Jeff Miller | Jul 16, 2017 01:28AM ET
There was something of a change in tone last week. There is more recognition of improving conditions. With a tailwind from improving earnings, more will be wondering:
What if you have missed the rally?
Last week began with stories about revised targets for the market and ended with Fed speculation. The market took the international stories and news about President Trump in stride.
The Story in One Chart
I always start my personal review of the week by looking at a chart of S&P 500 market price moves. The Wednesday pre-market release of Chair Yellen’s Congressional testimony was the most notable feature. The market gained 1.4%, reaching a new all-time high.
Personal Note
I am on vacation starting Friday and through the next week. This means that I will probably miss two installments of WTWA. Since readers requested and appreciate the “limited editions” we have produced when I have been away, we’ll do that again. We will include indicator updates, a few observations on news and worries, and perhaps some “timeless” advice that has special relevance right now.
Since I cannot ever get completely away, I’ll be in touch with events and my office. Is something important is happening, I’ll get involved. The last time I went to Toronto my vacation was spoiled by the debt limit crisis. I hope to avoid a repeat of that!
Each week I break down events into good and bad. For our purposes, “good” has two components. The news must be market friendly and better than expectations. I avoid using my personal preferences in evaluating news – and you should, too!
The economic news last week was mixed, but tilting positive.
The Good
He concludes as follows:
I submit that most of those criticizing recent Fed policy from various points of view seldom apply their proposals with the rigor shown above, or explain why they believe their alternative proposed measures of Fed policy success would be superior to its published methods, or where and when their different proposed measures would grade recent Fed performance poorly. I invite them to do so in the comments section below, or in their own articles.
- The NY Fed has a great explanation of how the balance sheet is adjusted. If you understand this, it provides an antidote to some of the daily misinformation. (Economicintersect.com highlighted this story, as it does with so many useful articles). There is a great chart sequence (clear, but too long to reproduce here) that shows the effect of Fed actions. If everyone spouting an opinion had to pass a short quiz on the basics, the world would be a quieter place!
The Bad
The Ugly, or is it Humorous?
There is always some “ugly” news in the world. I was planning to go with this story about share a few good laughs here with an important lesson – no one really knows what business ideas might work! Too make sure that my humor is on track, I consulted Mrs. OldProf, who approved this message!
I hope you enjoy it as much as we did.
We would all like to know the direction of the market in advance. Good luck with that! Second best is planning what to look for and how to react.
The Calendar
It is a more normal economic calendar. As always, I am especially interested in the housing starts and building permits. While they are lower on my priority list, many are fans of the leading indicators and the Philly Fed.
The big stories will be about earnings. Senate action on the ObamaCare replacement bill is supposed to include a vote this week. Investors are interested not only in the specific health-care effects, but the implications for other items on the Trump agenda, most notably tax cuts.
Briefing.com has a good U.S. economic calendar for the week (and many other good features which I monitor each day). Here are the main U.S. releases.
Next Week’s Theme
Despite the busier calendar, earnings stories will command attention. There is evidence of a changing mood. After months of focus on negative news, the move to new stock market highs is creating new questions. Many will be asking:
Have you missed the rally? And if so, what next?
Here is the background.
Doug Short and Jill Mislinski have a chart that is quite helpful for long-term perspective. It shows the frequency and size of drawdowns.
As usual, I’ll have more in my Final Thought.
We follow some regular featured sources and the best other quant news from the week.
I have a rule for my investment clients. Think first about your risk. Only then should you consider possible rewards. I monitor many quantitative reports and highlight the best methods in this weekly update.
The Featured Sources:
Bob Dieli : Business cycle analysis via the “C Score.
RecessionAlert : Strong quantitative indicators for both economic and market analysis.
Georg Vrba : Business cycle indicator and market timing tools.
Brian Gilmartin : All things earnings, for the overall market as well as many individual companies.
Doug Short : Regular updating of an array of indicators. Great charts and analysis.
Many readers share my interest analyzing data. The new interactive tool from the Council on Foreign Relations lets you analyze the breakeven price point for oil exporting countries. There are multiple approaches and features. I cannot do justice to it in a static chart, but here is an example.
Insight for Investors
Investors should have a long-term horizon. They can often exploit trading volatility!
Best of the Week
If I had to pick a single most important source for investors to read this week it would be Seeking Alpha Editor Eli Hoffman’s interesting question, What If Warren Buffett Was A Macro Trader?
Citing Bloomberg strategist Cameron Crise, he considers the impact of an annual 12% stop loss on Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa). Many who think of themselves as long-term investors also subscribe to techniques that traders swear by. The all endorse stop losses. What do you think the result was?
It turns out that Buffett would have been stopped out in 18 of the 30 years for which Bloomberg has data for the BRK share price. In fact, between 1997 and 2005, a risk-managed BRK would have delivered zero return versus the 8.5% annual gains that Buffett actually produced. Had he been trading macro, there’s little doubt he would have been fired.
Volatility would have been lower, but the overall gain only half as much.
[Jeff]: Investing has no miracle answers, no matter how confidently they are stated by proponents.
Stock Ideas
It was an active week for ideas from an array of great sources. There are plenty of stocks worth your consideration.
CWS . If you look at the list, you will also see a few laggards – probably good candidates. Smuckers (NYSE:SJM)?
Chuck Carnevale illustrates this week’s theme perfectly. He advises reduced worry about overall market valuation, and more attention to individual stocks.
best 20 communications stocks.
Brian Gilmartin does an exhaustive, earnings-based analysis of Schwab (NYSE:SCHW). His consistently excellent, specific-company analyses are a great source of ideas.
Energy? Barron’s (subscription required) follows up last week’s emphasis on energy with a cover story this week.
Dividends?
Simply Safe Dividends analyzes a company that has not missed a dividend in 122 years. That is only the starting point for his thorough analysis of Colgate Palmolive (NYSE:CL).
Marc Gerstein uses his Portfolio 123 platform for a careful and contrarian analysis of GAP (NYSE:GPS). He finds the dividend reward/risk to be attractive, despite the current consensus against brick-and-mortar retail.
Personal Finance
Seeking Alpha Senior Editor Gil Weinreich has an interesting topic every day. This week I especially enjoyed Charlie Bilello , who generally assuages concerns – at least for investors. This is a great topic – and on my future calendar.
Gil also has interesting links. In this edition, my favorite is David Merkel’s analysis of the difficulty in determining risk tolerance. This is an important topic, and David has nailed it.
Watch out for….
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). Paulo Santos analyzes the effect of a (likely) upcoming cut in revenue.
Blue Harbinger explains why an attractive yield might well be a warning – Omega Health Investors (NYSE:OHI). Blue Harbinger will be our guest expert on this week’s stock exchange, so check in for more of his thoughts.
Emerging markets? Watch the debt levels .
Last week I described the elements of a strong investment process. If you missed that, it will be helpful to take a look back.
Here are the main reasons some people have missed the rally in stocks:
If you would like more detail than the summary above, request my short paper, Getting Back in the Market. This has more specific suggestions about attractive stock sectors and good tactics. The Top Twelve Investor Pitfalls will help with your plan. Understanding Risk might also be of interest. All are free at your request from info at newarc dot com.
Investors might also appreciate our Stock Exchange’s advice to traders on Trading the Earnings Season . If you check out the post you will see that it is a difficult problem for traders, but might well be an opportunity for investors with a plan.
What worries me…
…and what doesn’t
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