Stocks & Equities

About That “Bull Market Til 2016” Call: Before You Buy the Dip, Check Out This Chart

If credit expansion leads the stock market, the market is in trouble.

Before you buy the dip “because this Bull market will run until 2016,” please ponder this chart from our Chartist Friend From Pittsburgh of total credit and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). Unsurprisingly, the stock market advances when credit is expanding and declines when credit growth slows.

Why is this unsurprising? Because ours is a debt-dependent consumer economy: everything from local government building projects to the purchase of vehicles to going to college requires borrowing money (i.e. credit expansion).

CFPGH-credit-DJIA12-13

Source: The Dome Top Bears Have Been Given Their Stock Market Sell Signal

Here is Chartist Friend From Pittsburgh’s commentary:

Total Credit Market Debt (TCMD) growth is not confirming the new DJIA high at all.

The trend of TCMD growth clearly reversed lower in 2007 by making a new all time low. The uptrend of the DJIA appears to be up since it’s recently made new all-time highs.

The point is – there’s a serious disconnect/divergence/non-confirmation going on here and in the end credit growth is the more important of the two and determines the trend because people can’t make a move nowadays without taking out a loan (house, car, student, government spending, etc.).

I would add these points:

1. Notice that credit growth is rolling over, and that its recent peak was significantly lower than the 2007 peak. In other words, despite rescuing the Too Big To Fail Banks (TBTF) to the tune of $16 trillion and the creation of $3.2 trillion that it pumped into the financial system to goose housing and stocks, the Federal Reserve’s unprecedented campaign to reflate leverage and credit only managed a weak bounce from 2007 highs in credit growth.

This is known as diminishing returnsOur Era’s Definitive Dynamic: Diminishing Returns(November 11, 2013)

The Fatal Disease of the Status Quo: Diminishing Returns (May 1, 2013)

2. In a debt-dependent consumer economy beset with declining real income for the bottom 90%, the only way to expand credit is to blow asset bubbles that boost phantom assets long enough to leverage new debt:

…..go HERE to continue reading & viewing more charts

 

 

Who’s the biggest bull on Wall Street?

 

The answer might just be J.P. Morgan’s top strategist.

 

In a note Friday, chief U.S. equity strategist Thomas Lee rolled out his 2014 forecasts with a year-end target of 2,075 for the S&P 500, which is one of  the most bullish calls out there yet.

 

Lee, says the index could gain another 20% in 2014, because the current bull market is acting like a “classic” secular bull market, which is now in its sixth year, and which has historically been very strong. A classic secular bull market is defined as one in which strong investor sentiment drives prices higher. Anecdotal evidence has been pointing to record highs on investor sentiment.

 

29 stocks J.P. Morgan says to consider for 2014

http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2013/12/13/29-stocks-j-p-morgan-says-to-consider-for-2014/

Don’t Invest Here in 2014…

scDow down 104. Gold down $27 an ounce.

No big deal. Good thing, too, because we don’t have much time to think about it. We’re on the road… in Brazil.

At Bonner & Partners Family Office, the small family wealth advisory we set up in 2009 to help families protect and pass on wealth, we’re bullish on emerging markets stocks in general… Screen Shot 2013-12-12 at 6.38.27 PMand bearish on developed market stocks in general.

That’s because we’re long-term investors. And the long-term growth sc-1prospects – to our eyes at least – are better in the emerging world… where populations are still growing… debt build-ups aren’t as high… and relatively low market capitalizations for stock markets mean more room for growth.

But 2013 has been a bad year for the emerging markets… and a bumper year for most developed markets. 

What’s going on?

Fortunately, we have a global network of analysts to help us… 

“What we’ve been explaining to investors down here,” continued a colleague from Empiricus Research, “is that you can’t know the future. You can only prepare for it. And you do that by putting yourself in a position where the surprises are more likely on the upside than the downside. 

“You just don’t buy expensive stocks, for example. You don’t know whether they will go up or down. But a surprise to the downside is more likely and more painful than a surprise to the upside.

“Some people refer to this as value investing. But we don’t really know what’s a value and what is not. Ultimately, we only have prices to guide us. And prices are very unreliable. So, we just look at what surprises might come… and what impact they will have on us. 

“I mean, I know I will be surprised. So I want a surprise that I will like. And the way you get that is by making sure you always have more upside than downside. 

“You look at the US stock market now and what you see is millions of people who are all sure that the market is going up… as long as the Fed continues to add money to the system. When the Fed stops, they think they are going to get out.

“But when everyone wants to sell, who will they sell to? So, in our view the surprise is likely to be on the downside… and it will be much more painful than a surprise to the upside. 

“So, what will happen? We don’t know. But we tell our people to stay out of the stock market in Brazil… and the US.”

