Source: Short Side Of Long
- We are starting to see some signs of the equity market becoming oversold from a short term perspective. The chart above shows that we are approaching internal breadth capitulation in the near term, especially thanks to Wednesday's strong selling pressure resulting in a 90% down day. The basic 10 day Advance Decline Line is also signalling oversold levels. The percentage of stocks within the S&P 500 above the 10 MA & 50 MA also hit a low reading, regularly associated with short term bounces (chart here & chart here). According to Tom McCellan, a well respected technical analyst, his own Summation Index is now also oversold. Furthermore, more than one fifth of the S&P 500's components now show an oversold RSI reading of 30 or below, while the index itself has also become oversold too. Finally, the Bespoke website reported that 27 out of 30 Dow Jones components are now oversold. All in all, one could make an argument that a bounce or relief rally might be in store soon. However, be warned that markets remained overbought for a prolonged period of time in an uptrend, so they can just as easily remain oversold for prolonged periods during a downtrend. Also be warned that oversold readings work better when the price is above 200 MA, like we saw in June. All major indices are now below the 200 MA. Having said all that, you won't see me buying equities.
Source: Market Anthropology
- The current secular bear market in the Western World began in the year 2000 and has so far progressed in a sideways trading range for the last 12 years. I believe we are now approaching a peak in the current cyclical bull market, as investors should get ready for one last major bear market. This week I came across an interesting chart, which showed how each one of the major S&P 500 peaks was marked by a market capitulation bubble in a company which became the daring of the investment world. In 2000 it was Microsoft leading the way, in 2007 it was Petrochina leading the way, and today it is Apple. As you probably already know, CNBC has a special section on the morning Squawk Box called "iEconomy". This segment tracks... you guessed it... everything Apple related. After all somewhere between stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, real estate and alternatives, Apple has become its own asset class.
Source: Short Side Of Long
- The bull market that started on the 06th of March 2009 is aged, tired and exhausted. It is either ending or close to its final top. Bob Farrell, a legendary investor, used to say that "markets are strongest when they are broad and weakest when they narrow to a handful of blue-chip names." The chart above shows the internal strength of the NY stock exchange components making 52 week new highs has been narrowing with every new rally to the upside. The most likely reason we have constant re-occurrences of false breakouts (aka bull traps) is because each time the index breaks out to a new bull market high, it is accomplished with fewer and fewer individual names participating. As already discussed above, I assume that we might soon bounce from oversold conditions, but I hardly doubt there is a possibility of new highs. Having said that, anything is possible with the right amount of QE, according to Helicopter Ben!
Source: Short Side Of Long
- As we can see in the chart above, the majority of gains in the current cyclical bull market occurred at the beginning of the recovery, from March 2009 towards April 2010. One might ask, why is April 2010 an important measuring point? Because in my opinion, that was the end of the natural economic rebound, post the 2008 rescission. Everything else was mainly driven by constant intervention by global central banks. Another reason why I measure performance from that period is because that was the first major peak in the current bull market and what most investors call a mid cycle slowdown. Therefore, personally for me, it is important to measure the true net gain as the bull market progressed onwards. The verdict is out: despite all the hustle & bustle, all of the fiscal & monetary stimulus (over 5 trillion in the US), despite global central bank rate cuts, despite record high earnings, and despite constant positive news flow from various media outlets (you know the ones) - the S&P 500 has managed to gain only 11% from its April 2010 peak. Comparing that to it's initial phase, where gains exceeded 80% in the space of 12 months, one has to ask themselves, is the equity market really worthy of your money this late in the business cycle?
Source: Short Side Of Long
- The recent monthly issue of the BofA Merill Lynch Global Fund Manager Survey showed that investors continued to sell down Bond exposure while bidding up Equity exposure for the fifth month in a row. Despite falling prices and deteriorating fundamentals, global fund managers are now more bullish on equities than they were in March 2012, prior to an intermediate top. Interestingly as the chart above shows, managers are not as optimistic on commodities with exposure remaining at neutral levels. Regionally, global fund managers are once again falling in love with Emerging Markets, while shying away from Japan. A case could be made that Japan is a steal at current prices. Also to note, the Consumer Discretionary sector stands at an all time record high overweight. Finally, global hedge fund exposure is now around 40% net long on average. That reading is the highest during the current cyclical bull market - higher than in April 2010 prior to the Flash Crash, May 2011 prior to the Debt Ceiling sell off and March 2012 prior to the Greek election panic. The Merrill Lynch team writes: "Since 2007, whenever HF exposure has exceeded 35% SPX has underperformed Treasuries by 700bps in the following month."

Source: BarChart
- The talking point in the Precious Metals sector this week is the huge decline experienced by the Gold Bugs Index (HUI) or the Gold Mining ETF (GDX). It seems that the declines took quite a few traders by surprise, especially as prices declined rapidly over the last two days. Personally, I had no interest in buying PMs in recent times, as quite a lot of PMs blogs, forums and newsletter writers expect "imminent upside break outs to test record highs". Many that claimed miners were a great entry two weeks ago still claim that miners are a great entry today, however a lot has changed in the last few weeks. First of all, the short term breadth has turned oversold, as the percentage of stocks above the 10 MA & 50 MA has now flatlined to 0%. The rise in volume over the last two days during panic selling can also be linked to a short term capitulation, as many retail trader's stops got triggered with prices falling below the 200 MA (chart above). There is now a possibility of a short term bounce, but personally, I am not playing this sector nor am I investing more capital into PMs just yet. I like to buy when real liquidation is evident and there are still way too many traders holding their position (with large drawdowns in hand), claiming that prices will recover in coming months. If their stops get triggered and they panic, it will be the time to buy!
