Stocks & Equities

What a Week

Screen Shot 2016-01-10 at 2.25.23 PMWhat a week. It’s a new year for the world’s financial markets, but it sure didn’t take long for investors to realize that the themes of 2015 are still very much prevalent. The week and the year began with Chinese regulators attempting to maintain control of their currency as the offshore market continues to discount the official rate has seen investors sell Chinese stock markets and prompt fear of further weakness in the world’s second biggest economy. The immediate and pertinent questions as fear of contagion spreads around the globe is, are the events over the previous week indicating some sort of paradigm shift in the global economy like a crisis or is this simply volatility that is to be expected in 2016?

At this point, it seems the latter scenario of increased volatility is more likely. Furthermore, ending the week Friday with strong US job numbers only added credence to this point. As the US labour market created 292 thousand net jobs in December, the year of 2015 topped out as the second best year for job creation since 1999. The US economy continues to moderately advance as the least dirty shirt in an obstacle-ridden world. 

The US Federal Reserve remains in their challenged position as the world’s central bank. As the IMF points out, global growth in 2016 will be muted and uneven, but domestically US businesses continue to have a positive outlook and hire. Hence, there is an environment to continue to support a strong dollar. Shifting overseas, part of the fear of the rapid currency depreciation in China, and other emerging markets is linked to local firms holding US dollar debt that inflates with currency weakness. This currency weakness is being prompted by diverging central bank policy between the US and the rest of the world. This has certainly been the dark cloud that has reappeared over financial markets, not unlike August and September of last year.

Chinese equities perhaps tell part of this story as they represent investors fleeing their domestic market, but don’t share a link to their economy that financial markets in more advanced economies may have. This is why they only an incomplete story. Proof of this is in the issues over the past week where circuit breakers and trading halts that failed to restore investor confidence and minimize what was an incomplete emotion-filled rush for the exits. As their equity markets require reform, it will be important for investors to keep this in mind in the year ahead and anticipate further violent moves. Chinese equities, while making headlines surrounding trading halts and selling bans, are only a small part of the story for global markets.

In retrospect, the outlook for the markets circles back to the US Fed and their interest rate policy. Despite the fact that we are now past the point of quantitative easing and emergency level interest rates, it is still the pace at which the US Fed continues to raise rates that will be the focus of investors. The unconventional measures of the past allowed the fed to maintain a liquidity backstop for global markets. This game is now changing as their ultra-accommodative measures are tapered back. Less liquidity prompts more volatility, and that is why in 2016 it is most important investors are tempered and have a plan for when the market sells off, instead of being caught in shock.

All investments contain risks and may lose value. This material is the opinion of its author(s) and is not the opinion of Border Gold Corp. This material is shared for informational purposes only. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.  No part of this article may be reproduced in any form, or referred to in any other publication, without express written permission.  Border Gold Corp. (BGC) is a privately owned company located near Vancouver, BC. ©2012, BGC.

 Summary:

 

  • Chris welcomes back Jim Rogers from his Singapore office, who says a financial crisis is imminent. 
  • His largest currency position remains the US dollar, which will likely rally into a bubble which eventually implodes in spectacular fashion. 
  • Although not a safe haven, the US dollar seems impervious relative to most global currencies, for the moment. 
  • He continues to monitor the gold market for signs of capitulation, to add to his stockpile. 
  • Russian and Chinese firms present appealing investment opportunities. 
  • Jim Rogers holds short positions in US shares, in anticipation of further volatility on the heels of the Fed rate hikes.
  • The zinc market is off over 90%, making ETF shares (ZINC) a potential turn around candidate in the coming weeks / months / years. 
  • Chairman of SchiffGold.com, Peter Schiff returns to the show with dire warnings of a looming currency crisis.
  • His work indicates that eventually, momentum will return to the gold market, making $100+ days commonplace culminating $5,000 gold.
  • The multi-year bull market in stocks may be viewed in retrospect as a Fed fomented bubble, which crushes million of retirement portfolios. 
  • Artificially low rates inspired large corporations to repurchase their shares via cheap debt, which can only end badly for investors. 
  • Although US retail sales are solid, better leading economic indicators like the Dallas Manufacturing Index and the US Weekly Leading Index are rolling over (Figures 1.1. & 1.2.). 
  • The dollar was on the verge of collapse during the credit crisis, but was saved by the bailout.
  • The next decline will require the formation of an entirely new currency.

How to invest (and grow) your savings in 2016

Unknown“Simon. What do you personally invest in?”

