Friday, August 21, 2015

Much to do and much to learn

Much to do and much to learn
The chase by Frances Horodelski:

Maybe because we look at things every day—corrections seem to happen in slow motion. This has been the most anticipated correction in history it seems for the New York markets (we haven’t had a serious one since 2011). The indicators have been there for a while. The Transports peaked in December. The generals (S&P 500 and Dow) peaked in May while the Nasdaq—always late to a party—peaked on July 20. We’ve been watching (and talking) about the internals for some time which also provided the clues that something was coming.
Here’s the tally so far: The TSX is down 11% from its April high (and 12.3% from all time September 2014 highs). The S&P is down just 4.5% while the Dow is down 7.2%. The Nasdaq has dropped 6.5% in a month. The movement has been the most painful but over a longer time frame – down 12.22% since December 29 peak – for the Dow Jones transports.
I’ve been told that what leads in the correction is also what can lead on the way out. Gold? Materials, staples and telecom have been the outperformers in the past week/month in both the U.S. and Canada. We’ll see whether that defensive posturing is the signal of more defensiveness to come. Alternatively, are we seeing the capitulation trade in energy that sets up for the next cycle? The S&P has had seven weeks of alternating performance (down, up, down, up, down, up, down). The CNN fear/greed index is at 10.
Yesterday I highlighted a number of the worries around the world. Add North Korea to the list today as Kim Jong Un traded threats with South Korea and the military has been put on a “war footing”.
For reference, U.S. strategists remain generally bullish on where U.S. equities will end the year. Right now the median target for the S&P 500 is 2225 within a 2100-2350 range. I think I said last week that we could get a pop, a drop and then a rally into the end of the year. I probably should have said pop, drop, pop, drop, pop, drop – and then the rally. The volatility will likely continue. Is there anything new in the mix? Maybe the realization that China’s economy is weaker than we thought (numbers in the 3-4% GDP growth range are becoming more prevalent) and that the country’s leaders are a little less capable at managing the markets and the economy. Today’s WSJ, below the fold, talks about the Tianjin explosion and how it has undermined the people’s confidence in the leadership. Pretty much everything else is the same. The ECB is still in there buying $65 billion worth of bonds per month (until September 2016). The PMI for both manufacturing and services in the Eurozone continue to show expansion (and at a pace slightly better than expectations). The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast for the U.S. economy has started to tick up again – and while the street remains much more bullish on growth, the gap is narrowing. Growth will be positive in Q3. Interesting that a dovish fed caused a big market hiccup – maybe a rate hike will be a plus. And what about all that “a fall in oil is like a tax-cut for the masses”? Of course, the price of gasoline hasn’t fallen at the same pace as oil – but it still could and it certainly has provided some consumer relief. Jobs are being had. Wages are rising (slowly). I don’t want to be a Pollyanna. The world is thinking that central bankers have lost control. And they’re hunkering down for something worse but when the weak are running, the strong take action.
Having said that, the technicians are nervous and in the short term, the charts might dictate. From Bill Strazzullo at Bell Curve Trading: “Note how the TSX tested the 13,800-13,700 area. This is the CRITICAL level I talked about on the show last week (mid-range of the June 2013 rally). Gut check time for the Canadian equity market. If the TSX fails here it is down to 13,400/300, another attempt at a rally that probably fails around 13,700-13,800 and then down again, possibly as deep as 12,900/700.” Another view from Raymond James Jeff Saut (who thought August 12th was the low and still thinks a bottom will be put in before September comes) lines up a number of indicators that are suggesting capitulation such as the NYSE McClellan Oscillator (about as oversold as it gets), puts are being bought at a pace more than calls that hasn’t been seen since 2012, the above-noted CNN fear/greed index is well into fear. While he notes “never on a Friday” – the bottom is near. For the TSX, the story might also be similar – if only the price of oil could find some level of support. Soon my friends, soon. Next week’s bank results – coming after a miserable year-to-date for the sector (down 10.45% year to date) – could be the supporting trigger.
Where is the most pain this year? The emerging world. In the past 13 months, according to Yardeni Research, almost one trillion ($940.2 billion) has flowed out of the 19 largest emerging market economies. That is double the outflow of $480 billion during three quarters of the financial crisis (2008-2009).

Monday, August 17, 2015

Canadian equity markets OUCH!

