Monday, December 14, 2015

Will the Fed stick to its rate-hike strategy?


The chase by Frances Horodelski:

What were you doing June 29, 2006, the last time the Fed hiked rates (to 5.2%)? That was the last hike after a series of 17 hikes over two years that moved the rate from 1% to 5.25%. That stair step of increases was followed by a water fall of cuts beginning in September 2007 and ending with ZIRP on December 16, 2008. With great symmetry, seven years to the day, Janet Yellen and the Fed is widely expected to put ZIRP to bed this Wednesday , Dec. 16, 2015.
Last week ended badly, so is it time for some good market news? We’re starting the week with bad news if you’re an oil trader. The price of oil dropped below $35 as the U.S. dollar is strong, the momentum from last week continues and all the concerns with supply continue (Iraq, Libyan peace agreement, etc). According to CFTC data, the commercial shorts are at the lowest level since the Spring while speculative longs are at the lowest levels since January 2013. But the catalyst for a reversal is hard to see (there is no risk premium and remains driven by supply). Natural gas is trading at the lowest level since 2001 (when the low was $1.83, right now the commodity is $1.88) – a reversal here is also hard to see.
Weather remains unusually warm and even when it does get cold later in the week in the North East and in Canada, it couldn’t be called frigid. These are tough times. And another sign of these times is Encana which has “reset” its annual dividend from seven cents/share to six cents/year. Reset is euphemism for slash I guess.
Meanwhile, the world continues to reel from high yield collapse including last week’s closure of Third Avenue’s fund (which was very high yield) and another this morning (Lucidus) which was triggered by a significant investor wanting out in October forcing the fund to wind down. One measure of credit risk (junk yields versus the 10-year) is stressed having risen 437 basis points since June (from 2.21% to 6.585 spread) but still well below five year highs at 8.33% and crisis high of 20.55%.
Last week’s CNN fear/greed index has moved to the highest fear level in a month at 24 – but the index can go to zero. But fear is [palpable. According to one pundit, when the market falls by more than 1.5% on a Friday, 86 out of 90 times, the market is down on the following Monday. Right now, markets are showing green but weakening as I type.
Meanwhile, news continues – especially in the record setting M&A space. Another big deal on the table as Newell Rubbermaid and Jarden merger in a cash and stock deal. Each JAH shareholder will receive $21 cash plus 0.862 NWL. The combination will be a bit of a branded powerhouse with Jarden bringing things like Sunbeam, Coleman, Rawlings, Yankee Candle, Bicycle playing cards and the list goes on. M&A activity so far this year is running at a record $5.5 trillion globally (announced deals). Interesting item on the DowDuPont merger from last week. According to Barron’s, DuPont paid US$500 million to investment bankers on its spin-out of Chemours. Some more suspicious than me suggested that the big chemical merger was more to line the coffers of the bankers than for strategic or shareholders reasons!
Speaking of Barron’s, the 2016 outlook from strategists look for an average year from stocks in 2016 (2200 on the S&P 500). Stocks that were profiled positively include Macy’s, XL Group, Disney. Also a note that the correlation between stocks has risen to 71%-- the highest since 2012. What does that mean? The macro backdrop is more important than the micro and stocks are moving together. So your stock-picking prowess is less important. There is an old adage on Wall Street that suggests just when you need it most, that is when markets fall, diversification helps you the least. We’re in one of the moments. They do end – but I have found that this “tough” time happens when a transition of some magnitude is unfolding just beneath the surface.
We’ll talk transitions with Scotia’s chief strategists this morning and what his 10 themes are for 2016. MKM Partners chief derivatives strategist also uses the term transition in his daily missive. Pivot and transition – watch for these words in the strategy pieces for 2016.
From street research this morning – RBC getting more conservative on Valeant (by reducing the target to $194 from $206 U.S.); Scotia says now is the time to buy Paramount Resources (with a $15 target), BMO upgrades Mattel to outperform from hold ($33 target); Barclays introduced its global stock picks last week that included four names that are Canadian – Suncor, CNQ, Vermillion and Goldcorp (these have been the same Canadian names for some time) and Scotia introduces its 2016 featured stocks list that run from Aecon through to WPT Industrials with 41 names between. Barclays also initiates on two recent IPOs Square and Match Group with outperform.
Stick with BNN as we stick-handle these markets with guests. The futures are now in negative territory and European markets are also lower across the way. From Art Cashin at UBS: “Crude is bothering markets but it's the high yield thing that has the most market risk. Friday's Option Expiration is rumored to be enormous, which could make this a very volatile week. Stay wary, alert and very, very nimble.”
So there you have it.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Survival of the fittest


