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DougD

The Hard Numbers Behind Selling in May.

Newsletter

If I had a nickel for every time that I heard the term ?Sell in May and go away? this year, I could retire. Oops, I already am retired! In any case, I thought that I would dig out the hard numbers and see how true this old trading adage is.

It turns out that it is far more powerful than I imagined. According to the data in the Stock Trader?s Almanac, $10,000 invested at the beginning of May and sold at the end of October every year since 1950 would be showing a loss today. Amazingly, $10,000 invested on every November 1 and sold at the end of April would today be worth $702,000, giving you a compound annual return of 7.10% .

My friends at the research house, Dorsey, Wright & Associates, (click here for their site at http://www.dorseywright.com/ ) have parsed the data even further. Since 2000, the Dow has managed a feeble return of only 4%, while the long winter/short summer strategy generated a stunning 64%.

Of the 62 years under study, the market was down in 25 May-October periods, but negative in only 13 of the November-April periods, and down only three times in the last 20 years! There have been just three times when the "good 6 months" have lost more than 10% (1969, 1973 and 2008), but with the "bad six month" time period there have been 11 losing efforts of 10% or more.

Being a long time student of the American, and indeed, the global economy, I have long had a theory behind the regularity of this cycle. It?s enough to base a pagan religion around, like the once practicing Druids at Stonehenge.
Up until the 1920?s, we had an overwhelmingly agricultural economy. Farmers were always at maximum financial distress in the fall, when their outlays for seed, fertilizer, and labor were at a maximum, but they had yet to earn any income from the sale of their crops. So they had to borrow all at once, placing a large cash call on the financial system as a whole. This is why we have seen so many stock market crashes in October. Once the system swallows this lump, it?s nothing but green lights for six months.
After the cycle was set and easily identifiable by low end computer algorithms, the trend became a self-fulfilling prophesy. Yes, it may be disturbing to learn that we ardent stock market practitioners might in fact be the high priests of a strange set of beliefs. But hey, some people will do anything to outperform the market.

It is important to remember that this cyclicality is not 100%, and you know the one time you bet the ranch, it won?t work. But you really have to wonder what investors are expecting when they buy stocks at these elevated levels, over 1,400 in the S&P 500.

Will company earnings multiples further expand from 14 to 15 or 16? Will the GDP suddenly reaccelerate from a 2% rate to the 4% expected by share prices when the daily data flow is pointing the opposite direction?

I can?t wait to see how this one plays out.

 

 

 

Thank Goodness I Sold in May

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/sunbathing.jpg 320 320 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-05-01 23:02:272012-05-01 23:02:27The Hard Numbers Behind Selling in May.
DougD

June 1, 2012 - Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

?If there is no monetary stimulus and no fiscal stimulus, obviously we are going to continue to grow slowly. We could be in secularly slow growth for decades,? said Harvard economics professor, Ken Rogoff.

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/snail.jpg 267 400 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-05-01 23:01:222012-05-01 23:01:22June 1, 2012 - Quote of the Day
DougD

May 2, 2012 - Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

?If you want to succeed, double your failure rate,? said Thomas Watson, the CEO who built IBM into a global force from the twenties to the fifties. He also said, ?I think there is a world market for maybe five computers.?

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/thomas_watson.jpg 450 350 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-05-01 23:01:132012-05-01 23:01:13May 2, 2012 - Quote of the Day
DougD

Enduring the Pain in Spain

Diary

There is no doubt that the crisis in Spain is getting worse, threatening to drag down the rest of Europe, and ultimately the US, with it. Over the weekend, Standard and Poor?s downgraded the debt of 11 Spanish banks, after downgrading the country?s sovereign debt weeks earlier. Further downgrades are a given so expect them in your regular Monday morning headlines. Expect more deposit flight from banks and spiking of sovereign bond interest rates.

The country is now officially in recession, as are seven other countries, including Great Britain. Spain?s unemployment rate is now at 24%, the peak seen in the US during the great depression, and is 50% for those under 25. It all adds up to more deposit flight from banks and spiking of Spanish sovereign bond interest rates.

It was easy to dismiss the long, tortuous descent into the Greek bond default as irrelevant and just a favorite topic of a few journalists, as it only accounted for 1.3% of European?s $16.7 trillion GDP. That makes Greece as about as important to the continent?s total fiscal health as the bankrupt cities of Vallejo, CA, Harrisburg, PA, Central Falls, RI, and Birmingham, GA, combined, are to the US.

Spain is another kettle of fish, with the fourth largest economy accounting for 6% GDP. Spain is an even larger portion of the European financial system, with bank assets at $3.7 trillion.

