Stocks & Equities

Stock Trading Alert: Positive Expectations Following Greece Debt Deal Announcement – Will This Optimism Last?

Briefly: In our opinion, speculative short positions are favored (with stop-loss at 2,140, and profit target at 1,980, S&P 500 index)

Our intraday outlook is bearish, and our short-term outlook is bearish:

Intraday outlook (next 24 hours): bearish
Short-term outlook (next 1-2 weeks): bearish
Medium-term outlook (next 1-3 months): neutral
Long-term outlook (next year): bullish

The U.S. stock market indexes gained between 1.2% and 1.6% on Friday, extending their short-term fluctuations, as investors reacted to some further Greece debt deal news releases, among others. The S&P 500 index trades within a short-term consolidation, following its late June decline. The nearest important level of resistance is at around 2,080, marked by local highs. On the other hand, support level remains at 2,040-2,050, marked by March local lows:

38258 a
Larger Image

Expectations before the opening of today’s trading session are positive, with index futures currently up 0.6-0.8%. The main European stock market indexes have gained 0.7-2.1% so far. The S&P 500 futures contract (CFD) is within an intraday uptrend, following lower opening. The nearest important level of support is at 2,060-2,070, and resistance level is at 2,090-2,100, as the 15-minute chart shows:

38258 b
Larger Image

The technology Nasdaq 100 futures contract (CFD) trades within a similar intraday uptrend, following lower opening. The nearest important level of resistance remains at 4,450, and support level is at 4,400-4,420, among others, as we can see on the 15-minute chart:

38258 c
Larger Image

Concluding, the broad stock market extended its short-term consolidation on Friday. For now, it looks like a flat correction following a downtrend. Therefore, we continue to maintain our already profitable speculative short position (2,098.27, S&P 500 index), as we expect a medium-term downward correction or an uptrend reversal. Stop-loss is at 2,140, and potential profit target is at 1,980. You can trade S&P 500 index using futures contracts (S&P 500 futures contract – SP, E-mini S&P 500 futures contract – ES) or an ETF like the SPDR S&P 500 ETF – SPY. It is always important to set some exit price level in case some events cause the price to move in the unlikely direction. Having safety measures in place helps limit potential losses while letting the gains grow.

Thank you.

Market Buzz – 5 Cardinal Rules for Successful Investing

page1 img2Plus KeyStone’s Latest Reports Section below:

Rule 1: Invest for Value (Buy Profitable Businesses at Reasonable Prices)

Value is perhaps the most important concept to understand as an investor (next to risk). Most people intuitively understand this in their everyday lives. Unfortunately, it is less understood in the arena of stock investing. What is value? Value, in this sense, is when you get a great deal on buying an asset. In the case of investing, it is when you are able to buy $1 worth of assets for $0.80 or less. When you are making the purchase of an item, like a house, or a car, or a television, and you put extra effort into finding an item of equal or greater quality, but for a lower price, you have made a value purchase. It is the same in the stock market. When you purchase a share of a company, you are buying an ownership interest in an underlying business – an asset. Almost any stock will have a story describing how the managers will try to make money, but if it’s a real business, it will have more than just that. It will have real products, real sales, real profits, and real business models. A successful business will generate cash flow and it will reinvest this cash flow for growth or it will pay this cash flow to back to its shareholders in the form of dividends. When we find those unique opportunities to purchase successful businesses at prices well below their real or intrinsic value, we have made a value investment.

The tricky part is determining what the stock is actually worth. This is by no means an exact science (not even close) and there are many different techniques that people use for varying degrees of success. The reality is that two different people can be given the exact same information on a company and arrive at two different conclusions of what the company is actually worth, and neither one of them is necessarily right or wrong. So rather than trying to determine the exact intrinsic value of the company (stock) you are purchasing, focus more on fundamental principles. If a company is not profitable or is not breaking into profitability, then it is not an investment, it is a speculation. If the company is trading at a premium price, risk increases. If that company is trading at a discounted price, risk decreases. The more solid companies you buy that are making money, at attractive prices, the better your portfolio will perform over time. The more you buy speculative ventures, which are innately impossible to value, the worse your portfolio will do over time. You may need to utilize the services of a qualified and competent advisor, but that is no substitute for maintaining your own opinions and investment strategy. 

