below its real value?’ [Rather they ask] ‘Is that stock going up?’ The only sound reason for buying any stock is that it can be had cheap.”
... R.W. McNell; Beating The Stock Market, 1927
Bet it surprised you that quote is dated 1927. Read it a couple of times away from the maddening crowd and reflect on it because certain phrases will grab you with their wisdom. I first read McNell’s book when I was a pup in this business back in 1971. The insights I gleaned from said book caused me to begin keeping three loose-leaf notebooks. The first notebook was the “I should have” notebook where I recorded the stocks I had considered buying, but didn’t, only to watch them trade higher. The second notebook was the “I shouldn’t have” book where I recorded the stocks I had bought that I should not have purchased because they went down and I was stopped-out of those positions with a loss. The third notebook was the “I did” book where I listed the stocks I had bought that had worked and made me decent returns. The first two books are thick, while the “I did” book is relatively thin. What I learned from this exercise is that when I try to force myself to buy a stock, rather than have the patience to wait for a “fatter pitch,” is when I almost always lose money. Indeed, many investors suffer from an “action bias,” aka a desire to do something, when in reality there are times in the markets when there isn’t much to do. When that occurs the best plan is to do nothing and wait for a “fatter pitch.”
Obviously, that is what I have been doing since the buying stampede ended in late January. Well that’s not entirely true, because I have actually raised some cash in anticipation of either a pause in the stock market or a correction. So far it has pretty much only been a pause with an upward bias, which is still bullish action. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why I have been consistent with the statement, “You can get cautious, but do not get bearish!” All in all, I think most will agree the past two months have been very frustrating with not much follow through either on the upside or the downside. During that time frame the NYSE McClellan Oscillator has worked off most of its overbought condition. However, the stock market’s internal energy is still completely used up and should take at least another six to seven sessions to rebuild. Accordingly, if the S&P 500 (SPX/1397.11) stays above the 1375 to 1385 support zone over the next six to seven sessions it would be very bullish action suggestive of a continuation of the upside runaway we have been experiencing since mid-December of last year. Failing to hold above those levels would likely mean a downside test into the 1320 to 1340 zone; that is what commercial hedgers are anticipating. Indeed, for the latest week hedgers were net short ~$9.6 billion of the NASDAQ 100 (NDX/2728.55), which is an all-time record. While hedgers are not always right, history does show that markets tend to have a difficult time rallying when professional hedgers are this bearish.
While the hedgers will be watching this week to see if their bearish bets pay off, the Obama administration will be watching the Supreme Court because beginning today Obamacare goes to court. I believe this week’s court session is unprecedented as the Chief Justice, Mr. John Roberts, has allowed those making their cases six hours, over three days, for their presentations (see the schedule on page 3). Typically the Supreme Court only grants one to two hours for a case. The opposition to Obamacare will argue that a citizen should not be forced by the government to buy any service. Those in favor of Obamacare will likely center on this quote from Walter Dellinger’s spiel to the Senate’s Justice Committee on February 2, 2011:
“As Justice Scalia observed in his concurring opinion in Gonzales v. Raich, ‘where Congress has the authority to enact a regulation of interstate commerce, it possesses every power needed to make that regulation effective’.”
William Eskridge, a law professor at Yale, was interviewed in a Forbes article dated 10/7/2011 on the same question. To wit:
“The answer, Eskridge says, lies in U.S. v. Comstock (2010), where Breier writes a broad opinion on the Necessary and Proper Clause, which gives Congress the power to take what measures it thinks necessary to accomplish its goals. The main case in this area is Mcculloch v. Maryland, the 1819 decision that upheld Congress’ power to establish a national bank.”
Of course, such arguments go to the very core of our government and the Constitution. The winner of the case will also have a “leg up” in the Presidential race. If Obamacare is found unconstitutional it should give candidate Romney the ability to say – the Administration tried unsuccessfully to force more government on the people and failed. The quid pro quo is that if Obamacare is declared constitutional the Administration will carry that victory right into the election. In any event, the very essence of our government will be decided this week by the Supreme Court.
Amid this Obamacare uncertainty, something fairly unusual has happened, the Health Care Select Sector SPDR (XLV/$36.62) is challenging its all-time high. This is unusual because as Michael Santoli writes in this week’s Barron’s:
“It is refreshing that investors and analysts collectively are not enamored of the group. It seems that the pending (possible) implementation of the health-care overhaul, and the expected Supreme Court decision on its constitutionality, has given observers plenty of reason to worry over the future economics of various medical and insurance fields.”
In last week’s letter I suggested participants watch the KBW Banking Index (BKX/49.53) for the overall stock market’s near-term direction because the Financials have been leading this year’s charge. Subsequently, the BKX tagged an intraday high last Monday of 50.69 and fell to an intraday low of 48.77 on Friday with an attendant weekly fade for the D-J Industrials (INDU/13080.73) of 1.15%. This week I suggest you watch the XLV for gleanings into how the Supreme Court will rule and what that means for the healthcare complex.