More to come… 

Regards,

Bill

Trading Became My Income, Removing You From The Equation – Part III

In my last post I talked about how my trading evolved over time and how I ended up being a full time “quant geek” running and trading my own automated trading system. This section I talk about why you nneed to be removed from the equation for maximum success. 

Simple automatic investing that actually makes money is something almost everyone wants. And it is the reason algorithmic trading systems are becoming more popular and more services are making it easier for individuals to build their own simple automatic trading systems.

In Part I and Part II of this series about how I got started in systems trading and how I built a simple automatic trading system for trading my own capital and to eventually share it with fellow traders we have covered several topics. Understanding how and why a system is trading is important for its users as it provides comfort in knowing the system complies with your line of thinking and market logic.

Through my simple automatic trading system and order execution you can free yourself from the painful grind of staring at a computer screen and struggling with yourself to follow your rules and execute trades according to plan. Do not get me wrong, the creator of the automatic trading system must always be monitoring things, maintain and updating the code when required. But users using the simple automatic trading strategy provided by a firm can simply setup their trading account, link it with the automated trading system and walk away without ever having to learn or do anything else.

How My Simple Automatic Trading System Works

Keeping things short and to the point, my system is based around the S&P 500 index. You can opt to trade either the 3x leveraged ETFs (UPRO & SPXU) or trade the original automated trading strategy using the ES mini futures contract.

Both trade virtually the same but can vary at times. Because ETF’s have the tendency to fluctuate a little more than the underlying index it can lead to an extra trade or missed opportunity from time to time. The real difference is in the performance. The ETF’s use 3x leverage while the futures contract uses 10x leverage. You definitely get a better bang for your buck with futures.

Why Automatic Trading and Why Trade the S&P 500 Index?

Automatic trading may sound risky and crazy and it can be depending on how active the system is, the creator, the programmers experience and what platform the system is run on (server, charting program etc..) but in reality it’s just a set of trading rules which you create, test, approve and trade via computer.

If you have common sense, a solid logical strategy, and a top notch programmer you should eventually be able to create your own profitable automatic investing system. Also if you trade more than one investment then you know how easy it is miss a trade because you were watching another chart or responding to emails or living life… Well automated trading systems make it so you do not miss another trade again.

The S&P 500 index I think carries the least amount of volatility and is diversified with the top 500 global corporations. Also it is the most liquid investing vehicle available for the stock market which keeps slippage to a minimum for optimum order fills.

Simple Automatic Trading – It Takes Money to Make Money – Ante Up!

We all know the saying “It Takes Money To Make Money” and it could not be more true. Unfortunately most traders fall victim to all the false advertising in this industry thinking they can make $87,523 in one trade with only $5,000 etc…

There are several things an individual must have in place to make money in the market and a properly funded trading account with enough money to manage positions is one of the most important things needed. But again most people are trading with accounts of $500 – $10,000 in size which is not enough to make any real money. Sure it’s fun trading and dabble with a little money, but do not expect make much.

algo-tradingThe financial markets are a numbers game in almost every way, shape and form. If you truly understand how the market moves, probabilities and percentages then you know the more money you have the more likely you are to succeed with a winning strategy. Even if one is given a winning strategy but their account is underfunded and they do not understand position sizing, that individual will eventually lose money. There are fixed fees with trading and just to overcome them with profits requires more capital than $10,000 in most cases.

The general rule is to trade with a minimum of $35,000 which is just enough for you to trade a position size that can generate gains while allowing you to scale in and out of the market at key turning points.

Knowing how much money is required to trade and manage my ETF and futures automatic trading system is important and I will show you some conservative numbers of what to expect each month on average.

How to Make $1,000 to $2400 Each Month with Simple Automatic Trading

Since inception in March 2007 when I started running my automated trading of the ES mini futures system it has returned an average of $2400 a month. This is trading only a $35,000 account and never trading more than $15,000 per trade (3 emini contracts). The results have been truly amazing!

trading-algorithm

Money buys you time – and time translates to the freedom
to pursue happiness and personal growth, the freedom to
help others, and do whatever you want.

Simply put, I offer a simple automatic trading solution that has your best interest in mind. Making as much money as possible through algorithmic trading while also controlling downside risk. The most exciting part is that it’s automatically traded within your brokerage account using our simple automatic trading system.

PUT SOME OF YOUR INVESTMENT CAPITAL TO WORK WITH OUR SIMPLE AUTOMATIC TRADING SERVICE & SEE WHAT AUTOMATED TRADING CAN DO FOR YOU.

Click to Learn More About My Simple Automatic Trading

Chris Vermeulen

Screen Shot 2013-12-12 at 6.56.21 AM

 

 

How Isaac Newton went flat broke chasing a stock bubble

Newton2

[Editor’s Note: Tim Price, Director of Investment at PFP Wealth Management and frequent Sovereign Man contributor is filling in for Simon today.]