Source: Citigroup
- As the majority of you already know, we are in a very rare period in financial history. Once or twice a century the world economy tends to reach its limit on the amount of leverage it can take up. At that point in time, be it 1929 or 2007, various sectors of the economy start to de-leverage. According to the Citigroup chart above, the de-leveraging period is still in its early days compared to the last cycle we saw in 1930s. Households are leading the way, which is a very good sign, but there is still a lot more pain to go through. According to Gary Shilling, one of the smartest investors out there, the de-leverging could go on for another 5 to 7 years. I assume that the up-and-coming recession and a bear market will really speed up that process. Buckle up!
- In his recent newsletter written on the 14th of November, Albert Edwards goes on to say that the equity market is not falling due to the fiscal cliff, but because future prospects of economic activity and earnings will most likely disappoint - something I have been warning about for months already. Mr Edwards says that: "the bottom line is: despite the upside economic surprises, profits have been spiralling downwards. Its not the impending fiscal cliff the market is worrying about, its the actual profits cliff we have already fallen off." You will notice that in early 2008, Citigroup Economic Surprise Index was rising but the equity market was falling (circled). We have a similar picture today, were data continues to improve against economists expectations, but the equity markets aren't buying it. A lot of bulls have been tricked recently with this indicator. As Mr Edwards's prior boss, Roger Palmer used to say: "if the market can’t go up on ‘good’ news it will fall very sharply on ‘bad’ news.” Another great quote I also tend to use from time to time is from the wisdom of Marc Faber, who frequently says that: "when the price of an asset fails to make a new low on unfavourable news, it could be starting to price in more favourable conditions. The inverse is also true for an asset that fails to make a new high, under very favourable conditions." So you might be wondering when will the bad news start to appear in the press? Well, according to Mr Edwards it's just about... now.
*** Updated Version ***
Since the current post did not feature a major topic due to the lack of economic events, the recent update of the Important Charts page is a perfect way to summarise the current market conditions from equities to bonds and from currencies to commodities. The other option was to discuss politics about Israel and Palestine, but I prefer for this blog to remain in economic nature. Therefore, let us begin.
OECD Leading Economic Indicators, which came out on 12th of November, showed that the global economic activity remains split since the mid cycle slowdown in 2011. Eurozone has entered an official recession and continues to weaken further. Chinese growth is below trend and still slowing from a year ago. I do not believe the recent official data, which was published during the leadership change, that signals a recovery is underway in China. Furthermore, Japan is now edging towards a recession, just like Eurozone. With three out of the main four economic regions either slowing or in a recession already, it is difficult to make a case that the US will continue to de-couple. With that in mind, I believe that the recent weakness in the equity market has almost nothing to do with the Fiscal Cliff, but almost everything to do with slowing growth in quarters ahead.
In my opinion, there is an above average chance that earnings will disappoint in coming quarters. In a recent summary, Jim Bianco pointed out that the current earnings beat rate has been the worst in over three years. Mind you, that is quite amazing relative to how the Wall Street plays the game, where analysts put expectations so low, even the shortest kid in the school somehow manages to complete a high jump. Out of the 500 S&P companies, 460 reported earnings to be down 2.2% and revenues (more important indicator) to be down 3.6%. Technology was the worst performer, with earnings down 4.3%.
The most important point however, is that analysts expect earnings to rise by 11% and revenues to rise 3.6% in 2013. In my opinion, profit margins have already started to fall and we are most likely going to experience a classic mean reversion, which in turn will put pressure on company earnings. So... looking at the Wall Street analyst optimism from a contrary perspective, I am predicting a 2013/14 recession and a mean reversion in margins, disappointment in revenues and therefore a drop in earnings.
I think the risk on a.k.a. inflation trade is starting to sense this slowdown. Remember, markets look out into the future quarters and aren't worried too much about the present or the past. S&P 500 and Emerging Markets broke below their respective 200 MAs joining Crude Oil, Copper and Euro. Commodity currencies look like they want to follow lower as well. DAX 30 staged a 180 degree reversal of gains from the Draghi / Bernanke comments to do "unlimited bond purchases". Gold, together with Asian currency complex, remains above the 200 MA and shows at least some relative strength.
Overall, only the S&P 500 managed to exceed its 2011 highs, while all other risk assets continued in their sideways consolidations. Industrial commodities like Crude Oil and Copper are not buying into the "China recovery" story. If the recovery was real, I am sure these commodities would be a in a full force rally!
Despite a decently strong sell off, Investor Intelligence proportion of bearish advisors has not risen meaningfully. From intra day high of 1474 towards intra day low of 1343, S&P 500 has lost almost 10% and yet it is difficult to find a true bear out there. Various market participants continue to talk about bottoms and buying opportunities, neglecting deterioration in growth and earnings discussed above.
As the old saying on this blog goes... when it is obvious to the public, it is obviously wrong. The public is no where near the stage where one would consider them demonised or pessimistic. Judging by the recent trend in Uni of Michigan sentiment, the US consumer is remarkably upbeat relative to the low level of confidence we saw only a year ago. With politicians spending large of amounts of money to buy votes and to get re-elected, this shouldn't be a surprise. The chart above shows that we are most likely closer to a major market peak, rather than a major market trough.
Usually, a good sign of a strong bottom is when real fear occurs, forcing weak hands to capitulate in a panic selling frenzy. Usually volume rises (unlike right now) and VIX tends to spikes above 35 (unlike right now).
Confirmation of this fear also come from the credit market, as credit spreads widen during a downtrend. However, high yield credit spreads remain very low...
... while corporate yield credit spreads resemble similar conditions.
