Bonds & Interest Rates

“Mister Margin and May”

Signs Of The Times

“China has delayed or defaulted on as many as 23 soybean cargos it ordered from the US and South America.”

                                                                                                         – Bloomberg, April 15

That was just in the first half of April and the buyers were users not investors. China’s problems seem to be doing a nasty to the Baltic Dry Index. This zoomed up to the highest Weekly RSI since 2007. The high was 2337 in December and it is sinking now.

Chinese investors demanding their money back from a troubled $156 million high-yield product [bond] were confronted by police.”

                                                                                                         – Bloomberg, April 16

“How Wild Turkey is capitalizing on the Bourbon boom.”

                                                                            – Party time as reported by CNBC on April 16

Decades ago, Keynes said something about that when the facts change, he changes his mind. The problem is that no amount of critical history can change a Keynesian in the service of big government. Intervention exists to enhance the power and wealth of the bureaucrats and the governing classes.

In 2006, climate guru, James Lovelock warned that “only a handful of the teeming billions [of people] now alive will survive”. Political activists expected a rapid rise in temperature. He was the inventor of Gaia which was a new slant on how mankind was destroying the Earth.

Anyways, the April 10th edition of Nature featured an interview with Lovelock and he admitted that in 2006 everyone was caught up in the supposed correlation between CO2 and global warming.

His recent words were “It was a mistake we all made. But being an independent scientist, it is much easier to say you made a mistake than if you are a government department or an employee.”

One of the leaders of an intensely political movement has discovered reality. How fast will it spread through the “warmist” cult? Not likely – it has to do with money and power – which are always addictive. 

* * * * *

Stock Markets

Last week we noted that powerful bull markets have not been deterred by war or other catastrophes such as the Chicago Fire of 1873. Russia’s aggression in Ukraine was associated with some setbacks, but is not a market-changer.

Overall, this has been the first bull market out of a classical crash and it was likely to accompanied by a weak business cycle. Stocks have run for more than five years and the business expansion is a month short of five years.

At the completion of a great bubble, the bear and the recession start at virtually the same time. Quite likely, this business and stock market cycle will top together. That means positive economic reports until they suddenly turn negative.

Sentiment and momentum reached excesses only recorded at cyclical peaks. The leading Nasdaq 100 set a strong high at 3738 in early March. Within this, the Biotechs (IBB) accomplished Upside Exhaustion readings in late February.

Also there was a rare eruption of speculation within the “Silly Season”.

The swing in the Daily RSI from overbought to oversold was impressive as the IBB stairstepped down to 207 last week. The high was 275 and the rebound could find resistance at the 245 level. On the same move, the NDX declined from 3738 to 3414. Momentum swings have been much less and the NDX did not become oversold.

Of interest is that this rally is within the “Election” model that called for a good high in April. It could take a few weeks for this seasonal influence to run its course.

In the meantime, the headlines listed above range from “Party Time” to the dictates of “Mister Margin”. Our calendar keeps in mind that May has seen a number of excited bond markets reverse.

Currencies

The US dollar continues to trade opposite to the swings in orthodox investments. On the nearer-term, the DX has set a double bottom at 79.27 in mid-March and 79.38 a week ago. The in-between-high was 80.77.

The rise since 79.38 has made it to 80 where the 50-Day ma is offering minor resistance. Through this level, the next objective would be around 80.75. This is the 200-Day ma and in January it capped the rally to the 81.5 level.

Gold bugs as well as central bank bugs both remain convinced that the Fed can depreciate the dollar at will. Our view remains that without speculators capable of driving asset prices “to-the-moon” the Fed is “pushing-on-a-string”.

On the longer-term, the major low for the DX was 71.33 set in early 2008. Commodities were on a boom then with base metal and agricultural prices topping in March.

The rest, as the saying goes, was history.

On a smaller scale, similar action has been developing this year.

Commodities

Our “Rotation” out of the November-December lows drove the CRB from a double bottom at 272 to 311 this week. On the way it has set the highest Weekly RSI since March 2011, which itself, was not as high as that reached in June 2008. The latter was inspired by the remarkable rally in crude to 147 in that fateful June.

This time around, we have had a target of 105 for crude in or around May. It reached 104.99 last week. This was accomplished with only a moderate overbought condition.