Don?t expect an improvement in the Spanish economy any time soon. It just passed one of the most austere budgets in European history, attempting to roll back decades of over spending and under taxing in one shot. While austerity is great for balancing the budget for the short term, it also triggers recessions which create longer term structural problems, as it has already done in Great Britain and Greece.

The only possible growth strategy for Europe is for the private sector to ramp up spending while the governments are cutting back. In Europe, that means getting rich countries like Germany to spend more to create end demand for poor countries. However, in reality, companies run the opposite direction, hunkering down during times of economic uncertainty.

There is also an additional internal conflict afflicting Europe in that the debt heavy counties of south need inflation to devalue their debt, but deflation to restore their international competitiveness and growth. It all means that the Spanish downturn will be longer and weaker than previously thought.

In December there was a big splash when the ?500 billion LTRO was announced to take distressed sovereign debt off the hands of the banks at extremely generous prices. That has since fizzled. Now hedge funds are betting that the other shoe will fall. A second LTRO is a given, but how long will it take them to realize this and how far will bond prices plummet until we get there?

Don?t count on any US bailouts to ease Spanish pain, especially during an election year. Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner, personally told me last week that Europe was a rich continent and had adequate resources to solve its own problems. Translation: no cash for the beleaguered continent.

It all makes my short position in the Euro through the (FXE) look pretty interesting. Some of the weaknesses mentioned above are already well known and priced into the currency markets, but not all of them. And the Europeans have a seemingly endless talent for discovering new structural problems as time goes on. Those unintended consequences can be a bitch.

With eight governments having fallen since the crisis began, and a ninth in France certain to go this weekend, who will be next is anyone?s guess. We have all become Spanish bond traders, whether we want to or not. Watch those screens.

 

 

 

Austerity?s Unintended Consequences

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/4778306118_53d2cba3bb.jpg 400 300 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-30 23:04:042012-04-30 23:04:04Enduring the Pain in Spain
DougD

The Bombshells Headed Our Way

Newsletter

This certainly promises to be an interesting week for the markets. On Thursday, we get the Department of Labor?s weekly jobless claims at 8:30 AM EST. If we clock a fourth consecutive week over 380,000, or go even higher, then an exact repeat for last year?s summer slowdown will be in play. So will the 25% drop in equity markets that followed.

This will be confirmed by an April nonfarm payroll of less than 100,000, the result of hiring being pulled forward into January and February by the warm winter, and then puffed up by the seasonal adjustment process.

This will bolster the relentless torrent of negative economic data that has been rapidly deteriorating for the last two months, which no one seems to be noticing but me. Here is the latest batch:

April 30 - Chicago Purchasing Managers Index down from 62.2 in March to 56.2 in April

April 30 - Personal Spending fell from 0.9% in February to 0.3% in March

April 27 - The real shocker was that Q1, 2012 GDP fell out of the bottom at 2.2%, compared to an earlier prediction of 2.5%, and a 3.0% rate before that. The current quarter is now expected to fall to the 1% handle.

April 26 - Weekly jobless claims stayed at a high 388,000.

April 25? - March durable goods fell -4.2%, in part due to a decline in domestic aircraft orders.

The corporate Q1 earnings reports are winding down, and look like they will come in bang on my 5% prediction. This is down substantially from last year?s 15% rate. When these reports finish, where is the next upside surprise coming from? In almost every case, each announcement generated a lot of selling on the news.

Permabulls beware: Rising multiples against falling earnings growth doesn?t go on for very long. Please note also that Treasury bond yields have given up all their gains this year and are poised to break to the low end of their one year range. This usually heralds a major ?RISK OFF? move bad for asset prices everywhere.

In case you didn?t have enough to worry about, on Sunday we get the French presidential election, where Socialist Fran?ois Hollande is leading conservative Nicolas Sarkozy by an impressive eight points. A much bigger borrowing and spending government in France could trigger the next wave of the European sovereign debt crisis, and lots of those riots that stock traders despise. Better take your significant other out to a French restaurant on Saturday night because it may not be there on Sunday.

It is possible that the data suddenly turn on a dime and return to an improving trend. But it is also possible that pigs fly. As for me, I?ve already got my weekend reservations at San Francisco?s Gary Danko?s. Frogs, hang on to your legs!

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/425AirportFlyingPigs.jpg 400 383 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-30 23:03:322012-04-30 23:03:32The Bombshells Headed Our Way
DougD

Only Buy Companies You Hate

Diary

Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams argues that you should invest in companies you hate, because only the most unprincipled and rapacious firms make the greatest profits.

Moral bankruptcy is a great leading indicator of success, and the best ones can get you to balance your wallet on the end of your nose and bark like a seal, as you buy products that you utterly despise. Companies with the work ethic of a serial killer, like British Petroleum (BP) come to mind, but you can also add other firms to the list, like Goldman Sachs (GS), Citicorp (C), Pfizer (PFE), and Altria (MO).