Financial stress usually tends to rise during a capitulation stage of a sell off. Currently, we can only see complacency judging from the chart above, which to me at least signals that this is more likely a major top rather than a bottom.
Finally, quite a worrying sign is that the Treasury Yield Curves are still flattening as investors lose confidence in Fed's ability to restart growth.
Now, let us remember that assets do not move in a straight line up or down. When prices become overbought or oversold, they tend to mean revert majority of the time. There are some basic reasons equity markets could also stage a relief rally of some kind, as we have gone down 10% in a hurry. The first market note at the beginning of this post outlines the current oversold readings from the short term perspective, so do take those into consideration.
Finally, I will cover hedge fund positioning in the various commodities and currencies, as reported by the CFTC commitment of traders on Friday.
US Dollar positioning is now rather neutral, but interestingly enough, hedge funds have once again turned bullish on the greenback this week. At the same time, we can see that the short bets are still evident in the Euro and the Franc.
They are also evident in the Japanese Yen too. I personally think the Yen has further to run, despite Japan being heavily indebted. The fact of the matter is that Japanese households will continue to repatriate their investments from abroad, which should most likely push upside pressure on Yen exchange rate.
Interestingly, while hedge funds dislike G3 currencies like the Euro and the Yen in favour of the greenback, they are aren't as negative on the commodity currencies. The chart above shows that bullish bets on the Aussie, Kiwi & Loonie are still very optimistic. At the same time, these currencies have failed to make a new high since middle of 2011. These commodity export countries like Australia tend to have the highest interest rates in Developed World, as they economies still grow above trend. As Mr Faber brinintly puts himself "when the price of an asset fails to make a new high on favourable news, it could be starting to price in more unfavourable conditions." Is the market telling us something?
Hedge fund commodity positions are starting to be liquidated now. Over the last month or so, we have a seen a trend where speculators are rapidly cutting holdings in agriculture, energy and metals.
Judging by the strong correction in the Grains market and constant weakness in Softs, agricultural positioning is also being reduced rapidly too. Having said that, we aren't anywhere close to bearish extremes yet.
Crude Oil positioning are starting to come back to earth...
... while traders have re-engaged their bearish Copper bets. I wonder why the industrial commodity market reversed its recent rally if Chinese economy is actually recovering? It seems to me that Dr Copper is not believing the recent positive data out of China.
Within the Precious metals sector, hedge funds have reduced their Gold positioning since September peak at $1,800...
... while we have also seen a small reduction in Silver positioning too.
Regular followers of this blog already know that two of my major Silver purchases for the fund were in late December 2011 and early July 2012. That is when hedge funds held the lowest net longs since at least 2001. The reason I am not buying Silver today is because there are still too many bulls for my liking. That does not mean I am selling my Silver either, but there is just not enough bears to lure me into putting extra capital to work right now.
Regular followers of this blog already know that two of my major Silver purchases for the fund were in late December 2011 and early July 2012. That is when hedge funds held the lowest net longs since at least 2001. The reason I am not buying Silver today is because there are still too many bulls for my liking. That does not mean I am selling my Silver either, but there is just not enough bears to lure me into putting extra capital to work right now.
Do I see any opportunities anywhere?
Yes in the Agricultural Softs. Hedge funds are negative on all three major Softs, which include Cotton, Coffee and Sugar. Recent Coffee positioning shows that bearish bets remain near record high levels, while...
... hedge fund Sugar positioning is now the lowest in almost five years. I think a major bottom in the Sugar market is approaching and that is what deserves my attention and my capital. I have opened a small Sugar position in recent weeks and plan to buy more soon. My personal view is that long term purchases of Soft commodities could return handsome gains in coming quarters and years.
Trading Diary (Last update 16th of November 12)
- Economic Outlook: The global economy continues to slow towards a recession, as we find ourselves in the very late cycle of the expansion. United States growth remains below 2% for five out of the last six quarters, with durable goods new orders collapsing recently. The Eurozone remains in a recession, as Germany dangerously flirts with a contraction in growth. German CEOs see the business cycle moving deeper into a downturn with a high probability of recession. Japanese growth rates are once again anaemic post the earthquake recovery, with Industrial Production slowing meaningfully. Chinese growth continues to slow for the seventh quarter in a row, however many do not believe official growth data. Business confidence is decreasing rapidly, while the manufacturing sector has been in a doldrum for a year, confirmed by the slowest electricity consumption since 2009. More importantly the price of cement, iron ore and steel has crashed recently, indicating the end of the property building boom. Finally, exports are now slowing rapidly, while railway cargo freight is looking very weak.
- Equities: Short positions are held in various US equity sectors, which include Dow Transports (IYT), Technology (XLK), Discretionary (XLY) and Industrials (XLI). Large put options have been bought on Apple (AAPL). Call options have been sold on Homebuilders (XHB), JP Morgan (JPM), Amazon (AMZN), IBM (IMB), Commonwealth Bank (CBA), Adidas (ADS) and others.
- Bonds: There isn't a lot of exposure in the bond space, as we believe this sector is experiencing euphoric investor demand. Call options have been sold on Junk Bonds (HYG). We plan to short Long Bond Treasuries (TLT) in due time.
- Currencies: Long positions are held in Japanese Yen (FXY). Put options have been bought on British Pound (FXB) & Canadian Dollar (FXC). Put options have been sold on Japanese Yen (FXY).
- Commodities: Long positions are held in various commodity sectors, which include Silver (SLV, SIVR, PSLV, Comex futures), Agriculture (RJA, JJA) and Sugar (SGG). We plan to increase longs in PMs and Softs in due time.