Our theme has been that if it got through 105, somewhere around 112 was possible. The two-day setback to crude dropped it to support at the 102 level but there could be another week or so of seasonal firming. If crude breaks down it would confirm credit concerns are appearing.

After last week’s dip to 338, base metals (GYX) have popped to 347. The initial rally shot right up to 360, which now represents resistance.

Mining stocks (SPTMN) have 8 weeks of an uncorrected rally. At 845, there is resistance at the zoom high of 867 set in January.

If the credit markets were not so precarious, the rally has further to go.

Much the same holds for the agriculturals, with the GKX making new highs for the move

last week.

Link to April 28, 2014 Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com:

http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2014/04/time-to-bail-on-orthodox-stocks/

BOB

BOB HOYE, INSTITUTIONAL ADVISORS

E-MAIL bhoye.institutionaladvisors@telus.net

WEBSITE: www.institutionaladvisors.com

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“Echo Bust” Strikes Key Sector – What It Means for You

The “Echo Bust” is here! That’s the unmistakable conclusion you have to draw from the latest reports on the housing market.

So what is it? And what are the consequences for you?

Well, way back in November 2012, I said in Money and Markets that I was getting nervous.

My forecast up to that point had been that “the housing market would gradually stabilize, thanks to a combination of low interest rates, lower home prices and the simple passage of time.” But as 2012 progressed, I saw a clear “risk we could backslide toward an ‘Echo Bubble’ — one driven by a large influx of hot-money investors looking to compensate for rock-bottom yields in other income-generating vehicles” such as rental property.

Then in April 2013, I ratcheted up my warnings. I wrote:

“[Investors have] flooded into the housing market like marauding swarms of locusts. They’ve been snapping up houses to turn around and rent them out, often paying cash, to generate yield.

Screen Shot 2014-05-02 at 7.58.26 AM“But because they’re under such tremendous pressure, they’re aggressively outbidding each other, as well as traditional buyers. They’re paying too much money for too little of a rental income stream. And I believe that has set the stage for another housing market pullback — not one as bad as we had last time around, but something of a low-grade ‘Echo Bust.'”

So where do we stand NOW? Get a load of what we just learned …

  • Existing home sales fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 4.59 million in March. That was the worst reading since July 2012.
  • New home sales plunged 14.5 percent to a SAAR of 384,000. Not only did that miss estimates by a country mile, but it was also the lowest level since July 2013.
  • The nation’s homeownership rate sank to 64.8 percent in the first quarter of this year from 65 percent a year earlier. That’s the lowest going all the way back to 1995.
  • Home purchase mortgage activity has plunged 21 percent year over year. And overall lending activity — as measured by the Mortgage Bankers Association index that tracks both purchase and refinance applications — just sank to the lowest level since December 2000.
chart1s-1
So yeah, I’d say that pretty much describes an Echo Bust to a “T”! Is it any wonder, then, that the kinds of housing-sensitive investments I recommended avoiding have been lagging badly?

 

Leading home builders like D.R. Horton (DHI) and Toll Brothers (TOL) are now back to levels they first traded up through in late-2012. Ditto for mortgage originators, investors, and technology firms like Ellie Mae (ELLI)Redwood Trust (RWT), and Nationstar Mortgage Holdings (NSM).

So what comes next? Well, I think we revert again to a housing market that depends on real people buying real homes with real incomes and real mortgages — not this cash-driven, investor-turbocharged stuff we saw going on in late 2011, 2012, and early 2013.

The problem is that wages and employment haven’t grown anywhere near as quickly as house prices did in the last two years … and neither has the economy! So the only way to get back to a “real” market is for house price growth to slow dramatically, and wage, population, and economic growth to play catch up.

Or in other words, if you’re loaded up with housing-sensitive investments like home builders, mortgage companies, and construction supply names, you’re likely to be disappointed. And if you got back into the “fix and flip” game in residential real estate, now’s the time to start harvesting your profits … before they fade away again.

If there’s any good news here, it’s that the overall economy is NOT wildly dependent on home price growth, mortgage-making, and real estate speculation like it was in the early- and mid-2000s. So you can still profit by focusing on other areas of the economy and stock market — just like I have over the last several quarters!