Rule 2: Be Patient and Allow Your Investments to Grow

As human beings, most of us possess a desire for immediate gratification. This is in large part why online ‘trader’ programs and strategies have been met with such popularity as of late. The term ‘day trader’ is appealing because it essentially suggests that profits can be attained on a ‘daily’ basis. All of the worthwhile things in our lives however, were not developed on a short-term basis, but instead they required years to grow and develop and eventually begin to yield rewards. This is true with relationships with friends; it is true with building a family, a career, and skills we wish to develop. With each of these assets, as with the act of growing a tree, at one point, we took the initial step of planting a seed and over time, with effort and care, the assets developed strong roots and began to grow. Most rationale people would never expect instant gratification with any of the most important assets in their lives and nor should they from their investments.

When we invest, we do not just buy ideas, we do not buy hype, and we do not buy promises. When we invest, we buy a piece of an operating business for the most attractive price possible. When the business grows, we expect the value of our investment to grow with it. Anyone who has ever built a business knows that success does not come overnight. The business must be given time to grow and so must the investment. 

Rule 3: Invest with Your Mind, Not Your Emotions

Warren Buffet, who is the undisputed greatest investor in the world and often referred to as ‘the smartest man in the room,’ provided a very interesting take on the key ingredient to successful investing. He said, “Success in investing doesn’t correlate with I.Q. Once you have ordinary intelligence, what you need is the temperament to control the urges that get other people into trouble in investing.” This should hopefully come as welcome advice from those that once thought investment success required brilliance. Indeed, more often than not, we are our own worst enemies when it comes to investing. Emotion is the single biggest detriment to long-term investment success in the stock market. When stock market prices are climbing, meaning the underlying businesses are becoming more expensive, emotion encourages most people to become greedy. The opposite is true in a declining market, when prices are falling, and in many cases, some of the underlying businesses are selling for discounted prices, most people become more fearful and consider leaving the markets. Ironically, this is the period where the best mid to long-term investments can be discovered.

The lesson to be learned here is – control the emotions of fear and greed. Understand that the market moves up and down and don’t become too excited or too depressed in either event. Let us remember the Crash of 2008. By mid-2008, stock market activity was at a climax. On the financial news, we were inundated with references to legendary levels of liquidity, M&A activity, and opportunity. The result was irrational exuberance, where like in the tech boom, people thought that the rules had changed and they became willing to pay any price for overvalued assets. Then the crash came and over the second half of the year, sentiment took a 180 degree shift with the overall market losing about 40% in the matter of months. It was at the trough of the market that many of our clients were asking us if they should liquidate their portfolios and stay away from the markets until certainty returned. The problem is that liquidating out of fear, and at the trough of the market, forces you to lock in your losses. The intention is always to re-enter the market during better times. Unfortunately, this timing never works the way it is intended. When we fast forward to the market recovery, the vast majority of the gains were made between March and May, with the market largely moving sideways since. Investors that had elected to lock in their profits during the market’s lowest point, in October of 2008, would not likely have gotten back into the market in time to benefit from the recovery. A quote I am quite fond of is that “success in the market is derived from time in the market and not timing the market.” Another from Warren Buffet is “if you cannot stomach your investments suffering a temporary decline of 50% or more, you have no business investing in the stock market.”