What I Am Watching

























Tiho, what is your view on wheat market ? I was bullish over the summer and came out of my long position as it consolidated.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I feel wheat has another leg up towards 1000 (currently at 860) and beyond.
But I have my doubts, it still looks like speculators and hedge funds are holding onto their record long positions.
holly molly apple is now approaching 500 bucks
ReplyDeleteThere's no video today ?
ReplyDeleteWhere do you get info about nº of 52 week new highs/ lows ?
For some reason the video didn't come through. I will re add it soon.
DeleteYou invest in the commented ETF's or you do it by futures.
ReplyDeleteIf you do i t by ETFs, i wonder to know why if they are much less liquid.
Thanks!
all views you need are in the chart period !
ReplyDeleteGreat article.
ReplyDeleteBut what i don't understand:
Yen long + Yen call options sold?
Nav - My view on the overall Agriculture space is that I remain very bullish, but I am talking from the long term perspective here. I don't know what Wheat will do over the coming days or weeks, but just like you yourself stated - there are still too many bullish bets for my liking within the Wheat futures. I like to buy something where traders and investors are giving up, and yet I see positive change in fundamentals. Something like that these days would be Sugar.
ReplyDeleteWeis - Video has been re-posted. You can get the info in a lot of places, including Bloomberg terminal or even Wall Street Journal. Even visit the exchange website itself. To answer your other question, it is much easier to invest in ETFs than it is in futures and many ETFs essentially buy futures and roll them over for you already (smart ETFs pick the right long dated futures and take into consideration backwardation / contango / harvesting times).
Endzeit - My bad, that is mistake. It should say Put Call options sold. I will correct that, so thank you for the heads up!
Put or call option but not put call option. There are no put call options.
DeleteHahaha! It's been a long day. I'm over worked, as you can see yourself. I glad you at least know what I meant.
DeleteIt would not surprise me to see some bounce in the DOW this coming week, especially with AAPL, bit I think it will be a sucker rally as I think the trend is still down.
ReplyDeleteMaybe a Santa Rally after US Thanksgiving dependent on sales in shops.
Your "Molehills Become Mountains" chart should be its own standalone post. That picture speaks many, many thousands of words.
ReplyDeleteThat CESI vs SPX chart does not show what you think it shows. It does not compare SPX to CESI; it compares the 3-mo change in $SPX to CESI. Big difference. If you chart SPX itself against CESI you will see that CESI leads every time at the top of the cycle and in 2 out of 4 bottoms (the other two are coincident). Soc Gen are data mining with that chart and making a misleading representation. Careful following the perm-bears, friend.
ReplyDeleteThe feature section of post has been updated!
ReplyDeleteTiho: Great update on the feature section. Market declines on a slope of hope. This condition seems very much in place as you have observed.
ReplyDeleteFiscal cliff gives a reason to sell now because of tax concerns but you have also pointed out how the business fundamentals are deteriorating with earnings falling. What is an undervalued PE ratio for the market when the underlying base is decreasing and the analysts have not sufficiently downgraded their expectations?
Hi Tiho
ReplyDeletemay I uncover a potential flaw in your line of argument? You repeat and repeat the statement that a market that fails to make new highs despite according news might be ready to fall as soon as the character of the news inverts.
Apply this to the yen today. Common sense would expect appreciation of the yen as soon as there is more bad news from Japanese corporations the likes of Sony.
But currently the yen is NOT making new highs despite such news. Hence, the correct conclusio from your proverb would be, that as soon as the Japanese news picture improves, the yen will fall.
So, all in all and for the sake of consistentcy, with your long positions in the yen you're expecting the Japanes news picture to worsen.
Then comes along Hendry who subtly hints at a big time decline of the Chinese economy. In other words, Hendry expects another Asian crisis. If such a scenario were to happen, I agree, the yen would have to rise along with it.
In other words, Tiho, you're now betting on an Asian crisis.
Are you?
BR Baltico
BR Baltico - Thank you for your comment and your questions. I see things differently as common sense and conventional wisdom expect weakness and depreciation of the Yen. My proof is here or just go and watch Bloomberg / CNBC where every single analysts comes on and says the Yen will drop like a hot potato!
ReplyDeleteFurthermore, the Yen is not making new highs because it is correcting and consolidating. Give it time to correct because it has had a great rally, so whenever rallies like that occur, prices tend to consolidate. Furthermore, I feel like I am consistent within my own view, but since you hold a different view to me, you see inconsistency from my side so I cannot help you in that department.
Regarding your main question, what I can tell you that despite all the bearish news and so much negativity circling around the Yen, I am surprised it has only fell back to 81. With so much awful news regarding BoJ becoming Abe's little puppy and threats of printing so much Yen from here to the Moon, you'd think the Yen would already be at 90 or something?
Also, my long side of the Yen has nothing to do with Japanese economy, but to do with global economy and repatriation of Japanese household funds globally back to Japan. I believe the Yen has not been strengthening because Japanese economy has been worsening, but quite to the contrary I believe Yen has been strengthening because Europe and US are in serious trouble and Japanese investors are selling out and bring money back home. As long as Bernanke and Draghi stay at 0% rates and continue to print, there will not be much desire to hold USD or Euros.
However, you shouldn't listen to what I say. I am just talking about my own personal view and my portfolio. I disclosed it openly so you know where I stand. But when it comes to your own money, you should do your own research and your own thinking, that way you can lose or make your own money. That is always the best way!
Tiho regarding the Yen. Historically the Yen has been strong because of the large trade surplus from Japanese companies exporting goods and receiving foreign currency which they exchange for Yen thereby increasing the demand for Yen and driving up its value. This stronger Yen has put pressure on Japanese companies profitability like Sharp who is in bankruptcy troubles.
