Saturday, July 13, 2013

The Closing Bell--7/13/13

The Closing Bell

7/13/13

Statistical Summary

   Current Economic Forecast

           
            2012

Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product:                           2.2%
                        Inflation (revised):                                                              1.8 %
Growth in Corporate Profits:                                  16.1%

            2013

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

   Current Market Forecast
           
            Dow Jones Industrial Average

                                    Current Trend (revised):  
                                    Short Term Trading Range                      14190-15550
Intermediate Uptrend                              14335-19335
Long Term Trading Range                       4918-17000
                                               
                        2012    Year End Fair Value                                     11290-11310

                        2013    Year End Fair Value                                     11590-11610                                          

            Standard & Poor’s 500

                                    Current Trend (revised):
                                    Short Term Trading Range                             1576-1687
                                    Intermediate Term Uptrend                       1521-2109 
                                    Long Term Trading Range                         715-1800
                                                           
                        2012    Year End Fair Value                                      1390-1410

                        2013   Year End Fair Value                                       1430-1450         

Percentage Cash in Our Portfolios

Dividend Growth Portfolio                              42%
            High Yield Portfolio                                        44%
            Aggressive Growth Portfolio                           43%

Economics/Politics
           
The economy is a modest positive for Your Money.   The economic datapoints this week were light and evenly mixed with no real bias: positives---weekly retail sales as well as June chain store sales, May consumer credit, June wholesale sales and the June fiscal budget; negatives---weekly mortgage and purchase applications, weekly jobless claims, May small business optimism, wholesale inventories, June consumer sentiment and June PPI; neutral---none.

So the overall trend in the numbers remains pointed at continued growth in the economy albeit at a sluggish pace.  I am leaving the amber light flashing because of the confusion over Fed policy (see below) created this week by Bernanke’s seeming reversal of ‘tapering’.  As I noted in Thursday Morning Call, the Fed may be more confused than investors over what its policy is and/or should be---which is not a good antidote to economic uncertainty.  As a result, businesses and consumers are likely to remain very cautious---which could contribute to weakness in those sectors of the economy; hence the warning light.  Our forecast:

a below average secular rate of recovery resulting from too much government spending, too much government debt to service, too much government regulation, a financial system with an impaired balance sheet. and a business community unwilling to hire and invest because the aforementioned along with...... the historic inability of the Fed to properly time the reversal of a vastly over expansive  monetary policy.

            The pluses:

(1)   our improving energy picture.  The US is awash in cheap, clean burning natural gas.... In addition to making home heating more affordable, low cost, abundant energy serves to draw those manufacturers back to the US who are facing rising foreign labor costs and relying on energy resources that carry negative political risks. 
       
       
       The negatives:

(1)   a vulnerable global banking system.  The bad news is that economic/political conditions continue to deteriorate in southern Europe [Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal].  Given the heavy exposure of those countries’ banking systems to their respective sovereign debts added to the recent revelations in Italy that it too [Greece] could likely experience substantial derivative losses, this problem remains front and center as a major source of risk to the global economy.

The good news is that [a] the Treasury has proposed rules that would punish reckless banker behavior under criminal law, [b] the FDIC has proposed raising minimum bank capital requirements to 5% and [c] the Senate has introduced a bill re-instating Glass Steagall.

To be sure, the existing risks in the EU banking system far outweigh the positives of a bunch of yet-to-be-enacted-proposals here at home.  Nevertheless, I will still embrace potential good news just was I do prospective bad news.  So I have to rate the recent developments in the US as a plus.

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

(2)   fiscal policy.  While our ruling class continues to fiddle while our spending and taxing policies act as a drag on the economy, there are still developments about which to be encouraged---even if they are occurring largely by default.  One such point is the Federal deficit.  It is narrowing as a result of the enforced sequester and the expiration of Bush tax cuts.  Our politicians whined, belly ached and prophesied doom when these measures went into effect.  But today, the economy continues to grow while spending and the deficit as a percentage of GDP are falling---which in turn serves to lessen the fiscal drag on the economy.  That’s good.

Another positive is the collapse of the implementation efforts for Obamacare. Most people with a lick of common sense strongly believed that this fiscal monstrosity was never going to work because, as Nancy Pelosi so presciently observed, no one had any idea what was in the legislation when it passed.  Now that we know that it is not going to work, one provision after another is being delayed or postponed; and that means that the fiscal drag from this nifty bit of unworkable, ideological dreamscape puffery is also being delayed and postponed. 