Until next time,

Mike

P.S. Housing isn’t the only sector at risk. Another disaster is approaching like a runaway freight train, and it will permanently change your financial life. In my just released report, The Deadliest Bubble in 237 Years, I’ll give you the five steps you must take immediately to protect yourself and your loved ones from the coming storm.

//www.gliq.com/cgi-bin/click?weiss_mam+297601-2+MAM2976+vgbb@shaw.ca+++2+4422655++“>To claim your FREE copy, click here now.

 
The investment strategy and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of any other editor at Weiss Research or the company as a whole.

May Decline in Gold & Silver Stocks Would Create Opportunity

Last week we noted that the gold and silver shares had formed a short-term rebound in response to an oversold condition. Yet we felt that the downtrend that originated from the hard reversal in March was still in effect. As we go to publish, the rebound appears to be petering out. Be aware that there is more potential downside in May. The good news is a decline in May will likely create a great buying opportunity at the end of the month and in June.

Let me start with the silver complex as its providing the most clarity. We wrote about the coming opportunity in Silver at the end of March. We posited that a break to new lows would likely mark the end of the bear market and signal an excellent buying opportunity. We derived that view from a few charts including the bear market analogs chart which is posted below. The chart (which excludes the 1980-1982 bear) makes a strong case that Silver should bottom sometime in the next four to eight weeks.

may1silverbears

Though Silver has broken below its December 2013 low and is inches from a new bear market low, the silver stocks remain (at the moment) comfortably above their bear market lows. The chart below plots both SIL (seniors), SIL against Silver, SILJ (juniors) and SILJ against Silver. SIL would have to decline 14% to test its December low while SILJ would have to decline 19% to test its December low. The relative strength of the silver stocks amid a breakdown in Silver is a signal that a major trend change is developing.

may1silverstocks

Unlike the silver stocks, the gold stocks haven’t had a chance to prove their relative mettle as Gold is a good $100 above its bear market lows. I reiterate that the gold indices likely bottomed in December. (I say indices because plenty of individual companies have already bottomed). GDX would have to decline 15% to test its December low while GDXJ would have to decline 19% and GLDX would need to shed 22% to test its low. There is a bit of room for these indices to decline but the closer they get to the December lows, the better buys they become.

may1goldminers

The near term prognosis looks cut and dry. Until proven otherwise the short-term trend is down. If that is confirmed in the coming days then let these markets fall to strong support before buying. Also, silver and the silver stocks peaked first in the first half of 2011. Keep an eye on the silver complex as it could bottom ahead of Gold. In any case, be patient and let this potential selloff run its course which it could by early June. We are preparing to take advantage of further weakness in the coming weeks. If you’d like to know which stocks we believe are poised to outperform after this next low, then we invite you to learn more about our service.

Good Luck!

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT

Jordan@TheDailyGold.com

 

About Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT is the editor and publisher of The Daily Gold.

3 Energy Companies Poised To Capture The Uranium Rise

Screen Shot 2014-05-01 at 10.36.15 PMAre You Smarter than the Average Portfolio Manager? Joe Reagor Says to Invest in Energy Six Months Ahead

According to Joe Reagor, analyst with ROTH Capital Partners, the average portfolio manager focused on uranium sees the potential for the uranium price to rebound in the second half of 2014—that’s why some uranium miners have already felt jolts in their share prices. In this interview with The Energy Report, find out about companies with crucial access to capital, and how undervalued oil and gas producers in the U.S. and Poland could deliver stealth profits to your energy investment portfolio.

COMPANIES MENTIONED: AREVA SA : DENISON MINES CORP. : ENERGY FUELS INC. : FX ENERGY INC. : STRATHMORE MINERALS CORP. : SYNERGY RESOURCES CORP. : URANIUM RESOURCES INC.

RELATED COMPANIESMIDLAND EXPLORATION INC.

The Energy Report: Looking forward to the end of this quarter, Joe, what is the prognosis for uranium pricing in terms of global supply and demand?

Joe Reagor: We expect to start seeing nuclear plant restarts in Japan. Each one of the restarted plants will consume 0.5 million pounds (0.5 Mlb) a year on average. With restarts lining up for early Q3/14, a resurgence of spot purchasing in the market will likely rally up the price of uranium.

TER: With a level of popular dissatisfaction about nuclear power roiling Japan, what is propelling the restarts?