DeleteThat said, even if this repatriation is occurring (btw is there a chart showing this is actually occurring) how do you expect the weakening trade deficit/lower exports will effect your yen forecast.
I see two camps
1. The Yen weakens because
- Increasing trade deficit lowers the demand for Yen
- Japan QE is leading foreign investment of Yen at least in the short term (i.e. into Chinese/asian markets)
- a potential Yen currency crisis
2. The Yen strengthen because of
- sentiment is terrible
- A Japanese slowdown and deflation means Yen undervalued
- US based QE will produce Japanese export growth
- Repatriation because of global recession and aided by aging Japanese population over the longer term
I avoided this trade because I can't make sense of what factor is most important to driving the Yen.
Hi Tiho,
DeleteIt is so confusing this currency forecasting it is literarily gambling.
I do not see how anyone cannot have overwhemling strong faith and confidence In Gold and/or Silver
When and how much to buy is the gambling part of it for the short term but long term there is no gambling involved. It is the safest and best place to be in this socilalistic western world
Thank you Lord Bless
Ukarlewitz - The Citigroup ESI shows exactly what I think it shows. I have the raw data for the index and have played around it for a long time. I have investigated all of its ebbs and flows and overlapped it with all assets in all time frames (including nominal, month over month, quarter over quarter, year over year etc) and have made my own conclusions. I have always stated on this blog that the best thing one can do is not listen to others and always do their own research, so it would be foolish for me not to follow my own advice.
ReplyDeleteThere are times when Citigroup ESI correlates positively with the price of S&P 500, but there are also times when it does not. During the last bear market from 2007 towards 2009, investors were fooled more than once into thinking data was improving, only to see stocks sell off very strongly (chart here).
For your convenience I have circled the section Albert Edwards circled in his own chart above, which shows that if you bought the S&P 500 with the outlook of data improvement from March 2008 to September 2008, you would have been incurred losses! If you held it for an extra month in, you would have been slaughtered. The recent improvement in the ESI (not shown in my chart) also tricked a lot of bulls. S&P 500 just lost 10% in a space of a few weeks as the Citigroup data surprises were improving.
Furthermore, Citigroup ESI does not track if the economy is improving or not, but weather the data is improving relative to economists forecasts.I guess you probably know that, but many do not. The fact that Wall Street economists brought down their expectations so low tells us economy is very weak in the first place. And when the numbers are so low, you are technically at stall speed, so if the market declines rapidly, it could mean we are at a risk of a recession. After all, economies cannot marian stall speed forever, so you either speed back up to trend growth or you fall into a contraction.
Now, Wall Street could bring their numbers even further down, but that just confirms what the market is already pricing in - further economic deterioration. You see, my point is many have not done their own research on this indicator, so they just quote it from blog to blog around the web and yet when it doesn't work they wonder why they are now suffering losses in their stock portfolios. I can name a few bloggers and newsletter guys that recently got fooled like that...
I hope that explanation does the job!
Tiho
Since Tiho is watching Kyle Bass, I think everyone who reads Tiho's blog ought to read Kyle Bass' most recent letter to investors (dated november 15) where he discusses Japan, interest rates and most importantly the Japanese Yen. Tiho, as usual, i love your blog.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.gurufocus.com/news/198008/kyle-bass--letter-to-investors-nov-15-2012-
schiffer- Yes, you are right but also consider that Yen has been weak when Japanese surplus was strong too, so your argument is not very well connected to the price of the market. Overt the last 30 years, Yen has had bull markets and bear markets. So trade surplus and Yen exchange rate do not have strong correlations. It is what Bloomberg writes about, but I do not pay any attention to that. What Yen moves strongly with is interest rate differentials with other CBs, because BoJ has been at low rates for so long.
ReplyDeleteIf you think Yen will weaken, do you see Fed, ECB, BoE and RBA hiking rates? If you do, you should short the Yen, because capital will leave Japan to invest abroad. I do not see rate hikes, so I am not short the Yen, I am long right now. The reason I do not see rates going up yet, is because I see a recession coming in 2013 and deflation. I think central banks will actually cut rates and those at 0% will print more money. That could strengthen the Yen, as the repatriation rate of change increases. Japanese households will panic and bring their capital back home. Yen could spike dramatically during the next recession!
Anonymous - Yes Kyle Bass has an opposite view to me on the Yen and Mr Bass is about a trillion times smarter than I am. I hold a similar view to Mr Bass over the longer term as I believe eventually Yen will weaken and Japanese stocks are a bargain, but I am still waiting for Yen to do well when global economies enter a recession. Who knows what will happen, we will see...
One thing is certain today - everyone everywhere is either outright negative on the Yen or just cautious at best. I see no bulls on the Yen right now. When I watch business channels every analysts think BoJ is about to go QE-necular and weaken the Yen dramatically. Politicians always talk tough, like Mr Abe, but they tend to act weak. Politics shouldn't be the main reasoning and basis for investment, as trusting politicians can send you broke. However, majority today are acting on these political comments and a major inflection point for the Yen. I guess they could all be right, but I prefer to be on the other side of this trade and a lone wolf.
Bass front ran MTG (he bought at $1.5) and told the world he would not mind owning it for a long long long time. Guess what? he dumped 75% of his position at $5 and the stock is back at $1.5. I wonder if he still owns any MTG......the point is, be careful listening (or consider to follow) the money manager. One must have his own crystal ball. I would not be surprised if Bass is pumping Fiscal Cliff (risk) and buying the market at the same time. It is like Bill Gross declaring the death of the stock culture...why didn't he close down his stock operation he started only a couple of years ago? may be deep down he expects the secular bear market will end in due time and he wants PIMCO to take advantage of it.