Adams initially started investing in companies he loved, like Enron, WorldCom, and Webvan, and absolutely lost his shirt. His advice to (BP) is not to waste money on artificial, sincere, maudlin ad campaigns apologizing, but get us to hate them more. Bring on more dead bird pictures!

Who is Adams about to hate next? Apple (AAPL), because he irrationally craves their products, resents their emotional control over his entire family, can?t get iTunes to work, and is appalled by those aloof black turtlenecks that Steve Jobs wore. For my own recent piece about this incredible company, please click here for ?Apple?s Next Stop: $1,000? a

 

Hand Me a &*%@* Buy Ticket!

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/shout.jpg 212 320 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-30 23:02:042012-04-30 23:02:04Only Buy Companies You Hate
DougD

May 1, 2012 - Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

?The investor in America sits at the bottom of the food chain,? said John C. Bogle, founder of the Vanguard Group of index funds.

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/LION.jpg 301 320 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-30 23:01:302012-04-30 23:01:30May 1, 2012 - Quote of the Day
DougD

SOLD OUT! Last Chance to Sign up for the May 3, 2012 Scottsdale Strategy Luncheon

Lunch

Come join me for lunch for the Mad Hedge Fund Trader?s Global Strategy Update, which I will be conducting in Scottsdale, Arizona on Thursday, May 3, 2012. A three course lunch will be followed by a PowerPoint presentation and an extended question and answer period.

I?ll be giving you my up to date view on stocks, bonds, foreign currencies, commodities, precious metals, and real estate. And to keep you in suspense, I?ll be tossing a few surprises out there too. Enough charts, tables, graphs, and statistics will be thrown at you to keep your ears ringing for a week. Tickets are available for $235.

I?ll be arriving an hour early and leaving late in case anyone wants to have a one on one discussion, or just sit around and chew the fat about the financial markets.

The lunch will be held at a Scottsdale Hotel the details of which will be emailed with your purchase confirmation.

I look forward to meeting you, and thank you for supporting my research. To purchase tickets for the luncheons, please go to my online store at www.madhedgefundtrader.com and click on the ?LUNCHEONS? tab.

 

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/fetch.jpg 300 300 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-29 23:06:512012-04-29 23:06:51SOLD OUT! Last Chance to Sign up for the May 3, 2012 Scottsdale Strategy Luncheon
DougD

Coffee With the Treasury Secretary

Newsletter

I knew that Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner was early for our meeting at the San Francisco Mark Hopkins Hotel, as the line of silver Secret Service GM Suburbans was illegally occupying some of the most prime parking places on Nob Hill. I?m glad they changed the color. I was getting tired of the perpetual black. Perhaps it?s an unknown leading economic indicator?
As the agent pawed through my briefcase, I asked if death threats against the president were still up 400%. He said there was a big jump when Obama first came into office, but threats have since petered out, although they are still running much higher than the George W. Bush days. ?People dislike change,? he said. ?So true,? I replied.

The 50-year-old Geithner was fit and trim as always, and probably could still squeeze into his old high school graduation suit if he still had it, a goal that has so far eluded me. That?s what jogging every day of the year gets you, no matter how crushing the schedule or how crucial the priorities. The two Secret Service agents who accompanied him this morning on his run from the Oakland Bay Bridge to the Marina Green and back are also probably up to an Olympic standard of fitness. But he had also noticeably greyed since our last meeting.

I always catch Tim when he stops in San Francisco on his way to China. I knew him in Tokyo during the late eighties when he was the young, up and coming, hotshot economic attach? at the embassy there. I spoke to him briefly in Japanese just to see if he was still up to snuff. He was. He also speaks Chinese, which I imagine will be a requirement for every future Treasury Secretary, as they own $1 trillion of our national debt.

Without any prompting he launched straight into his canned campaign stump speech. When Obama came into office the economy was shrinking at a -9% annualized rate and shedding 600,000 jobs a month. Today it is growing at 2% and adding jobs. Exports are up 34% since 2009, and private investment is rapidly increasing. Real estate is still tough, but is showing signs of life.

We moved on to Europe, and I asked him if the Treasury had any plans to participate in a Spanish bailout, where the real estate and construction collapse has been far worse than our own. He pointed out that Europe was a rich continent and had plenty of resources to solve its own problems. He then backed up a bit and wryly said, ?Let me evade that question differently.?

The Federal Reserve was intervening where it could in the most cost effective way, such as through the provision of $400 billion in swap lines which are guaranteed by the European Central Bank. That will create a safety cushion between Europe and the rest of the world. A precipitous move towards austerity will only prolong the length and depth of their recession.