JR: Earlier this year, there was a lot of speculation that Japan might move away from nuclear power. But the simple truth is that fossil fuels cost too much to import. Although uranium-based nuclear power is a bit more dangerous, as proved by the Fukushima situation, at the end of the day, it is a much cleaner and cheaper source of energy for Japan. As a result, the Japanese government is updating its policies in support of nuclear energy. Although the average person in Japan might not approve of this policy move, nuclear energy is the most cost-effective way for the country to move forward.

TER: Is there a growth curve for the long term?

JR: There are 53 shut-down reactors. If 30 of those are restarted, that will increase demand by 15 Mlb a year. Right now, worldwide, there is less than 10 Mlb of uranium idled. With the Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) Agreement completed, and Russia no longer blending down its high-grade uranium stockpile, there is definitely a shortfall in the future supply of uranium. There are a couple of large-scale projects that can step in as we go along, but, globally, there are over 60 additional power plants in varying stages of permitting and construction. That is another 30 Mlb a year, so the potential upside scenario by 2030 for demand is an additional 45 Mlb/year uranium, roughly.

TER: How have companies that explore and produce yellowcake in the major uranium mining areas of the U.S. been faring post Fukushima?

Energy Fuels Inc. has the scalability to move from being an alternative feed producer of 500 Klb/year this year, to being as much as a 3 Mlb producer in a couple of years.

JR: Some firms have been forced to idle. For example,Uranium Resources Inc. (URRE:NASDAQ) has a smaller-scale facility in Texas. Right now, it has about 600 thousand pounds (600 Klb) in resources sitting on the sidelines that it could produce in a healthy market. And Energy Fuels Inc. (EFR:TSX; EFRFF:OTCQX; UUUU:NYSE.MKT) has the White Mesa mill, with a capacity of 8 Mlb/year, running at a 1 Mlb/year rate. It began idling that in the middle of last year. And it is expected to be fully idled by the middle of this year, barring a change in the uranium spot market. It will deliver to contracts using both spot production, alternate feed production, and a little bit of production that was left over from its own mines. It is a tough ride for the U.S.-based junior uranium producers, in general.

On the other hand, the larger companies, like Denison Mines Corp. (DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.MKT) andAREVA SA (AREVA:EPA) are doing alright. Obviously, their share prices are tied to the uranium price, but they are moving forward with plans to expand production. There are delays, of course. Cigar Lake, owned by Cameco, has been delayed before, but it is ramping up now.

TER: Do these troubles sweeten the deal for acquirers?

JR: There were a few smaller, undercapitalized groups. Energy Fuels picked up one of those—Strathmore Minerals Corp. But most of the large projects are consolidated down to a few players at this point in the U.S. The essential issue is that when the price finally turns, these companies will still be too undercapitalized to fully develop all of their projects simultaneously. They will have to cherry pick their best projects, and the other ones will sit on the sidelines. So there is not a lot of hope for a resurgence in supply in the short term, even if the price moves up significantly.

TER: If the price does move up significantly, will exploration take off?

JR: Around the world, there are numerous uranium deposits that could be brought into production, but in the U.S., the process of permitting and environmental approvals can take years. Historically, when there is a shortage of uranium, the spot price tends to jump significantly. It was riding a strong rally right before the Fukushima incident occurred, and that was on the back of the realization that there was going to be a 24 Mlb shortfall when the HEU Agreement went away. So if the supply shortage mounts, the uranium price will likely move upward, and the process of permitting new projects will take years, leaving the shortage in place or the foreseeable future.

TER: What firms are your top picks in the uranium area at this point?

JR: Let’s highlight Energy Fuels. It still uses conventional mining methods, as opposed to in situ recovery (ISR). Most people will argue that using conventional is a higher-cost method of recovering uranium. But looking at the potential for a strong uranium price environment, I believe that flexibility and scalability will become valued over cost of production metrics. Now, take a firm like Uranium Resources; it might be able to produce using ISR at a lower cost metric than Energy Fuels does conventionally, but Energy Fuels has the scalability to move from being an alternative feed producer of 500 Klb/year this year, to being as much as a 3 Mlb producer in a couple of years. Other companies will have a very hard time achieving that type of scalability.

TER: How do in situ mining techniques affect profit margins?