ReplyDeleteIf anyone is interested my crystall ball just told me correction is over.
ReplyDeleteHi Tiho,
ReplyDeleteGiven the huge short-interest in Coffee, why are you more interested in Sugar?
I'm not expert on soft commodities but I can see that net position of large speculators is long on Sugar and remain short on coffee. Perhaps it is a sign that sugar fundamentals is better.
DeleteWho know : )
Soybean oil has also very good perspectives.
One proverb in France says "do not catch the falling knif"
Bastiat
Glad to see the Kyle Bass letter didn't phase you at all, and that you are sticking to your thesis. My guess is the Yen is going much higher despite the worsening trade data. Thanks Tiho for the fantastic charts.
ReplyDeleteAt this level of bounce AAPL will be over a thousand bucks within the week - LOL!
ReplyDeleteTiho,
ReplyDeleteWhat are your thoughts on the mining Index? GDX or $hui
Edwin - Hey mate, I am just wondering how you know when Bass bought and sold that stock? Do you work for him?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous - I am more interested in Sugar because I believe supply problems will be worse in Sugar. I believe over the coming recession, at least one third of all Brazilian sugar mills will bankrupt. Their financial condition, from the research I have done, is terrible. At that point supply will suffer, shortages will become apparent and prices could rise dramatically. It has nothing to do with COT positioning.
Joel - I will copy my sections of my thoughts on GDX from the section of the post above:
The talking point in the Precious Metals sector this week is the huge decline experienced by the Gold Bugs Index (HUI) or the Gold Mining ETF (GDX). It seems that the declines took quite a few traders by surprise, especially as prices declined rapidly over the last two days.
First of all, the short term breadth has turned oversold, as the percentage of stocks above the 10 MA & 50 MA has now flatlined to 0%. The rise in volume over the last two days during panic selling can also be linked to a short term capitulation, as many retail trader's stops got triggered with prices falling below the 200 MA.
There is now a possibility of a short term bounce, but personally, I am not playing this sector nor am I investing more capital into PMs just yet. I like to buy when real liquidation is evident...
In the mining sector the liquidation was evident. Especially, look at the juniors (GDXJ) - last sell off in May 2012 went lower than the bottom in 2009 - what more do you need to get into that ETF ? Of course GDX looks much worse when you seek for the panic (that ETF goes sideways for years) but still, PM mining stocks were rather poor long term investment so at the moment they seem very good play from long term investing point of view. In my opinion if somebody really wants to be in that sector, now is one the best entry points. But if somebody wants to wait...well, why not. In that case I recommend the book "Waiting for Godot" by Irish writer Samuel Beckett.
DeleteMietek
Tiho...I was going to buying some MTG (at $3.0) after hearing his talk. I went to Yahoo massage board and people posted his SEC FILING and the various shares/price he paid (ave to $1.5). After MTG rolled over from $5 to $2.5, people again posted (SEC FILING ) that he had sold 76% at around $5. A nice 3 bagger.
DeleteFollowing the money manager can be profitable like buying muni-bonds by following Bill Gross.
http://www.businessinsider.com/everybody-hates-the-yen-2012-11
ReplyDeleteI could agree more. Every analyst over the last few weeks on CNBC and Bloomberg has said that Yen will go down. Every... single... one... I am yet to see any bulls on the Yen. Furthermore, I am so glad that Dennis Gartman is shorting the Yen. Now, I actually have a chance to make some money.
DeleteDidn't every analyst recomended to buy nasdaq in 1999 or oil in january 2008? How one would do if he shorted right away? Even a broken clock is right twice a day ;]
DeleteYeah they did, but those were parabolic bubbles. Today Yen is not in a parabolic bubble or a major falling knife crash. Therefore you shouldn't compare Apples to Oranges just for the sake of a "wise comment". In markets, it is always important to stay in the context.
DeleteToday the parabolic bubble is in Treasuries and yes if you shorted Treasuries last year in November, when I recommended to do it, you would not be making any money right now (you wouldn't be down a lot either). The point is that I have quickly realised that Treasuries want to go higher, so I will let them go up as much as they want patiently before I try to short them again.
BOJ defies easing calls, strikes back against independence risk
ReplyDeletehttp://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/20/us-japan-economy-idUSBRE8AJ05M20121120
yes, i would agree with Tiho on Gartman. I get his daily letter and I can't wait to push delete.
Hi,
ReplyDeletejust a question about sugar. Is there any play on it on the stock market?. I've been looking at IPSU, but this is more a refinery than a producer. Another option would be cosan, but no sure how important in the sugar production for their business.
Santiago
Santiago, why would you want to play sugar in an equity role when equities are in a secular bear market whilst commodities are in a secular bull market? By this simple logic, there 'should' be much more to gain from playing the commodity outright rather than playing it via a stock format. This is just my opinion but I would be interested to hear other people's thoughts, especially if they have an opposing view!
ReplyDeleteAll the best,
Alex
Dear Tiho,
ReplyDeleteI'll make you happy and disagree with you on a couple of items :)!
You state that "A case could be made that Japan is a steal at current prices.".
I acknowledge that you are not long Japanese stocks(so you're not walking the talk).With that in mind,I think that whilst stocks there may be "cheap" from a value-investing perspective,they are likely to get cheaper,partly because of the reasons so brilliantly explained by Hendry and partly because in the likely event of a global recession,scared foreign money(which makes up the vast majority of stock trading in Japan)is going to leave and scared Japanese money is going to enter the country in droves,but will likely be parked in cash or JGBs(causing a strong Yen rally and proving Bass wrong in the short/medium term).