Rule 4: Diversify Your Investments

Diversification is a tool that every investor has been touted. Although the benefits have undoubtedly been explained to you at some point, it is important enough that I will explain it again. Capital has to be spread around amongst different investments types, amongst different industries, and amongst different individual companies (stocks). How a portfolio is diversified depends a lot on the individual and relatively the importance of their investment portfolio. You can afford to take more risks (and diversify less) if you are young and without dependents. When you are older and become more dependent on your investments, your risk tolerance declines and your need for diversification increases. From experienced investors to novices, just about everybody in this day and age understands that stock market analysis is anything but an exact science. Even the greatest analyst on the planet cannot know unequivocally what will happen to a single stock or the stock market in the future. Even in the case that the analysis of a single stock is flawless, the analysis cannot predict with absolute certainty whether or not an individual company will succeed or fail. 

True diversification should start at the asset class level (stocks, bonds, cash, real estate, etc). Unfortunately diversifying outside of stocks, while necessary for most, is beyond the scope of this commentary. Our focus here will be the discussion of how many individual companies, or stocks, should be in your active portfolio. At KeyStone, we focus on two areas of the market where we believe investors can generate superior returns – high-growth small-cap stocks and dividend growth stocks. For our clients, we typically suggest holding eight to ten individual companies in each of these portfolios. Holding less exposes you to excess risk of poor performance from an individual stock. Holding more makes your active portfolio too difficult to manage. Let’s take a sample portfolio of eight stocks with the following one year returns: A(-40%); B(-20%); C(0%); D(0%); E(20%); F(25%); G(50%); and H(85%). These example returns are being used purely for illustrative purpose, but they do represent a somewhat realistic return spectrum. If you were to diversify equally into all eight of these stocks, you would have made an average return of 15% for the year. On the other hand, if you were to select just one of these stocks (not knowing which would outperform), you would have a 50% chance of either making nothing at all or even losing money. If you were to select just three of the stocks, there is a reasonable chance that you would have selected A, B, and C, which would have yielding an average return of -20%. Of course, by selecting three stocks you could have been lucky and picked F, G, and H, yielding you an average return of 53%. The problem with concentrating into one to three stocks is that you are now depending on luck to guide your returns. “Hindsight is 20/20, but foresight is legally blind.” You don’t know at the beginning of the year which companies will be the losers and which will be the winners, so in order to give yourself the best chance of generating a reasonable return, you have to diversify your holdings. Anything less brings us from the realm of investment to the realm of speculation.  

Rule 5: Maintain Reasonable and Achievable Expectations

Many people buy and sell stocks with an expectation of becoming wealthy within a short time span. Unfortunately, this is more of a pipe dream than a reasonable expectation. By now, you should be familiar with Warren Buffet and his reputation as “the world’s greatest investor.” He has amassed a fortune of $50 billion over a 40 year career as a buyer and seller of businesses. Yet all of his success has been generated with an average annual return of only about 22% per year. To the truly experienced investor, this return is phenomenal. To the average speculator, this return might actually appear meager. Yet no money manager on record can boast of a higher average investment return over a long-term (over ten years) time horizon. The truth is that those that might tend to scoff at the return and consider it unimpressive have not even come close to consistently generating anything comparable. 

A big problem with maintaining overly high expectations is that most people tend to gravitate to high-risk investments in order to achieve them. In the Canadian investment market, this typically means overly high allocations to the very cyclical resource sectors of Mining and Oil & Gas. While these sectors have their place in a well diversified portfolio, overly high allocations almost always result in disaster. In the search for unrealistic returns, many investors go a step further and over allocate towards junior resource and junior high-tech. With only a few exceptions, these types of companies typically do not make any money and are pure speculations. As with the temptation of gambling, many so called investors are attracted to the prospect of the infamous “10 bagger” (a stock that multiplies in value 10 times), but as with gambling, nearly every participate that allows greed to dictate decision ends up nearly penniless. Lest we remember the lessons from the tech boom of the 1990s – long standing wisdom that insisted real companies should actually make money was thrown to the wayside as the investment community became absolutely enamoured with the prospects of generating nearly unlimited returns. Lest we also remember how quickly it took for those paper profits to disappear and how quickly those ambitions for unrealistic returns morphed into hatred for stock market investing. We have seen this again more recently with the stock market crash of 2008. Between 2002 and 2007, many speculative junior mining issues enjoyed excellent returns in the absence of actually generating any real economic value. During this period, many of those who bought and sold stock in junior mining companies undoubtedly saw a few years of triple digit returns. In the end however, after the bell sounded, these individuals were quickly left in the exact same position as those that were once seduced by the tech boom – with stock that in some cases had declined by up to 95% or more. While the speculative sectors, along with the rest of the market, have since seen somewhat of resurgence, they are still almost all trading at depressed prices relative to the pre-2008 levels and almost all of those that participated in that market remain in the red over the course of this market cycle. 