JR: In situ mining was originally touted as a significant cost saver, but it has not performed as a cost saver compared to conventional mining on a direct cost-per-pound of production, or at least not to the extent once anticipated. Generally, the all-in cost is in the $30–40 range for ISR, while conventional mining sits in the $40–50 range. Obviously, there is a difference, but it is just not as significant as people once believed it would be. The other side of that coin is the upfront cost to develop a mine. It can take hundreds of millions of dollars to develop a new conventional mine, whereas an ISR project can be brought online for, in some cases, less than $10 million ($10M). That significant cost saving is making the biggest impact for producers around the world. There are various tradeoffs between conventional and ISR methods to consider depending on the particular situation and access to capital.

TER: What’s the capital market looking like for uranium firms in this environment?

JR: It is better than it was six months ago. The average portfolio manager in the space is aware of the potential for a uranium price recovery in H2/14. Generally, you find that the market looks six months ahead. In the early part of this year, mostly in February, there was a strong move up in the share prices of a number of uranium producers and explorers. That occurred because of the expectation that, six months from then, or in August of this year, there would be a healthier commodity price environment, and investors are trying to get ahead of that curve on uranium. Capital for nuclear energy ventures is available, albeit at depressed valuations compared to what these companies were worth when the price of uranium was closer to $70/lb. The determinant consideration on all sides is how much new capital a management team can take into its kitty.

TER: Do you have any favorites the oil and gas space?

JR: One of our Top Picks is Synergy Resources Corp. (SYRG:NYSE.MKT). Its management team is continuing to deliver on its promises. The company has experienced some minor delays, but nothing that is a value-changing proposition. We believe that coming out of the end of its fiscal year in August, Synergy will be in a very strong position to build on its past success. This is a young company, remember, that only 18 months ago was not even drilling horizontal wells, and it is now developing its fourth drill pad. Synergy understands its drilling environment. It is in a rural area outside Denver, where there are a lot of people concerned with noise levels. Synergy uses pad drilling to keep noise levels consolidated to a single area. It is attention to that kind of seemingly minor, but important detail, that provides a good growth story to investors.

TER: How does pad drilling tamp down noise?

JR: Pad drilling confines the work to a single area and drills out horizontally. Drillers can access a large area with wells by using longer-reach laterals instead of having to space their wells out and drill closer to homes, businesses or schools. Instead, Synergy finds an area where the noise level is not a neighborhood concern, and it drills a series of horizontal wells from that point.

TER: Given oversupply issues in the U.S., what is your prognosis for the shale fields?

JR: The biggest supply issue in the shale fields is with natural gas. A lot of midstream firms are flaring off their natural gas. My personal view is that the midstream constraints are actually going to result in positives for the natural gas price. Earlier this year, natural gas spiked to over $6 per thousand cubic feet ($6/Mcf). That occurred because there were a few midstream shutdowns for maintenance reasons. One shutdown significantly impacted Synergy Resources; its midstream processing facility at the Leffler pad was shut down for 35 days. With the combination of the shutdown and the cold winter, the natural gas price spiked back up. This example demonstrates that all the excess supply of natural gas in the U.S. is still not enough to feed the system if the midstream does not keep up. Supply is relative to situation.

On the oil side, we are still not oil independent. We are approaching energy independence, but not oil independence. A significant increase in the production of oil should help to cap the worldwide oil price, but I do not believe that we are reaching a point of oversupply of oil in the U.S. or anywhere near it. The growth of the shale play is going to keep impacting worldwide oil supply during the next few years. There is going to be a tipping point that forces down the oil price. Most people believe that the forward curve of oil showing an $80–85 per barrel ($80–85/bbl) value of oil in a few years is accurate. It is just a matter of timing and how political issues around the world play out. Currently, the Ukraine situation is forcing up the price of oil, as there are fears of shortages. When that situation resolves itself, we could see a small pullback in the oil price. Then, the fundamentals should take over again and pull it down into the $80–85/bbl range.

TER: Can you suggest a reasonable weighting for a profitable energy portfolio?