The chase by Frances Horodelski:

From the reading pile:
-Goldman Sachs is making a head and shoulders pattern and is vulnerable to $120 (!) (Bottarelli Research)
-FANG stocks are ridiculously overpriced (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Google) and require increases in net income of 473%, 5017%, 1752% and 81%, respectively to get p/e levels to market multiple (720 Global)
-Global exposure to USD appreciation is highest ever (at 18% of world GDP, ex-U.S.) and $9.8 trillion (National Bank Financial)
-Beware of Sovereign Wealth Funds (from China to Saudi Arabia) where selling could exacerbate global debt market valuations. Oil country SWF’s total $4.2 trillion. China’s reserves have dropped from $4 trillion to $3.43 trillion (an old number, but still falling) (Financial Times)
-Resistance on the S&P 500 is around 2072 and then about 2100 – will we take another run today (traders)
-Suncor made the front page of options newsletters yesterday as the shares have seen two days of heaving call buying (50:1 over puts) – 9 of 10 most active contracts are all calls especially the January 2016 $25 (U.S.) calls
-Not surprisingly, Caterpillar and Exxon are these most oversold Dow stocks (deeply oversold), the most overbought Dupont and Procter & Gamble (Bespoke)
-CNN’s fear/greed index is in the fearful territory (35)
-But maybe fear is justified – from Walter Murphy, CMT looking at chart patterns notes “the long-standing internal deterioration suggests that in early 2016 the market could be in its most fragile condition since 2007”
In the news cycle we have Cenovus lowering its 2016 capex budget by 19% to $1.6 billion (there will be a call at 11 am); we have a report from CIBC that 80% of millennials have no idea how to invest; there are earnings to asses including Hudson’s Bay Company after the close (watch in particular the impact of the U.S. dollar’s strength on the flagship 5th Avenue store of Saks and commentary about the Christmas selling season), DavidsTea (third earnings release post IPO, first earnings saw the stock collapse and has never recovered trading 41.6% below $19 offering price), and Transat (reported already and outlook shows 15% improvement in first half 2016 bookings).
Sandvine and Lumenpulse have also reported results. Economically, housing starts for Canada (which traders say is unlikely to move the dial on the Canadian dollar which is oil focused) as well as initial claims (the last jobs related number before next week’s Fed meeting). BNN will have more 2016 outlooks, some small cap high tech ideas in the “disruptor” space, we’ll talk about the dollar and the results of an IIROC study into High Frequency Trading. CVE’s CEO will also join BNN.
From the analysts on the street – interesting discussion on Dollarama which had a good quarter and opened higher yesterday got pummeled on what CIBC calls “detailed” guidance that was below their forecasts and admittedly “conservative” according to the company. DOL has a history of beating its own outlook but street worried about stocks trading at about 30x earnings. RBC has a detailed report out on the short interest in specialty pharma companies. The companies with the largest % of float short positions include Insys (82%) and Lannett (36%). Biggest changes higher include Teva (+49%), Perrigo (+24.5%) while Valeant has seen its short position drop modestly.
On the U.S. active list, Men’s Wearhouse missed its Q3 numbers and looks like it will miss the next quarter as well (stock down 21%), Canadian Solar also down 14% while Adobe, Box and GoPro are modestly higher on discussions that they could be targets for Apple.
U.S. futures are higher, European markets are lower, the smart money index is high but rolling over, bonds are getting a little bit of love, gold is up, oil is flat, the Canadian dollar is a little higher.
There isn’t much to read into the action so far. Glencore is a topic of conversation as it looks potentially to IPO is agriculture assets as it pledges to cut debt further (stock up 11% in London), Uni-Select and Cott remain at the top of the performance list in Canada (+109% and 82%, respectively YTD) while the biggest bounces today may come in the mining space.
Remember that there have been three bull market bounces (+20% or more) in oil since the collapse from last June. These quick bounces are very tough to play – we’re probably due for another bounce for the very nimble only. When the turn comes, there will be plenty of time to get one board.
Enjoy the day.

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