KeyStone’s Latest Reports Section

7/9/2015
AEROSPACE AND DEFENSE MANUFACTURER POST STRONG Q2, SHARES RISE 10% – MAINTAIN SPEC BUY

6/19/2015
SPECIALTY PHARMACEUTICAL POSTS SOLID Q1 2015, INVESTMENT IN RECENT ACQUISITIONS PROVIDE DRAG ON EARNINGS NEAR-TERM, LONG-TERM POSITIVE – ADJUST RATING NEAR-TERM

6/5/2015
ROYALTY POOLS – DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIES COMPANY GROWS ROYALTY PORTFOLIO 40% SINCE START OF THE YEAR AND PROGRESSES – INVESTMENT POTENTIAL ON 1 TO 3 YEAR TIME HORIZON LOOKS SOLID AS COMPANY PROGRESSES TO NEXT STAGE OF DEVELOPMENT

6/3/2015
UNIQUE IP COMPANY REPORTS PATENT PORTFOLIO ACQUISITION AND SUBSEQUENT LICENSING DEAL WITH SAMSUNG – MAINTAIN RATING

5/29/2015
UNDERVALUED SPECIALTY PHARMA MAKES SOLID PRODUCT ACQUISITIONS, MORE-TO-FOLLOW? – MAINTAIN BUY

Clive Maund – Gold Market Update

The situation is paradoxical – the charts of just about everything are positioned for a plunge – or a turnaround and limited recovery, which reflects the fact that markets are waiting on some sort of resolution of the standoff with Greece, either Greece walking away, a Grexit, or a fudge solution where Greece accepts defeat and is denied debt relief or it is obfuscated sufficiently for the markets to buy it and this may involve another “can kicking” exercise. While the charts for many commodities look scary, including gold and silver, their COTs now look bullish, which suggests that the fudge solution will be the outcome.

As far as the charts are concerned the situation remains the same as at the time of last week’s update, with the risk of a steep drop by both gold and silver. Both broke sharply lower early last week but went on to recover their losses as the week wore on. The big difference is in the COTs, which have improved rather dramatically over the past 2 weeks, especially silver’s COT, which is now flat out bullish, at least for the short to medium-term.

Let’s now proceed to look at the latest charts. The 8-year chart for gold shows it positioned for a C-wave plunge to the $850 – $1000 area, but its latest COT chart shown immediately below, reveals that Large Specs have almost given up on it, which in itself is bullish – these sort of readings have almost always marked important bottoms in the past. The COTs for both copper and silver now look positive too, in copper’s case after a quite steep drop. Here we should note too that the Chinese market has scope for further recovery after its recent brutal plunge, and the US stockmarkets are positioned to rally back to near their highs – if there is an easing of the Greek crisis.

38252 a

38252 b

The 1-year chart for gold shows that it is testing a zone of important support at its November and March lows, which is clearly a good point for it to turn up, although the positioning of the bearishly aligned moving averages close by above could force a breakdown to new lows.

38252 c

It’s worth digressing to look at the charts for copper, which provide circumstantial evidence of a possible intermediate bottom in commodities here. On copper’s 1-year chart we see that it too is in a good position to turn up, because after a steep drop from its May highs which got panicky early this month, it is oversold and at important support at its January lows. We shorted copper early in May.