To be sure, the uncertainty that it created is still there and will remain until this piece of crap is repealed or substantially altered; and that will likely continue to restrain enthusiasm for investment and consumption.   However, the immediate costs that everyone feared have been delayed at worse for a year or so and at best forever.

All that said, entitlement and tax reform remain a wet dream at least until after the 2014 elections.  That leaves the economy struggling to overcome a fiscal policy headwind and the Fed assuming that it alone must bear the responsibility of keeping the economy from falling back into recession---an assumption that has led to policy moves more harmful than helpful [see a discussion of this week’s Fed circus below].

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

So the risk here is two fold: [a] to the Fed---its balance sheet is levered to the point that Lehman Bros. looks like it was an AAA credit.  So if interest rates go up {and prices go down}, the very thin equity piece of the balance sheet would disappear.  The Fed would then be technically bankrupt. and [b] to the Treasury---it must pay the interest charges.  Hence, if rates go up, the interest costs to the government go up; and if they go up a lot, then this budget line item will explode and make all the more difficult any vow to reduce government spending as a percent of GDP.....
                  
(3)   the potential negative impact of central bank money printing:  The key point here is that [a] the Fed has inflated bank reserves far beyond any comparable level in history and [b] while this hasn’t been an economic problem to date, {i} it still has to withdraw all those reserves from the system without creating any disruptions---a task that I regularly point out it has proven inept at in the past and {ii} it has created or is creating asset bubbles in the stock market as well as in the auto, student and mortgage loan markets. 

The headline this week was, of course, Bernanke’s seeming retreat from his ‘tapering’ comments---‘seeming’ being the operative word.  Pundits disagree about whether he really and truly backed off of the circa September start date.  They are also going to great lengths to distinguish between ‘tapering’ [implying that it is the relatively harmless reduction of Fed Treasury and mortgage purchases] and tightening which they define as raising interest rates [implying that it will have a meaningful impact on the economy].  Their point being that ‘tapering’ could still could occur near term but tightening is nowhere to be seen.

First let me say that the events of this week confirm in spades my central thesis on the Fed, to wit,  it still has to withdraw all those reserves from the system without creating any disruptions---a task that I regularly point out it has proven inept at in the past.  If the recent sideshow hasn’t reinforced the proven inept at portion of that statement, I don’t what else could. 

Let’s recap: in late May, Bernanke presents ‘tapering’ to the Markets [a step I agree with].  Then the Markets throw a hissy fit.  Immediately, one Fed official after another starts walking back Ben’s statement; and when that doesn’t seem to be working, Bernanke has to come out with his ‘just kidding’ mea culpa.  In other words, the Fed either has no clue what it is doing or it has no confidence in what it is doing.  Whichever is the case, ‘inept’ comes to mind.

This whole episode raises a second issue: who the f**k is in charge of monetary policy?  The Fed or the Market---because if it is the latter, what do we need Bernanke for?

Finally, all the fine tuning parsing of ‘tapering’ [not raising rates] versus tightening [raising rates] is a meaningless exercise. 

[a] if the Fed stops buying $45/$55/$35 billion {you pick the number} in Treasuries a month, somebody else has to buy them.  Those investors will most likely be a bit more discerning about what they pay than the Fed; and that probably means higher rates.  If you don’t believe that, go back and look on what happened in the last month,

[b] the parsers define ‘raising rates’ as the Fed moving up the Fed Funds rate {at its option}.  Of course, that has nothing to do with long term rates---which have already moved up and nothing is stopping them from going even higher---or even some short term rates like credit cards.  More to the point, as I noted above, once investors know that the Fed is starting to reverse this massively irresponsible expansion of reserves {‘tapering’}, I believe rates all along the interest rate curve could rise substantially. In fact, historically, more often than not Markets generally lead and at times force changes in Fed policy.  If that holds true this time around, it won’t be the Fed’s choice when to tighten {raise rates}; it will be the Market’s.  

Bottom line: my thesis remains that when Bernanke introduced the notion of ‘tapering’, he slapped the Markets in the face with a dose of reality.  In their gut, investors knew that the Fed had heavily spiked a massive punch bowl but cheap money [carry trade] was simply too big a temptation.  But when confronted with reality, they quickly adjusted expectations.  So irrespective of his Wednesday afternoon comment, the genie is now out of the bottle and all the rationalizing in the world is not going to get back in. 