Then,on a more general note,I actually wonder how come you so often sell naked options...it strikes me as a rather dangerous practice that provides sub-par risk-adjusted returns and makes you vulnerable to unexpected moves(isn't limiting losses whilst keeping full upside potential the whole point of investing?!).I suspect that in the long run it works very well only if you are a professional arbitrageur and even in that case risk of ruin is always present...I understand you don't use leverage,but yet...
PS.:even more disagreement :)
DeleteYou state you're not buying PMs because you're not seeing enough panic and liquidation:it's smart to wait for those conditions before buying,but remember also that during a new bull trend(which started after a long period of corrections and consolidations during which there have been numerous washouts)it's rare to see such conditions and most corrections end when just mild oversold readings and a neutral sentiment level have been reached.
Yes, that's the point. But remember - Tiho manages his fund which means there is a constant cash inflow. In that case it's quite smart to buy on panics and sell on euphoria. But somebody without the constant cash inflow should play PM sector bull market the way you write - just sit thight. Of course, if one believes this sector is in a bull market.
DeleteMietek
I, personally, 100% agree with Tiho about the "wait" action on PM sector. He is speaking about the intact GDX stops of big boys, but from my side I can just add - gold itself have a great downside risk right here. There is a huge probability of gold will show someting aka hui awful correction last week. It is all about overheating sentiments, bad COT data( last period commers increased about 20 k of shorts), and falling HUI/gold ratio. So it is not right for me to increase PM exposure in these market conditions.
DeleteDuring this potential future correction HUI should show strenght relative to gold and this will be the greatest buy signal.
Also we are aproaching to the next critical point. 28 NOV - gold option expiration, full moon and lunar eclipse.
Tiho and others,
ReplyDeleteDo you think gold's correction from its September 2011 high is over and that we are seeing the start of a new bull leg? That seems to be the consensus among the gold bugs, but I'm skeptical because historically even assets in a bull market see corrections up to 40%. We have not seen that type of correction with gold yet. I'm looking for a good entry point, but hesistant to buy this close to record highs.
In my opinion, if you do not own any phisical gold at all it will be better to buy even a small portion right here. If it correct 30-40%, just add more
DeleteFor me, the risk of explosive currency devaluation is much more great. Only European banks need to refinance until 2015 about 16 trillions of debt. Printing presses is just reheating.
During previous QEs inflation were not so big because, new cash from Fed just replase disapeared credit money. But now situation is much more different - every QE will increase money supply huge, from here.
So it is not about bull market at all. It is just about survive.
But in terms of speculation? yes as I alreedy note, here is the probability of correction.
Howewer I do not think we will see even 30% of downside.
There is only two reasons "under moon" for big correction in gold:
1. Global financial panic aka 2008.
2. Good economy performing
First thing has very low probability, because the repeat of 2008 will end up all international financial sistem. That's why all financial institutions decide to inject liquidity.
Second - current economy conditions are much more worse than even in 2008, because nothing done. So S&P may experience only inflationary rise, not the healfy bull market then the "quality" of companies is improving.
So gold is very important at this point
Follow your instinct. Basically right now it's good to wait as markets are in neutral mode. Since you're looking for a good entry point which I assume is for long term position, just wait. Cot charts for silver is still very short for commercials.. Plus there is not much upside action in November which usually is very strong seasonally.
DeleteGerman Sentiment:
ReplyDeleteSentix:-20% bearish
AnimusX:-42% bearish
Cognitrend: 59% bulls vs.22% bears
German stock newsletter:+30% bullish
VDAX:15,6%
Not the time to buy the DAX, even though I have to admit, that the DAX is (until now) not as weak as the Nasdaq100. Most concerning is the low volatility, which is now as low as the DAX hit 7480 for some weeks.
Ben
Tiho,
ReplyDeleteI would like to really differentiate between the miners and the precious metals. They are related but not the same. Gold or GLD looks like it is about to have a serious pullback. I am seeing a lot of the same as last year. I am looking at a january 13 for my next buy in the GLD and GC. The miners really look like a great short, they have about another 25% more to go.
Buying these miners is a fools game right now. What is the old saying a miner is a liar standing next to a hole in the ground.
Alexander M, in all politeness and respect, 2 quotes from you:
ReplyDelete"Tomorrow we have solar eclipse, usual it is negative for gold, so we may have a chance to see healthy correction."
"Also we are aproaching to the next critical point. 28 NOV - gold option expiration, full moon and lunar eclipse."
This is a good blog, so keep up with the level in the comments section please and don't post anything like this irrational nonsense.
Next thing you say is that the bible has a great impact on the stock market.
Yeah, by the way, we are approaching December so if Mayan (you know, these ancient Indians from Yukatan, Mexico) were right it's time to be closing that blog and other things as well, he, he.
DeleteBut O.K., let's not laugh at astrotechnical analysis - I have no idea about that.
Mietek
What I'm watching:
ReplyDeleteBloomberg: Is there a potential cap on sugar prices.
Quote "everything that happened in the sugar market over the last few weeks was purely a techinical bounce". Another non believer!
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/is-there-a-potential-cap-on-sugar-prices-OnSizsTwSPCn5~JeYYKgTg.html
Lot of good commentary and plenty of interesting points. I will answer some questions:
ReplyDeleteSantiago - I pretty much agree with Alexander. Commodity companies cannot always profit from shortages. Majority of the time they actually end up losing money. I refer to own commodities over commodity stocks during a commodity bull market.