I asked how he personally felt when he first stepped in to oversee a financial system that was in complete collapse, with classic bank runs and frozen financial markets. Instead of sitting back and ordering a raft of study groups or waiting for recalcitrant Republicans to join him, Obama took immediate, decisive action, pushing through the stimulus bill and bailing out AIG and General Motors. He confided in me that he was not at all confident that the emergency rescue plan would work, but told the president that it was certainly better than all the other alternatives.

The bailouts were very controversial, highly divisive, but a necessary evil. The passage of the TARP in 2008 was in fact the last bipartisan bill to pass congress. Although the initial estimate of the cost ran into the trillions of dollars, the government will end up making a $20 billion profit from all of the programs. Geithner wants to unload the remaining holdings as soon as possible, while still maximizing taxpayer value. ?We didn?t save the banks for the benefit of the banks, we saved them for ourselves,? he asserted.

Geithner didn?t believe the repeal of Glass-Steagle in 1998 caused the financial crisis, which separated the banking and securities industries. The real trigger was a huge off balance sheet financial system that grew up outside the established regulatory framework and eventually accounted for half of all the credit in the US. It also didn?t help that many existing banking regulations were not enforced by a hands-off Bush administration. The end result was vastly excessive leverage understood by few.

The reforms enacted by Dodd-Frank are intended to force a reduction in leverage so that any future mistakes the banks make do not pose a systemic threat to the financial system. Instead of future bailouts there will be orderly liquidations. If you need proof of the effectiveness of the new rules, look no further than the immense resources the financial industry is pouring into having them overturned.

He said we were right to be concerned about the upcoming ?fiscal cliff,? the tax increases and spending cuts that automatically kick in at year end, which Geithner believes could shave a massive 3.5% off of GDP. He thinks that some sort of agreement around the Simpson-Bowles framework will be reached, similar to the deal that was almost done last summer. Back then, the two sides were much closer than people realize.

While the administration was laying some foundations behind the scenes, congress was not yet ready to clinch an agreement. ?We don?t need to solve all of America?s problems for the next 100 years in six weeks, but we can create a framework for progress,? he averred. While the deficits in Medicare and Medicaid were unsustainable, that was no excuse to drastically cut education and infrastructure spending today.

We spent a lot of time talking about China, which we have both been studying for decades. His goals there were to level the playing field for US companies and help the country move towards a more domestically oriented, less export dependent economy. Since 2009, US exports to the Middle Kingdom have doubled. Its trade surplus has fallen from 8% of GDP to 3%. Currency pressure has eased with a 13% appreciation of the Yuan against the US dollar. But major issues remain in intellectual property rights and tariffs. American consumer goods cost double in Shanghai than they do at home.

The Treasury has undertaken 36 anti-dumping complaints against China, such as in tires, solar, and wind power, compared to none by the previous administration. If China wants to participate in the global trade system they have to play by the rules.
Much of The Middle Kingdom?s strength is not as strong as it seems. A huge demographic headwind will hit the country soon, thanks to the 30-year-old ?one child? policy. China?s productivity is a tiny fraction of America?s.

Geithner has already made known his intention to leave after the end of Obama?s current term. It?s hard to say what he?ll do next. I don?t see him soiling his hands by joining a major bank board, as past Treasury Secretaries have done. My guess is that he will end up on the board of Apple or Google.

As the Secretary scurried out the door to his next appointment, I asked if he would ever consider making a run for public office. ?Not a chance,? he shot back. ?Not even the president of Dartmouth College?? I persisted. ?No way,? he affirmed. I suspect there is an unhappy and undeserved grade of C- hidden somewhere in his distant past.

On my way out the Secret Service agent told me that when he did my background check, he found that I had been in their system since the Ford administration in 1976, well before he was born. I said ?Yes, that Alexander Hamilton was a hell of a guy, a real party animal,? referring to our nation?s first Treasury Secretary. He thanked me for my service and shook my hand. It was the nicest thing anyone said to me all day.

With that, I disappeared out the door and jumped on a moving cable car down nearly vertical California Street on my way home. I knew I would have to backpack three hours up a steep mountain to digest the implications of what Geithner had said.

Such my life has become.

 

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/tim-geithner.jpg 240 320 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-29 23:02:182012-04-29 23:02:18Coffee With the Treasury Secretary
DougD

April 30, 2012 - Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

?At some point in 2011, knuckles are going to be turning white, and we'll see whatever rabbits Ben Bernanke is going to have to pull out of his hat,? said David Rosenberg of Gluskin, Sheff & Associates

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/roller.jpg 408 400 DougD https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png DougD2012-04-29 23:01:082012-04-29 23:01:08April 30, 2012 - Quote of the Day
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