Friday, April 18, 2014

The Closing Bell

The Closing Bell

4/19//14

Statistical Summary

   Current Economic Forecast

           
            2013

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

            2014 estimates

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

   Current Market Forecast
           
            Dow Jones Industrial Average

                                    Current Trend (revised):  
                                    Short Term Trading Range                     15330-16601
Intermediate Uptrend                              14696-16601
Long Term Uptrend                                 5055-17405
                                               
                        2013    Year End Fair Value                                   11590-11610

                    2014    Year End Fair Value                                   11800-12000                                          

            Standard & Poor’s 500

                                    Current Trend (revised):
                                    Short Term Uptrend                                     1813-1990
                                    Intermediate Term Uptrend                        1760-2560
                                    Long Term Uptrend                                    739-1910
                                                           
                        2013    Year End Fair Value                                    1430-1450

                        2014   Year End Fair Value                                     1470-1490         

Percentage Cash in Our Portfolios

Dividend Growth Portfolio                          43%
            High Yield Portfolio                                     47%
            Aggressive Growth Portfolio                        46%

Economics/Politics
           
The economy is a modest positive for Your Money.   It was another slow, holiday  shortened week in which the data was mixed: positives---weekly mortgage and purchase applications, March retail sales, the April Philly Fed index and March industrial production and capacity utilization; negatives---February housing starts, the April NY Fed manufacturing index and March CPI; neutral---weekly retail sales, weekly jobless claims and February business inventories/sales. 

While the data was sparse, three of the primary economic indicators were out this week: housing starts were poor, industrial product was excellent, retail sales were up but there was some question about their internal make up.  In short, they were mixed; and mixed is to be expected in our sluggish forecast.  Hence, they were in line with our expectations and sufficient enough for me to kill the economic warning light.

Update on big four economic indicators (medium):

Our outlook remains:

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

        The pluses:

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

       The negatives:

(1)   a vulnerable global banking system.  No news on this score this week.  That doesn’t mean that this risk is any less.

‘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.  All quiet among our ruling class with the Passover/Easter holiday, except for this (short):

(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. 

This week:

[a] Fed policy got even murkier when the most dovish member of the FOMC made a hawkish speech while Yellen gave her most dovish statement ever. 

In addition, some mystery entity is gobbling up Treasuries via the Belgian central bank.  While there is no way of knowing if it is our own Fed counteracting its own tapering, the bottom line is that someone is doing it,  

[b] the economic news out of China continued to be very downbeat.  However, on Monday the Bank of China made a very explicit statement that there would be no stimulus.  To be sure, those guys lie a lot; but to date, their actions are reflecting their words,

[c] finally, the data on the Japanese economy is equally bad.  In response, the Bank of Japan is threatening a QEInfinity squared ramp in monetary growth---in the sure knowledge that its past QE and QEInfinity attempts to stimulate the Japanese economy have not been just an abject failure but have crushed the Japanese workingman {higher prices, higher taxes}.  One has to wonder if the electorate will put up with more of the same.


In response to this, investors spent the week in a state of euphoria induced denial, picking and choosing which events to focus on and ignoring anything that smacked of cognitive dissonance.  I can understand this behaviour if it was clear that the central banks were going to continue pumping as hard as they can [don’t fight the Fed].

Certainly, if more monetary easing is forthcoming, the transition process to normalized monetary policy can be postponed; but I see nothing in the above developments that makes that a certainty.  Further, what I do believe is that [a] at some point, electorates are going to rebel over policies that only make their life worse and [b] whether they do or not, history tells us that when, as and if a transition begins {i} the Fed will bungle it and {ii} the longer it takes, the greater the pain.
           
(4)   a blow up in the Middle East or someplace else.  Ukraine is now in the midst of a serious police [military] action as forces are being deployed to stamp out pockets of pro-Russian dissidents.  Meanwhile, Putin has warned both Obama and Merkel that the country is on the verge of civil war.  For the strife to continue [which seems likely] and him to do nothing [which seems unlikely] is probably not a good assumption.  There was some sort of squishy agreement on Thursday attempting to de-escalate tensions.  But that already seems to have gone by the wayside.  I maintain my belief that whatever the outcome, Putin will be happy.   Indeed what better time to invade than a long Easter weekend.

My bottom line: ‘If He [Obama] would actually do something (pledge to reinvigorate NATO, resume negotiating the treaties with Poland and the Czech Republic) to project American power and show Putin that He is dead serious about preventing further expansion from Russia, I could get behind the Guy.  Sure it would likely send nervous tremors through the Markets---but it would be a long term positive.  But trying to scare Putin with a lot diplomatic bullshit accomplishes nothing because Putin doesn’t care and doesn’t respect Obama enough to think that anything He does will materially impact Russia.  Indeed as I have voiced many times, my concern is that Putin responds to these antics by kicking Obama in groin, humiliating Him publicly.  I suspect that the Markets would be even less enthralled with this scenario.’