JR: It really is important to have a balance of different types of energy sources. Some of the clean energy ideas out there—solar and wind and electric car batteries—all have their place. Weighting an investment portfolio toward any one specific energy type is not an investment strategy I would personally recommend! I believe that the uranium price has a strong fundamental story to go up in the next 12 months. I believe that the oil price has a strong fundamental story to go down in the next 12 months, while natural gas will be more seasonal, especially in the U.S. On the basis of these commodity price movements, I suggest a slightly stronger weighting toward uranium than oil and gas. From a production standpoint, however, many oil companies are growing at exceptional rates. As long as the oil price remains high, they are going to outperform most of the uranium producers, barring a significant change in the uranium price.

TER: Do you have any other picks in the energy space for us today?

JR: We cover a small natural gas company in Poland called FX Energy Inc. (FXEN:NASDAQ). It fell out of favor last year after drilling a dry hole on a well that had a 10% chance of success. If it had worked out, the well would have been a game changer, but it turned out to be watery and a loss of money. In today’s market, though, the valuation of FX Energy is a bit low. The company is now drilling a new well on a 100%-owned piece of land. It will not be an overnight game changer if successful, but it will allow the firm to develop a second situation like the Fences. The Edge Concession play could slowly develop into a second source of natural gas production in Poland for FXEN.

The nice thing about natural gas in Poland is that it gets $8/Mcf, compared to the roughly $4.5–5/Mcf that gas goes for in the U.S. today. That depression of prices caused by the shale boom in the U.S. has not taken hold in Europe. And since no one has been successful with the Polish shale plays, natural gas prices in Poland have remained strong.

TER: Is FX Energy only in Poland, or is it in other countries as well?

JR: It has some small legacy assets in the U.S., but 95% of the valuation of the company is based on the natural gas asset that it holds in Poland.

TER: Do you have a target price for FX Energy?

JR: Our target price for FX Energy is $5.75. It just goes to point out that stories that are out of favor tend to be the most interesting investment ideas when the firm is fundamentally strong, despite the momentary market disconnect.

TER: Thanks for joining us, Joe.

JR: Happy to be here.

Joe Reagor is a research analyst with ROTH Capital Partners, providing equity research coverage of the natural resources sector. Prior to joining ROTH, he worked in equity research at Global Hunter Securities and at Very Independent Research, covering a wide array of resource companies, including metals (steel and aluminum), mining (gold, silver and base metals) and forest products (containerboard, OCC, UFS and pulp). Reagor earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics and mathematics from Monmouth University.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) Peter Byrne conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Energy Fuels Inc. and FX Energy Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Joe Reagor: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: Within the last twelve months, ROTH has received compensation for investment banking services from Uranium Resources Inc. ROTH makes a market in shares of Uranium Resources Inc. and as such, buys and sells from customers on a principal basis. ROTH makes a market in shares of Energy Fuels Inc. and as such, buys and sells from customers on a principal basis. ROTH makes a market in shares of FX Energy, Inc. and as such, buys and sells from customers on a principal basis. ROTH makes a market in shares of Synergy Resources Corp. and as such, buys and sells from customers on a principal basis. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent. 
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

 

Chartoftheday: Historical Stock Market Weakness Dead Ahead

The stock market is about to enter what has historically been the weakest half of the year. Today’s chart illustrates that investing in the S&P 500 during the six months of November through and including April accounted for the vast majority of S&P 500 gains since 1950 (see blue line). While the May through October period has seen mild gains during major bull markets (i.e. 1950-56 & 1982-97), the overall subpar performance during the months of May through October is noteworthy. Hence the saying, ‘sell in May and walk away.’

Notes:
What should you invest in this time of year? Find out right now with the exclusive & Barron’s recommended charts of Chart of the Day Plus.

20140430

Quote of the Day
“Managers are people who do things right, and leaders are people who do the right thing.” – Warren G. Bennis

Events of the Day
May 01, 2014 – May Day
May 03, 2014 – Kentucky Derby
May 05, 2014 – Cinco de Mayo (Mexico)
May 06, 2014 – National Teacher Day
May 08, 2014 – NFL Draft begins (ends May 10th)
May 11, 2014 – Mother’s Day

Stocks of the Day
— Find out which stocks investors are focused on with the most active stocks today.
— Which stocks are making big money? Find out with the biggest stock gainers today.
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— Which stocks are the biggest dividend payers? Find out with the highest dividend paying stocks.
— You can also quickly review the performance, dividend yield and market capitalization for each of the Dow Jones Industrial Average Companies as well as for each of the S&P 500 Companies.

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