That said, that thesis is on the cusp of being proven wrong---at least for the time being.  But sooner or later, I believe Markets are going to realize QEInfinity will cease; at a minimum, rates will rise as a result; at worse, bubbles will be popped and things will not end well. 

The latest from Lance Roberts: the Fed and the liquidity trap (medium):

 (4) a blow up in the Middle EastEgypt has had the headlines the past two weeks---its importance being as a transit [Suez Canal] for Middle East oil.  Indeed, oil has moved up as concerns about the country’s stability have grown---which perfectly illustrates my point: any disruption in production or transportation of Middle East oil will negatively impact prices, raising the risk of the US slipping back into a recession.

(5)   finally, the sovereign and bank debt crisis in EuropeSouthern Europe continues its slide: Greece needs another bail out, Portugal is in political crisis over austerity, Spain is also in crisis over a money-for-influence scandal and first, Italy, then France’s credit ratings have been downgraded.  Finally, in the  latest bit of surreal comedy, Spanish banks are petitioning the government to allow them to convert their tax loss carry forwards into capital assets.  Hilarity ensued.

So far, the US has escaped any major fallout from any of this.  However, my worry is that a political or economic crisis could lead to financial turmoil that could trigger defaults stemming from excessive sovereign indebtedness or poor quality, overleveraged bank balance sheets.

‘To be sure, Europe has managed to ‘muddle through’ so far---indeed that has been our forecast.  But if current turmoil in the credit and derivatives markets continues, the EU economies, in particular those weak Mediterranean sisters, are much more vulnerable as a result of the magnitude of their indebtedness and overleveraged banks.’
   
    Southern Europe crumbles (medium):

  Bottom line:  the US economy continues to click along although at a historically below average pace.  It is a tribute to American business acumen that this progress has been made in the face of fiscal, monetary and international headwinds.

Fiscal policy is improving although not because our political class is doing anything responsible.  The fiscal restraint on the economy is lessening as the budget deficit falls; and that is a positive.  Further, Obamacare is self imploding and that is resulting in the delay of new costly and onerous regulations.  Now if we could just get these clowns to do something meaningful, like entitlement and tax reform, fiscal policy could transition from a negative to a positive.

If fiscal policy has some bright spots, central bank reserve creation, in particular, our own central bank monetary policies, keep getting worse.  It is bad enough that the Fed clings to a policy that has done little to improve economic activity or employment while creating asset bubbles along with lots of rich bankers; but this last week, it folded like a cheap umbrella when the beneficiaries of its highly spiked punch bowl threw a temper tantrum.  This latest move reinforces my conviction that the Fed will once again botch any attempt to transition from easy to tight money.

Finally, Europe is a mess and it is getting worse.  So far the eurocrats have done what they do best---which is nothing except drink whisky, smoke cigars and tell each other how smart they are, while occasionally pontificating on the fiscal and financial problems of the EU and promising that someday they will do something. 

This week’s data:

(1)                                  housing: weekly mortgage and purchase applications declined,

(2)                                  consumer: weekly retail sales rose and June chain store sales were a plus; May consumer credit jumped substantially; weekly jobless claims rose versus expectations of a decline; June consumer sentiment fell,

(3)                                  industry: small business optimism dropped in May; wholesale inventories declined but sales were quite strong,

(4)                                  macroeconomic: the minutes from the latest FOMC meeting were released and they were more dovish than Bernanke’s comments following the meeting; subsequently in a speech, Bernanke appeared to walk back his original ‘tapering‘ comments; the June budget was in surplus, though there were technical factors involved; the June PPI came in hotter than anticipated, but ex food and energy, it was in line.

The Market-Disciplined Investing
           
  Technical

The Averages (DJIA 15464, S&P 1680) had a great week, finishing within striking distance of their all time highs/upper boundaries of their short term trading ranges (14190-15550, 1576-1687) and well within their intermediate term (14335-19335, 1521-2109) and long term (4918-17000, 715-1800) uptrends.   

Volume on Friday picked up slightly; breadth was mixed.  The VIX closed below the lower boundary of a very short term uptrend.  If it remains there at the close Monday, the trend will be broken and that will be a positive for stocks.

GLD traded down; so it saw no improvement to an already dismal chart.
           