The showdown between the US and Russia (medium):


(5)   finally, the sovereign and bank debt crisis in Europe and around the globe.  The economic data out of China and Japan this week were terrible.  China has stated reasonably forcefully that it will not stimulate the economy and has shown its willingness to allow companies and investment trust to default.  Of course the latter does not encompass the banks nor is it likely to; but given the level of counterparty liabilities that exist outside the banking system, damage could still extensive if defaults began to snowball and get out of control.

Japanese economic policy enshrines the very definition of insanity.  These guys are in a decade long recession, the recent gargantuan expansion of money supply has only made matters worse and now the government is considering doubling down on this losing strategy.  I have no clue how this situation resolves itself but it seems likely to me that the Japanese electorate is not going to be happy and the risk that the yen carry trade gets crushed substantial.

Of course, as I continue to note, to date the various government leaders have managed to keep their respective crises under control.  Clearly, they may be able to continue to do so.  However, this narrative is not a prediction of disaster; it is an analysis of risks facing the US economy and securities markets.  And the risk is one or more of these situations spins out of control.

Bottom line:  the US economy continues to progress, disastrous Fed and fiscal policy notwithstanding.

Fed policy remains uncertain as we lurch from one contradictory statement to another.   I continue to believe that (1) this is a sign that the Fed has no idea about how to extract itself from a disastrous QEInfinity, (2) this means that it will once again bungle the transition to tighter money and induce more pain in the Markets than they might otherwise have had to suffer and (3) because QE has had so small an impact on the economy, then the transition process will be manageable, economically speaking---the pain being felt in the securities markets.

Investor daydreaming aside, the Chinese government continues its new policies [the government is not the answer, re-introducing ‘moral hazard’ into the investment equation] in spite of a flow of disappointing economic data.   If it sticks to its guns, then I believe that there is apt to be some discomfort along the way, not just for the Chinese but for the rest of the globe.  To its credit, it has managed the process reasonably well to date---the operative words being ‘to date’.

The weak EU and Japanese economies are also areas of concern.  This week

(1)   inflation in the EU fell, raising hopes of an ECB easing.  To be fair, the ECB has been reasonably firm in its monetary policy to date; so all things being equal, it has the room to be more accommodative.  However, [a] it has not been clearly established that the ECB can legally pursue the easing policies it has proposed and [b] the EU’s problem is more centered on its banking system in that the banks are highly leveraged and own a substantial portion of their host countries’ sovereign debt.  Even if we assume the ECB eases monetary policy, the question is, will it be any more effective than the US or Japanese.  And with the EU economy in worse shape than the US, the issue remains the ability of the sovereigns to service their debt and the solvency of the banks that hold it.

(2)    Japan announced that GDP growth would not meet its forecasts.  Its solution, more QE.  Again that had investors all atwitter.  But for the life of me, I can’t see how this economic mess resolves itself without some real pain.

Finally, military confrontation is now occurring in Ukraine and Putin is telling us and the Germans that he ain’t happy about it.  My best guess is that when all is said and done, Putin is happy, oil prices are higher and the US looks like a shadow of its former self.  I just hope Putin spares us Obama’s public humiliation.

In sum, a resilient US economy is something about which to rejoice but is it facing a number potentially troublesome headwinds. 

This week’s data:

(1)                                  housing: weekly mortgage and purchase were both up; March housing starts were disappointing,

(2)                                  consumer:  weekly retail sales were mixed; March retail sales were slightly better than expected, weekly jobs claims rose less than forecast,

(3)                                  industry: February business inventories were below estimates but sales were better; March industrial production and capacity utilization were quite strong; the April NY Fed manufacturing index was well below estimates while the Philadelphia Fed index was much better than consensus,

(4)                                  macroeconomic: March CPI was hotter than anticipated.

The Market-Disciplined Investing
           
  Technical

`           The indices (DJIA 16408, S&P 1864) had another volatile week, but finished up every day.  None of their primary trends were broken, although the S&P touched the lower boundary of its short term uptrend and then bounced.  Plus both of the Averages both broke above below their 50 day moving averages.

The S&P closed within uptrends across all timeframes: short (1813-1990), intermediate (1760-2560) and long (739-1910).  The Dow remains within short (15330-16601) and intermediate (14696-16601) term trading ranges and a long term uptrend (5055-17405).  They continue out of sync in their short and intermediate term trends. 

Volume on Friday was up but that was largely a function of options expiration; breadth deteriorated.  Not surprisingly, the VIX suffered some serious whackage as prices soared; though it continues to offer no directional help with the Market.  It finished within, but close to the lower boundary of, its short term trading range, below its 50 day  moving average and within an intermediate term downtrend. 

The long Treasury was up neatly Monday through Wednesday, than gave much of it back on Thursday.  I will be paying close attention to TLT next week to see if Thursday’s action was just noise or a sign that the bond crowd is revising its outlook.  Still it remained within a short term uptrend and an intermediate term downtrend and above its 50 day moving average. 

GLD’s chart remains a dog.  It is within both short and intermediate term downtrends and below its 50 day moving average.

Bottom line:  the indices weekly pin action was quite strong.  Of course, a bounce was not all that surprising given that the prior week was one of the roughest in the Market since February.  How much of it was just a rebound from a very oversold condition and how much a renewed round of euphoria, is the question before us at the moment. 