If you’re feeling the pain of the Canadian equity markets, these comments might explain. According to Scotia Capital’s strategist, on a market cap basis, the TSX is down 9.2% year-to-date and 21% year-over-year. 

However, the difference between this performance and the equal weight is -4.2% and -18%, year-to-date and year-over-year, respectively, is the widest in 15 years (Nortel?). Today, this reflects the weight and performance of Valeant. 

So if you own Valeant, you’re happy (or for that matter most everything else that isn’t energy, materials and even some financials). As for pain, breaking down the Dow Jones can show how skewed performance is this year. 

The index is down about 3% on the year but there are big winners (United Health, Nike and Home Depot) but there are nine components down more than 10% YTD including Intel (-20%), Dupont (-23%) and Chevron (-23%) although the latter did break a 15-week losing streak last week. 

Breaking into the top ten in terms of performance, and beating the market, is McDonalds (+6% year to date). For reference in 2014, the best performing stock YTD was Intel (+31%).



Full Article

Bull to bear?
The chase by Frances Horodelski:

Sublimity: “It’s the instant when one thing is about to become something else. Day to night, caterpillar to butterfly. Fawn to doe. Experiment to result. Boy to man.” - Dr. Hauptmann, All the Light we cannot see. Bull to bear(?).
Here’s the news that might be important to you. Barron’s has a bullish review on Potash (5.8% yield and potential upside to $34 U.S. in the next year and a $52 replacement value). On the negative side, oil could see $20 with a fast snap back after citing CFTC speculative long positions as a big negative (although net long positions of the speculators have declined over the past few months while the net short position of the commercials has also been declining – i.e. less short). In a summary of the 13F filings by major investors, position changes that stand out include Bridgewater exiting Potash, Fairholme adding to Sears Canada and Imperial Metals, The Gates Foundation reducing its position in Berkshire and adding BP, Kyle Bass added to Valeant, Paulson lowered his position in GLD, Pershing exited Actavis, Soros bought TimeWarner, Facebook and Dow.
If you’re feeling the pain of the Canadian equity markets, these comments might explain. According to Scotia Capital’s strategist, on a market cap basis, the TSX is down 9.2% year-to-date and 21% year-over-year. However, the difference between this performance and the equal weight is -4.2% and -18%, year-to-date and year-over-year, respectively, is the widest in 15 years (Nortel?). Today, this reflects the weight and performance of Valeant. So if you own Valeant, you’re happy (or for that matter most everything else that isn’t energy, materials and even some financials). As for pain, breaking down the Dow Jones can show how skewed performance is this year. The index is down about 3% on the year but there are big winners (United Health, Nike and Home Depot) but there are nine components down more than 10% YTD including Intel (-20%), Dupont (-23%) and Chevron (-23%) although the latter did break a 15-week losing streak last week. Breaking into the top ten in terms of performance, and beating the market, is McDonalds (+6% year to date). For reference in 2014, the best performing stock YTD was Intel (+31%).
For the week, the big stories will centre around the consumer and retail sales. In Canada,August 21st will see retail sales for June (estimate +0.2%). In the U.S., we’ll get a slew of companies reporting including WalMart, TJX and Home Depot tomorrow with Target, Lowes, American Eagle and Staples (among others). The big industrial name for the week will be Deere on Friday. The big corporate story this morning is Liberty Interactive (owner of QVC) buying Zulily (ZU) for $18.75/share which is a 49% premium to Friday’s close. As well, Jeff Bezos reacts to the New York Times description of how Amazon treats its employees – he says he’d quit the Amazon described in the article noting also that he doesn’t recognize the Amazon described in the article.
The week will likely continue volatile as the street waits for the Fed in September (last month’s FOMC meeting minutes will be released on Wednesday). The futures calculated probability of a hike in September remains a coin toss although most strategists would say it is a done deal. In other economic data, Japan’s economy contracted in the second quarter, but at a slightly less aggressive pace than the street had been expecting.
From analysts this morning Trican downgraded to sell at BMO (new $2 target), GDI integrated downgraded to Hold at TD ($21 target). Lots of downgrades to hold on the street including Cisco (at Morgan Stanley), Fresh Market (at BMO), Micron (at Wedbush). Imperial Metals upgraded to buy at M Partners with $12.50 target.
On BNN today, we’ll try to get to the heart of the oil story in Canada and the world. If you’re wondering why gasoline remains at such a high price relative to the collapse in crude,
 

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