Bottom line: equities will likely challenge the 15550/1687 levels next week.  If successful, stocks should be off to the races again.  Since they would then be at all time highs, there exists no overhead resistance.  Nevertheless, the upper boundaries of the three major trends (short term---1750, intermediate term---2109, long term ---1800) will become important benchmarks. 

Assuming the 1750/1800 (short and long term upper boundaries) area represents the zone of maximum upside, that is about 3-6% versus 6% downside if stocks return to the short term lower boundary, 9% if they slide to the intermediate term lower boundary, 18% if they return to Fair Value and 57% if they make it all the way to the long term lower boundary

If the 15550/1687 levels hold, the risk exists that a double, even a triple top will have been put in.

 There is nothing to do but watch the process.

   Fundamental-A Dividend Growth Investment Strategy

The DJIA (15464) finished this week about 34.7% above Fair Value (11475) while the S&P (1680) closed 18.1% overvalued (1422).  Incorporated in that ‘Fair Value’ judgment is some sort of half assed attempt at getting fiscal policy under control, a botched Fed transition from easy to tight money, a historically low long term secular growth rate of the economy and a ‘muddle through’ scenario in Europe.

Our economic growth assumption remains spot on while fiscal policy is improving by default (declining deficits due to sequestration and tax hikes; and the collapse of Obamacare).  That is enough to sustain my confidence in our outlook and the assumptions in our Valuation Model.

On the other hand, we got some reassurance this week that the Fed will most likely screw up the unwinding of QEInfinity and that leaves the headwinds of either spiking inflation (if it tightens too slowly) or another recession (if it tightens too fast) plus the uncertainty of how the stock, student loan, auto loan bubbles dissipate.

Near term the issue as it applies to stock prices is how much investor confidence the Fed retains.  As you know, my thesis has been that the ‘tapering’ talk jarred investors back to reality (QE isn’t going to infinity and when the Fed starts to tighten, it likely won’t be pretty economically or with respect to securities prices).  I would add that despite the initial jubilation over Bernanke’s retreat, this latest moved will ultimately serve to lessen confidence in the Fed---which could make any transition from easy to tight money even more difficult.

Clearly that thesis is a short hair away from being debunked.  However, it won’t be my first idea that has proven wrong and it likely won’t be the last.  Nevertheless, even if Markets get suckered again by the Fed, I still believe that ultimately my thesis will be right. 

Finally, bad news continues to emanate out of Europe; so the risks of a sovereign and/or banking debt crisis remain a threat to our ‘muddle through’ scenario.

         Bottom line:  our main issue today is, is there any changes warranted in our investment strategy should Fed induced euphoria return and stocks shoot the moon?   Or less dramatically put, what happens if stocks break out to the upside, driven as it were by more punch? 

(1)     our Valuation Model hasn’t changed, so neither have the Fair Value of the stocks in our Portfolios.  To be sure, we have a few names on our Buy Lists.  But our Portfolios already own full positions in most.  I am going to leave the remainder at less than full positions because of the simple risk/reward equation that I cited above.  But for an investor that just has to put money to work, use our Buy Lists,

(2)     if any of our stocks trade into their Sell Half Ranges, our Portfolios will act accordingly,

(3)     for anyone wanting to push out on the risk curve: [a] if 15550/1687 hold and prices roll over, simply buying the VIX (VXX) is a good alternative as well as the Ranger Short ETF (HDGE) and [b] if stocks rocket upwards and you have to play, a good multi asset class ETF (IYLD) would be a less risky way to participate, the Russell 2000 ETF (IWO) would be the more risky alternative.  A purchase of any of these alternatives should be accompanied by very tight stops.
        
        This week, our Portfolios did nothing.

DJIA                                                    S&P

Current 2013 Year End Fair Value*                11600                                            1440
Fair Value as of 7/31/13                                   11475                                                  1422
Close this week                                                15464                                                  1680

Over Valuation vs. 7/31 Close
              5% overvalued                                 12048                                                    1493
            10% overvalued                                 12622                                                   1564 
            15% overvalued                             13196                                             1635
            20% overvalued                                 13770                                                    1706   
            25% overvalued                                   14343                                                  1777   
            30% overvalued                                   14917                                                  1848
           
Under Valuation vs.7/31 Close
            5% undervalued                             10901                                                      1350
10%undervalued                                  10327                                                  1279   
15%undervalued                             9753                                                    1208

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

The Portfolios and Buy Lists are up to date.


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








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