Sunday, January 30, 2011

There Is Nothing More Frightening Than Ignorance In Action


I found this sentence in Satyajit Das´s Blog - Fear & Loathing in Financial Products, and as the author says, an observation made by Goethe. It goes on:

On 30 July 1998, Alan Greenspan, then Chairman of the Federal Reserve argued that: “Regulation of derivatives transactions that are privately negotiated by professionals is unnecessary.” In October 2008, the now former Chairman grudgingly acknowledged that he was “partially” wrong to oppose regulation of credit default swaps (“CDS”). “Credit default swaps, I think, we have serious problems associated with them,” he admitted to a Congressional hearing. His current views on wider derivative regulation remain unknown. Politicians and regulators globally are currently busy drafting laws to regulate derivatives. A common theme underlying the activity is an absence of knowledge of the true operation of the industry and the matters that need to be addressed.

In DAVOS, at the yearly reunion for overrated Million- & Billionaires, surrounded by exactly those politicians, the common sense was that the economy is improving - and listening to Joe Ackermann from Deutsche Bank, one could think that the actual recovery is unstoppable. "Growth in emerging Markets remains strong", he says and as Greece gets downgraded to junk, he continues: "There is no way that Greece or Spain are going to default." Meanwhile, a solid framework for regulations on investment banking- and derivative transactions is not in sight. As the author Thomas Pynchon warned:

“If they can get you to ask the wrong questions then the answers don’t matter.” Simplistic causes and solutions may prevent real issues in relation to derivatives from being debated and dealt with."

The Obama Administration’s proposed “Volcker Rule” prohibiting major banks engaging in proprietary trading may, if implemented, affect speculative activity in derivatives. The proposal would prevent banks from hedging their own exposures using swaps as well as trading swaps. At a minimum, it would force banks to move their derivatives activities into non-bank entities. Transferring such activities would require additional capital (estimated at $20 billion or more) and also result in higher cost of funding for the derivatives activities. It is not clear how this proposal actually addresses any of the fundamental issues relating to derivative activities.




Hedging Activity?
The last week has ended with a sell-off that hit equity markets across the world. The main reason, market observer say, were the mounting tensions in Egypt. So is there fear in the market? Looking at hedging activity, the US CBOE Volatility Index Point & Figure chart is a helpful tool. The Index has made a quadruple bottom break down, a very strong sell signal but now the Index reverses this sell signal as it did a this very same level in spring 2010. So last week we have just seen a small reversal pattern that has not given buy signal yet. A break of the downtrend, indicated by the white line, would be a clear indication that equity markets are running into trouble and could head for a bigger downside move. But for now, it does not look as if investors are worried. In fact, the level indicates complacency.

Focusing on the rally in commodities and equities that has started beginning of september 2010, we have to admit that some trends are broken and some could break soon. If markets are heading for a bigger correction can not be confirmed, nor ruled out at this point in time. I still view the biggest threat for financial market coming from the EUR and China, where as the US is certainly out of the woods for the next 6 month, probably the outperforming market until summer.

SPY 60´: Trend still up, but "break out profits" are gone.

QQQQ 60´: Trend break & a retest, starts to look topish.

Eurostoxx: Failed at resistance but still above trend channel.

SMI: The break out of this triangle is a bad sign short below 6400

DAX: 7000 becoming an important level. No trend break or double top?

EURUSD: Overshooting and a strong sell here. Probably interventions.

USD: Working on a bottom, not much downside from here

Gold: Will not buy until USD 1256

Crude Oil: Looks like the beginning of a top

GOOG: Gave a sell signal but would buy around USD580

SYNN: Still no break out

SDF: Could fall below 50 short term if 53 does not hold

NESN: Is something to watch below 50

European Banks: If there is no break- out I would short below 18

Bayer: Short Candidate in the DAX. Broke 54, giving a sell signal.

Shanghai Composite: Somebody´s buying but does not look good

Brazil: Fighting with the last support

India: Under heavy selling pressure







Sunday, January 16, 2011

Stocks To Watch in 2011

Some companies have exceptionally strong balance sheets, some others have outstanding positions versus their competitors and the third group finds it self in a strong growing market. I have four big cap. companies, that fulfill these "criterias" and are worth buying the dips, but do that respecting support and resistance.

Google: Market leader, good acquisitions, undervalued.

Synthes: Working on a long term bottom, great balance sheet.