38252 d

Copper’s COT is now looking increasingly positive, with the ever right Commercials building a bigger long position…

38252 e

The biggest threat to commodity prices is the potential for another big upleg in the dollar, and what happens with the dollar depends on what happens to the euro (the dollar index has a 57% euro weighting), and what happens to the euro now depends now on the outcome of the Greek mess. In the last update we pointed out that the dollar was poised to begin another major upleg – it still is, BUT the breakout attempt is starting to look shaky and like it could fail. If it does fail and the support in the 93 area on the index fails, which just to be where the 200-day moving average is, which makes it more significant, then things could get ugly fast. This may be what the positive commodity COTs are signaling.

38252 f

What about the dollar hedgers chart? – it is still showing quite strongly bearish readings, although they have eased from the extremes of a couple of months ago. So the dollar could be topping out after all. The big dollar rally of the past year has been driven by a combination of the euro’s woes and unwinding of the global carry trade ahead of an expected Fed rate rise. While it is hard to see the euro improving much, since a fudge solution of the Greek mess will only buy time for the beleaguered single currency, the carry trade unwind could stall out if the market senses that the Fed is bluffing re raising rates, because it can’t due to its back being to the wall. This would probably be the reason for a drop in the dollar.

38252 g
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

Now let’s proceed to view various indicators for gold as usual.

The gold hedgers chart, a form of COT chart going back further, is starting to look quite strongly bullish, having improved markedly in recent weeks. This certainly suggests that at least a bounce is probable in the weeks ahead…

38252 h
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

The Gold Optix has improved substantially over the past couple of weeks to levels that are flat out bullish…

38252 i
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

Rydex Precious Metals assets readings are now strongly bullish, since the dumb Rydex traders are always wrong and their holdings are now at a very low level. Their holdings peaked at the top of the bearmarket rally late in 2012. Interestingly, we have seen a pickup in volatility in this gauge in recent weeks, suggesting that some Rydex traders may be having second thoughts.

38252 j
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

Finally, it is worth keeping in mind that we are now entering the most bullish time of year for gold, as the seasonal chart below shows…

38252 k

Conclusion: while it may look like this update is a classic example of fence sitting, there is a good reason for this, since the situation depends on the outcome of something which is unknowable, except to God – the outcome of the negotiations between the EU and Greece. What we can be sure about is that the scales will tip one way or the other very soon, and we do have some indication in the COTs, which are suggesting that after much protest the Greeks will kneel before their European masters and live on bread and water for years – in other words the recent vote will be ignored. However, if they walk away and out of the euro, a global selloff is likely to be the result involving a rising dollar and falling commodities, including gold and silver.

Agriculture: On the Brink of Seasonal Cycle

Commodities, such as agriculture, have been depressed for many years, continue to be depressed. But I’m still extremely optimistic about agriculture, more so than many sectors of the world economy – Jim Rogers

With Jim Rogers quote in mind here is a section from the Thackray Market Letter. Full letter can be accessed HERE – MT Ed

Agriculture

Looking good, but the sweet spot of the trade occurs in late August/early September

The sector is currently at support and if the stock market starts to rally, this would be positive for the sector. Given that the seasonal period has not started for the agriculture sector, it is best to wait for the sector to start to show signs of outperformance. 

Screen Shot 2015-07-13 at 4.40.36 AM

Fertilizer Stocks

Seasonal period starts in late June, beaten up and providing a relative opportunity

PotashCorp has pulled back substantially since January. Given that PotashCorp is close to support, it currently represents an interesting opportunity. 

Screen Shot 2015-07-13 at 4.41.36 AM

Agrium has a better technical chart as it recently had a breakout and has since pulled back. 

Screen Shot 2015-07-13 at 4.42.28 AM

…to read the entire Thackray Market Letter including analysis on the Stock Market, Gold, Biotech and other go HERE

High Alert

Talk about volatility. Over the last week, markets have vacillated wildly but, as of this writing, gained NO ground as concerns over China’s bursting stock market bubble finally took Greece off of the front page headlines.

SP500-Chart1-071015

…..read more HERE for larger charts. 

 

test-php-789