361 Capital Briefing: Risk Asset Buying Continues

 | Nov 11, 2014 12:22AM ET

It remains a difficult 2014 for both the Wall Street Bears and the Chicago Bears…
This arctic blast hibernation push could not happen soon enough for either team. While equities and risk assets continue to be accumulated in the U.S. markets, stocks do look a bit overbought here when looking at most 10, 20 and 50 day measures. The news flow and earnings data has been encouraging, however, the market could use a time to digest this recent move while some of the risk buying spreads to foreign equity and global credit markets. And while falling energy prices are a positive for global cost structures, too quick a pullback can be destabilizing for economies too dependent on oil and gas prices. Energy stocks are also 10% of the S&P 500, so a bit of calm after their 20% pullback could help encourage equity buyers.

Ativan, Valium, Librium, Xanax, or Klonopin? JP Morgan notes the anxiousness as Managers underperform…
While the tape is pretty quiet and relaxed (especially compared to October) beneath the surface, anxiety levels are rising and buying is growing a touch more “urgent” as this market isn’t giving underinvested people any chance to step in on the long side. The most “painful” buying felt like it was running out of steam late last week around ~1990, but two macro events (Kuroda and McConnell) subsequently intervened to squeeze the tape up another ~40+ points. However, despite this persistent bid to stocks, it still feels like the rest of 2014 won’t be as “easy” as many are now assuming (people are much more worried about the SPX going to 2100 instead of it revisiting 1975 while the “year-end melt-up rally” proclamations are growing louder and more frequent). -- JPMorgan

And just when you thought active equity Portfolio Managers could not underperform any further, they do…
“It has been an abysmal year,” said Savita Subramanian, head of U.S. equity and quantitative strategy at Bank of America. “Large-cap mutual funds have a chronic bias towards smaller stocks, since it is hard to overweight the very largest stocks, but these stocks have actually outperformed by a pretty large margin this year. The smaller-cap bias has hurt quite a bit.” In addition, widely held technology and energy stocks had a dismal October, amid concerns about global growth, potentially extended stock valuations and a sliding oil price. BofA data covers all U.S. large-cap equity funds, including those tilted towards value stocks or growth companies that are actively managed. Only 17.7 per cent are beating the Russell 1000 index of large-cap stocks so far this year. That compares with 40.5 per cent for 2013 as a whole.

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Even with peak equity prices, Janet Yellen is telling you to keep an eye on our algorithms…
Federal Reserve officials are warning investors and foreign central bankers to brace for market turbulence as the Fed prepares to raise short-term interest rates next year. In a speech to central bankers Friday in Paris, Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen said rate increases, when they materialize in advanced economies, “could lead to some heightened financial volatility.” New York Fed President William Dudley, at the same conference, issued a more detailed alert. “This shift in policy will undoubtedly be accompanied by some degree of market turbulence,” he said of future rate increases in the U.S. “Moreover, it could create significant challenges for those emerging market economies that have been the beneficiaries of large capital inflows in recent years.”

And to prepare for more volatility, College endowments are shifting aggressively into alternatives this year…