The call for this week: I continue to exercise patience with the equity markets while I sit on the cash raised over the past number of weeks. Unlike many, I consider cash an asset class. Indeed, to assume the investment opportunity “sets” that are available to you today are better than ones that will present themselves next week or next month is naïve. To take advantage of those opportunity “sets” one needs to have some cash. For those wishing to be more aggressive, it looks to me as if the U.S. dollar is in the process of breaking down. If true, and only for a trade, the Market Vector Gold Miners’ (GDX/$49.76) 16.3% mini-crash since February 29th should be over. A good stop-loss point would be slightly below last week’s intraday low of $48.45.
Schedule
Monday, March 26, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Oral arguments about: Does the Tax Anti-Injunction Act bar judicial review of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act until the mandate takes effect in 2014?
Tuesday, March 27, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Oral arguments: Is the individual mandate constitutional?
Wednesday, March 28, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Oral arguments: Is the mandate severable from the rest of the law?
Wednesday, March 28, 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Oral arguments: Is the Medicaid expansion constitutional?
Friday, March 30
Audio transcripts of the week’s oral arguments released; and the court decides the case in secret conference.
Monday, June 25
Court publishes its decision (tentative)
Source: FreedomWorks
Copyright © Raymond James
Tags: Action Knowledge, Beating The Stock Market, Bet, Chief Investment Strategist, Decent Returns, Financial Transactions, First Notebook, Intelligent Analysis, jeffrey saut, Loose Leaf Notebooks, Maddening Crowd, Mainspring, Patience, Phrases, Pup, Raymond James, Sound Reason, Speculative Action, Speculators, Two Books
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The Case for Chinese Stocks (Koesterich)
Friday, March 23rd, 2012

by Russ Koesterich, Chief Investment Strategist, iShares
China recently modestly lowered its annual growth target to 7.5% from 8%. This change has made many investors nervous that China may be in for a period of sluggish growth.
While investors are reasonably concerned about a hard landing, I believe such a scenario can be avoided in 2012. As a result, I continue to advocate overweighting Chinese equities for three reasons.
1.) Relatively Strong Growth Expectations: The lowered growth target isn’t necessarily a precursor to a hard landing. Why? The government’s 2012 growth target is a reasonable estimate for Chinese potential going forward.
The new target reflects the government’s endorsement of a beneficial, long-term rebalancing of the Chinese economy. China can’t, and probably shouldn’t, try to maintain the pace of growth achieved during the past decade as much of that growth came from fixed investments. In order to create a more sustainable long-term model, China needs to raise consumption and moderate investment, a rebalancing that will likely help support Chinese equities. Currently, China is unusual, even for an emerging market, in that only about 1/3 of its economic activity comes from personal consumption.
In addition, even if China grows at 7.5%, it still would be one of the world’s fastest growing economies and the government’s growth goal is typically a floor. In fact, actual Chinese growth is expected to be in the 8% to 8.5% range this year.
2.) Attractive Valuations: Assuming China can grow as expected in 2012 and engineer a soft landing, Chinese equities look attractive from a valuation perspective. While Chinese stocks are up significantly this year, the Chinese market is still down nearly 8% over the past 12 months. It’s now trading for less than 1.7x book value, a significant discount to where it has traded over the past five years and well below the emerging market average.
3.) The Inflation Outlook: Rising prices were a major problem in China last year, with consumer prices up 5.5% in 2011. But inflation in China is now decelerating. Currently, prices in China are up only 3.2% from a year earlier, and inflation is expected to stay low for the remainder of the year. Lower inflation will provide more latitude for the Chinese central bank to loosen monetary policy, which should further support the local economy and local stock prices.
To be sure, the Chinese market is not without risks, particularly surrounding local property prices. Still, as I expect China will most likely engineer a soft landing, the market’s decelerating inflation, cheap valuations and strong relative, and rebalancing, growth make it one investors may want to consider. For those looking to gain exposure to Chinese equities, my preferred methods of access are the iShares MSCI China Index Fund (NYSEARCA: MCHI), the iShares FTSE China 25 Index Fund (NYSEARCA: FXI) and the iShares MSCI China Small Cap Index Fund (NYSEARCA: ECNS).
Source: Bloomberg
The author is long FXI
In addition to the normal risks associated with investing, international investments may involve risk of capital loss from unfavorable fluctuation in currency values, from differences in generally accepted accounting principles or from economic or political instability in other nations. Emerging markets involve heightened risks related to the same factors as well as increased volatility and lower trading volume. Securities focusing on a single country and investments in smaller companies may be subject to higher volatility.
Copyright © iShares
Tags: 7x, Attractive Valuations, Chief Investment Strategist, Chinese Economy, Chinese Growth, Chinese Market, Chinese Stocks, Economic Activity, Economy China, Emerging Market, Growth Expectations, Growth Goal, Growth Target, Inflation Outlook, Personal Consumption, Precursor, Rebalancing, S Endorsement, Sluggish Growth, Term Model
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