For practitioners of Schadenfreude, seeing high-profile investors losing their shirts is always amusing.

But for the true connoisseur, the finest expression of the art comes when a high-profile investor identifies a bubble, perhaps even makes money out of it, exits in time – and then gets sucked back in only to lose everything in the resultant bust.

An early example is the case of Sir Isaac Newton and the South Sea Company, which was established in the early 18th Century and granted a monopoly on trade in the South Seas in exchange for assuming England’s war debt.

Investors warmed to the appeal of this monopoly and the company’s shares began their rise.

Britain’s most celebrated scientist was not immune to the monetary charms of the South Sea Company, and in early 1720 he profited handsomely from his stake. Having cashed in his chips, he then watched with some perturbation as stock in the company continued to rise.

In the words of Lord Overstone, no warning on earth can save people determined to grow suddenly rich.

Newton went on to repurchase a good deal more South Sea Company shares at more than three times the price of his original stake, and then proceeded to lose £20,000 (which, in 1720, amounted to almost all his life savings).

This prompted him to add, allegedly, that “I can calculate the movement of stars, but not the madness of men.”

20131210-image

 

The chart of the South Sea Company’s stock price, and effectively of Newton’s emotional journey from greed to satisfaction and then from envy and more greed, ending in despair, is shown above.

A more recent example would be that of the highly successful fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller who, whilst working for George Soros in 1999, maintained a significant short position in Internet stocks that he (rightly) considered massively overvalued.

But as Nasdaq continued to soar into the wide blue yonder (not altogether dissimilar to South Sea Company shares), he proceeded to cover those shorts and subsequently went long the technology market.

Although this trade ended quickly, it did not end well. Three quarters of the Internet stocks that Druckenmiller bought eventually went to zero. The remainder fell between 90% and 99%.

And now we have another convert to the bull cause.

Fund manager Hugh Hendry has hardly nurtured the image of a shy retiring violet during the course of his career to date, so his recent volte-face on markets garnered a fair degree of attention. In his December letter to investors he wrote the following:

“This is what I fear most today: being bearish and so continuing to not make any money even as the monetary authorities shower us with the ill thought-out generosity of their stance and markets melt up. Our resistance of Fed generosity has been pretty costly for all of us so far. To keep resisting could end up being unforgivably costly.”

Hendry sums up his new acceptance of risk in six words: “Just be long. Pretty much anything.”

Will Hendry’s surrender to monetary forces equate to Newton’s re-entry into South Sea shares or Druckenmiller’s dotcom capitulation in the face of crowd hysteria ? Time will tell.

Call us old-fashioned, but rather than submit to buying “pretty much anything”, we’re able to invest rationally in a QE-manic world by sailing close to the Ben Graham shoreline.

Firstly, we’re investors and not speculators. (As Shakespeare’s Polonius counselled: “To thine own self be true”.)

Secondly, our portfolio returns aren’t exclusively linked to the last available price on some stock exchange; we invest across credit instruments; equity instruments; uncorrelated funds, and real assets, so we have no great dependence on equity markets alone.

Where we do choose to invest in stocks (as opposed to feel compelled to chase them higher), we only see advantage in favouring the ownership of businesses that offer compelling valuations to prospective investors.

In Buffett’s words, we spend a lot of time second-guessing what we hope is a sound intellectual framework. Examples:

  • In a world drowning in debt, if you must own bonds, own bonds issued by entities that can afford to pay you back;
  • In a deleveraging world, favour the currencies of creditor countries over debtors;
  • In a world beset by QE, if you must own equities, own equities supported by vast secular tailwinds and compelling valuations;
  • Given the enormous macro uncertainties and entirely justifiable concerns about potential bubbles, diversify more broadly at an asset class level than simply across equity and bond investments;
  • Given the danger of central bank money-printing seemingly without limit, currency / inflation insurance should be a component of any balanced portfolio
  • Forget conventional benchmarks. Bond indices encourage investors to over-own the most heavily indebted (and therefore objectively least creditworthy) borrowers. Equity benchmarks tend to push investors into owning yesterday’s winners.

In the words of Sir John Templeton,

“To buy when others are despondently selling and sell when others are greedily buying requires the greatest fortitude and pays the greatest reward.”

So be long “pretty much everything”, or be long a considered array of carefully assessed and diverse instruments of value. It’s a fairly straightforward choice.

In the words of Sir John Templeton,

“To buy when others are despondently selling and sell when others are greedily buying requires the greatest fortitude and pays the greatest reward.”

So be long “pretty much everything”, or be long a considered array of carefully assessed and diverse instruments of value. It’s a fairly straightforward choice.

 

Next: 

Previous: 

 

 

test-php-789