From a standpoint of the fundamentals, the fact that prices rose on both good and bad news suggests that investors seem to have a rekindled belief that the central banks will expand money supply into infinity.  I have a problem with how they could have gotten to that position (like ignoring any Fed statement that doesn’t fit the theme as well as the explicit statement of the Bank of China that no stimulus is forthcoming).  But what I think doesn’t matter.  If the Market believes it, prices are headed up and will likely challenged the upper boundaries of the Averages long term uptrends.

On a technical note, the last lower high was circa S&P 1873.  If it can close above that level, a very short term downtrend will be negated.  If not, then our attention returns to the lower boundary of the S&P short term uptrend.

Meanwhile, we have a trendless Market; so there is really not much to do save using any price strength that pushes one of our stocks into its Sell Half Range and to act accordingly.

   Fundamental-A Dividend Growth Investment Strategy

The DJIA (16408) finished this week about 40.2% above Fair Value (11700) while the S&P (1864) closed 28.3% overvalued (1452).  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 and China.

While it was another slow week for economic releases, several covered important segments of the economy which kept the quality of information factor high.  In general, the stats, especially the primary indicators, mirrored our forecast.  So I am turning off the economic warning light.  That leaves the economy as the bright spot in our Market outlook.  Unfortunately, this positive performance is built into our Models; so it provides no relief from with our valuation problem.

Fed induced confusion over monetary policy continues.  Yellen spoke this week and delivered her most dovish performance ever.  Like last week’s FOMC minutes, investors elected to zero in on her latest pronouncement and ignore the prior hawkish comments of both her and several other high ranking Fed officials.  Investor reaction aside, I don’t see anything clarifying about Yellen’s remarks when taken in the context of everything else that we have heard from the Fed in total.  This keeps me of the opinion that the Fed is shooting in the dark when it comes to a transition to normalized monetary policy---which in turn means a higher probability of a botched transition and, hence, more pain with the caveat that the pain will be felt less in the economy and more in the Markets for the simple reason that the QE’s have had more impact on the Markets than on the economy.

The biggest risks to the Market, in my opinion, come from potential negative events overseas.  China heads the list as its economy slows, bankruptcies are increasing, its financial markets are going through a massive deleveraging, the yuan carry trade is being unwound and the government insists that it will allow the markets to take their own course. 

Japan and to a lesser extent the EU are having problems getting any economic growth; and worse, so far the only remedies the ruling classes are considering is doubling down on policies that already haven’t worked (QE).  Of course, that is exactly what the Markets want because it means more ‘money for nothing’ carry trade profits. To be fair, the politicians have thus far managed to maintain control of their difficulties; and they may very well continue to do so until their respective economies are out of trouble.  The risk is that they won’t.

Ukraine isn’t going away; I suspect because Putin doesn’t want it to go away.  It seems a foregone conclusion to me that this situation will end as Putin wants it to.  Figuring out what form that will take is above my pay grade, but I seriously doubt that he is concerned about any fallout from the US.  My real concerns are that (1) the US get humiliated in the process because I don’t think that will be well received by the Markets and (2) in the fallout from any invasion/military action, the price of oil will likely spike.

Overriding all of these considerations is the cold hard fact that stocks are considerably overvalued not just in our Model but with numerous other historical measures which I have documented at length.  This overvaluation is of such a magnitude that it almost doesn’t matter what occurs fundamentally, because there is virtually no improvement in the current scenario (improved economic growth, responsible fiscal policy, successful monetary policy transition) that gets valuations to Friday’s closing price levels. 

Bottom line: the assumptions in our Economic Model haven’t changed.  The assumptions in our Valuation Model have not changed either.  I remain confident in the Fair Values calculated---meaning that stocks are overvalued.  So our Portfolios maintain their above average cash position.  Any move to higher levels would encourage more trimming of their equity positions.

 I can’t emphasize strongly enough that I believe that the key investment strategy today is to take advantage of the current high prices to sell any stock that has been a disappointment or no longer fits your investment criteria and to trim the holding of any stock that has doubled or more in price.
           
                Another must read from Lance Roberts (medium):
           
             What individual investors are doing? (short):
          
            Who’s buying? (short):

           The latest stats on this quarter’s earnings and revenue ‘beat’ rates (short):


              
DJIA                                                   S&P

Current 2014 Year End Fair Value*              11900                                                  1480
Fair Value as of 4/30/14                                  11700                                                  1452
Close this week                                               16408                                                  1864

Over Valuation vs. 4/30 Close
              5% overvalued                                12285                                                    1524
            10% overvalued                                12870                                                   1597 
            15% overvalued                                13455                                                    1669
            20% overvalued                                14040                                                    1742   
            25% overvalued                                  14625                                                  1815   
            30% overvalued                                  15210                                                  1887
            35% overvalued                                  15795                                                  1960
            40% overvalued                                  16380                                                  2032
            45%overvalued                                   16965                                                  2105

Under Valuation vs. 4/30 Close
            5% undervalued                             11115                                                      1379
10%undervalued                            10530                                                       1306   
15%undervalued                             9945                                                    1234

* 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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