Syngenta: Soft commodities started a strong bull-market in 2010

Kali & Salz: Also here, Agriculture markets will move this stock.

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Kicking The Can Further Down The Road

Happy New Year, may all your wishes come true this year, after all, the next financial nightmare is just around the corner...

Equity Markets started the new year on a mixed note, with a bumper in the first week of trading, followed by a strong rebound in the past 5 trading days. Tracking the US Presidential cycle, market analysts have a strong consensus for positive equity returns in 2011, with expectations running between 15 % 20 % for the US markets. In fact, the 3rd Presidential year in the US has given an average return of 23 %, making the remarkable bullishness more understandable.

My own view is that markets could be up 10 - 15 % in 2011, but it will also be down at least 10 % once this year. I expect volatility to return to the markets and 2011 to be a transition year, with the secular bear trend continuing it´s course latest beginning 2012. None of the problems that have caused the last crisis have been addressed or solved. Basel III looks like a joke in the face of the last banking crisis and the government´s response to the world wide debt problem with more debt is jus the frosting on the cake. With central banks starting to manipulate bond markets, like the FED, who now owns more Treasury Bonds than China, and the ECB, who starts to buy totally overvalued Eurobonds to protect it´s own worthless currency, are just two bright examples how we witness the biggest manipulation of financial markets in history. That this is going to end very badly is for sure, but the question is how and when.

As we look back on past financial crisis since the stock-market crash in 1987, after which the incredible path of market intervention´s by Central Banks world wide started to intensify, we witness a clear and simple 4 year crisis cycle all fueled by a manipulated and over leveraged "financial system": 1987: Stock-market crash; first Wall-Street self made credit crunch. 1991: Savings & Loan scandal & LBO crisis; Wall Street going wacko. 1994: Mexico Tequila crisis: Bond markets going wacko. 1998: LTCM-crisis; Emerging Markets getting slamed. 2001: definite implosion of the dotcon bubble, probably one of the greatest Wall-Street scams. 2003: Enron, Worldcom etc... scandal; balance-sheet implosion on Wall-Street. 2007: subprime loan crisis. Indeed, the 4 year crisis cycle started to shorten a little but it´s difficult to say for some crisis, when it really started. None of the just mentioned crisis have brought us better rules ore better regulations. Instead, we are just printing money.

Looking ahead, as you can see in the Charts below, we are living in a divided world. Not only wealth distribution is getting out of control, with the top 20 % of the US population owing 93 % of the country´s assets, but also on a global basis, in equity markets right now. Where as especially the US stock-market is breaking every resistance since the FED has announced QE2. BRIC Nations on the other hand are rather fighting with support than resistance. This comes probably from the fact that in China and India, inflation is running out of control. Of course, the Government does not confirm that. Now the crucial question for the industrialized world is how emerging markets will handle the current inflation problem. Quote Felix Zulauf:

The emerging world has experienced high levels of growth, but it is entering a period of rising inflation. How emerging economies handle that inflation will be the decisive factor for the industrialized world. If they decide to fight inflation with really restrictive monetary policies, we're in trouble. If they hike interest rates only a little to restrain growth, the cycle can be extended. But that means later on, perhaps in a year or two, they will have much higher inflation and will have to crunch it. The choice is between more growth in the short term and then a crunch, or a more serious bear market now.


Rather sooner than later, we are going to be in trouble again. With the S&P500 trading almost at 1300 and the Dow Jones Industrial just below the 12´000 barrier, I don´t see a good risk reward for equity markets at this point in time. There are some individual names that are looking extremely interesting, but for now, I would rather buy the dips, than chase the rallies. I expect a correction in Q1 of about 10 %, followed by a rally, that could take us higher, but it will be the start of distribution phase, marking the next big top in the current secular bear market. For a trader it should be a good year. For an investor, I see it rather difficult.



SPY: another low volume break-out, 127.4 support, momentum weak.


The Sox is pushing the QQQQ, this is too good to be true

SMI: Weighted down by the health-care and financial sector

DAX: Car Sector and Cylclicals rally, but heavily dependent on BRIC


Gold: Building a short term top, but the long term bull-market isn´t over

Euro: Rebound should stall between 1.34 & 1.35. It is a sell

USD: Gains erased by EUR manipulation, buliding a bottom in 2011

China: Real-estate bubble about to burst, inflation out of control

India: Probably the most dramatic top in equity markets right now

Brazil: Rebound helped by the US-rally, but working on a top.