This is a question I’m often asked, particularly at the start of the new year.

I’m a value investor, which means I buy high quality assets “on sale” for less than their intrinsic value.

This includes private companies, real estate, productive agriculture…

And it also includes public companies (stocks).

Now, I’ve been publicly critical of the dangers of investing in the stock market…

But value investing is the exception.

See, while most Wall Street pundits and financial advisors encourage investors like you and me to crowd into risky stocks at their all-time highs… 

Value investing focuses on profitable companies run by competent management teams trading for – in many cases – less than the cash they have in the bank.

This is a glaringly obvious and straightforward strategy.

Look, where to invest your hard-earned savings is a deeply personal decision. 

And to give blanket recommendations would be irresponsible.

But there is one particular place I encourage everyone to start:

First and foremost, invest in your financial education.

And second, consider the opportunity that value stocks present:

A SAFE way to diversify your assets into well-managed companies in promising jurisdictions all over the world trading for much less than their intrinsic value. 

The challenge, of course, is having the patience and financial sophistication to FIND value stocks that fit this description.

It’s a lot like searching for needles in a haystack.

In Freedom,

Simon Black

Founder, SovereignMan.com

 

Fortunately, you can let my close friend and personal advisor Tim Price do all the hard work for you.

See, Tim has one of the most brilliant minds in finance.

Every month, he shares his incredible financial insight and top value stock pick inside Price Value International (PVI).

And right now, PVI is an absolute bargain at 50% off.

The speed at which your financial sophistication will jump to the next level is worth multiples of the heavily discounted purchase price.

And the cherries on top are his safe, well-researched stock picks backed by an impressive track record.

Just remember, the 50% discount you can get on Price Value Internationalexpires January 11th at midnight.

Click here to learn more about value investing and get your discount before it expires.

 

Breaking Markets – Sell Signals Flash

Breaking-MarketsOver the last couple of months, I have repeatedly discussed the deterioration of market breadth, momentum and the fundamental backdrop of the markets.

I have continually suggested a health regimen of portfolio rebalancing, profit taking and risk controls in this weekly missive: To wit:

As always, your portfolio, much like a garden, must be tended too in much the same way. By doing so, it will ensure that it prospers and grows over time and yields a fruitful bounty.

  1. HARVEST: Reduce “winners” back to original portfolio weights. This does NOT mean sell the whole position. You pluck the tomatoes off the vine, not yank the whole vine out of the ground.
  2. WEED: Sell losers and laggards and remove them garden. If you do not sell losers and laggards, they reduce the performance of the portfolio over time by absorbing “nutrients” that could be used for more productive plants. The first rule of thumb in investing “sell losers short.” So, why are you still hanging onto the weeds?
  3. FERTILIZE AND WATER: Add savings on a regular basis. A garden cannot grow if the soil is depleted of nutrients or lost to erosion. Likewise, a portfolio cannot grow if capital is not contributed regularly to replace capital lost due to erosion and loss. If you think you will NOT EVER LOSE money investing in the markets…then STOP investing immediately.
  4. WATCH THE WEATHER: Pay attention to markets. A garden can quickly be destroyed by a winter freeze or a drought. Not paying attention to the major market trends can have devastating effects on your portfolio if you fail to see the turn for the worse. As with a garden, it has never been harmful to put protections in place for expected bad weather that didn’t occur. Likewise, a portfolio protected against “risk” in the short-term, never harmed investors in the long-term.”

As I have discussed many times in the past, the trend of the market is still positive and there is no reason to become extremely defensive as of yet. However, this does not mean to become complacent in your portfolio management practices either.”

It is that last paragraph that I want to focus on with you today…..continue reading HERE

5 facts That Most People Don’t Know But Should

by Michael Campbell

  • There are $3,744,000,000,000 worth of negative yield government bonds in circulation in Europe. That represents 40% of the total.

….continue reading HERE

 

Is the Recession Starting?

by Martin Armstrong

The ISM purchasing managers’ index for the manufacturing sector in December 2015 in the USA has plummeted to its lowest level since June of 2009. This warns that the U.S. economy is entering a recession that is in line with the forecast of the ECM and the rise in the dollar.

…continue reading HERE

 

Our “Storm Warning” for the Year Ahead…

by Bill Bonner

it is a new year… and we face new conditions. New challenges. New threats. 

But at least we know how the waves work… floating prices up one side and down the other. 

And so let’s begin 2016 by looking at the choppy waters. Where are we? Are we on the upside? Or the downside? 

….continue reading HERE

 

 

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