Anonymous @ November 21 2:42 AM - Yes, Japanese stocks are very cheap at the moment, but there is a reason I have not bought any yet. I believe they could get a bit cheaper. I also think Russia and Vietnam are very very cheap. But, I am not optimistic on stocks in any country anywhere in the world right now, because I see another financial crisis and a global recession coming. All stocks could get cheaper. Regarding Hugh Hendry or any other guru, I listen to their process of thinking more then what they are themselves doing. I do not really care what smart gurus are doing, because I try and risk my own capital based on my own research.
Regarding sell options, there are various "conventional wisdom" statements people constantly quote like selling calls has "unlimited" risk potential. No it doesn't. I have never seen a stock go to unlimited, but I have seen many stocks go to zero. First of all, do not do what I do, do your own research and understand what you are getting yourself into. Furthermore, speculative stocks can go up a lot in a space of few years, so don't go selling calls on them. Also, when stocks are in a parabolic like Apple, they could go up a lot more, so don't go selling Calls on them either. I sell Calls on indices / sectors or very large caps only after they have had big runs and become extremely overbought.. Majority of the time options expire worthless, so if you sell OTM Calls you have a chance to make money if the stock goes down, goes sideways or even goes up a little bit. Selling options for me works very well majority of the time and I have a good risk control mechanism, with my trades being small. But I repeat... please do not do what I do, do your own research and understand what you are getting yourself into.
Regarding PMs, yes you are right that liquidation and panic is not present all the time, and during new uptrends sentiment doesn't get negative too often, if at all. So if you think this is a new bull market, you should buy and not be bothered but what I am doing. Personally, I am not buying. But that doesn't mean I am selling either. In other words, I already bought enough for now and if prices rise it is not as if I will miss out on a fortune, but I will only buy more if prices collapse.
Anonymous @ November 21 5:32 AM - Personally, I am not sure this is a new bull market for PMs, because Bloomberg recently reported that Gold is up 12 years in the row and that is a new record since at least 1920. Never has Gold gone up so many years in the row. I am very nervous about that, so tI will not exposing myself more to this sector. But that doesn't not mean prices cannot rise for a 13th year in the row...
ReplyDeleteBen - thank you for that update! Do you see the DAX going higher or lower from here? As you already know, I am personally negative and I think we have seen the top at 7,500 in September. I personally have sold Calls on Adidas shares within the Frankfurt exchange couple of weeks ago, but I have no other positions yet. I am looking at shorting Volkswagen if it rallies just a bit more. I think both will suffer in earnings with Chinese slowdown.
Joel Donovan - I think it valid to do ones own research when it comes to this question. I am not too convinced that playing Miners is the best way to expose oneself to PMs. This is a commodity bull market so I own commodities instead of commodity producers. For example, consider the recent issues in South African mining sector. Those issues are very bullish for the metals as supply falls, but very bad for producers / miners are their profits suffer. I believe as food prices rise, a lot more of these remote regions of the world will become unstable and that is where majority of mines are. Therefore, I rather have exposure to Silver than Silver miners. Having said that, many will disagree with me and if you pick a right mining company, like Silver Wheaton since 2008 lows, you could have made a fortune and much more profit than in Silver itself.
Anonymous @ November 21 9:17 AM - videos like that just turn me more bullish. When analysts do not know why prices of Sugar are rising, they just say it is only a technical bounce. The fact is International Sugar Organisation said on the weekend that Sugar supply will be one of the highest ever in 2013 and that is meant to be very very bearish for the price. So what did the Sugar price do? It rallied strongly by almost 5% in a few days, indicating that the last few months and quarters, we have already been discounting that information. It is old news! The question is what is going to happen next? It is irrelevant to focus on the past or the present. These CNBC / Bloomberg analysts do not have a clue on what is happening in the Sugar market right now, including major problems with Brazilian mills. That is why they are analysts who work for wages. If they knew, they would actually take risks and speculate on these occurrences with their own fund with millions of dollars and get rich doing it, instead of working for $150,000 per annum not including taxes.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI remember similiar thing in oli market on September 17th. After sharp oil drop analysts couldn't even madke up the reason after the fact.
Deletehttp://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20120917-709682.html
In fact it was beginning of 15% move. So far...
When I originally commented I clicked the "Notify me when new comments are added" checkbox and
ReplyDeletenow each time a comment is added I get several e-mails with the same comment.
Is there any way you can remove people from that
service? Thank you!
Also see my page - cigarette prices
Well the Japanese Yen is definitely not doing me any favours right now, that is for sure!
ReplyDeleteDear Anonymouse and Mietek. May be it is not right to use word «irrational» for things like eclipses.
ReplyDeleteLet me explain my point of view. From one side it is impossible to make 100% correct forecast of market, but from the other side, we, based on human ratio, sometimes, can figure out any true conclusions about trends.
It is because the human discursive ratio can reflect only a small part of the market reality which is much more or even indefinitely great. In other words the market reality includes the human ratio area, but in the same time comes far far away through the borders of it.
So it is not «irrational» (means there is nothing from human ratio at all) it is really supra or meta – rational. And therefore all astronomy correlations are not irrational but super-rational.
So putting attention on the complicated market nature it is always constructive to add some analyst things wich are situated in the border of «human ratio».
So do I. As You can see I never consentrate just in astronomical point of view. The most of my arguments come from rational side, but sometimes astronomy things just correlate well with the rational point of view.
Tiho,
ReplyDeleteWhat would make you reconsider a position you currently have. For example, what would make you bearish on the Yen?
A huge rally in the price of Yen would. Also if the stock market declined a lot and Greece defaulted, I'd view that as a reason not to view anymore safe haven assets like USD or Yen. Sentiment according to Public Opinion reading has fallen to the lowest level since 2002 on Yen.
DeleteTraders haven't been this bearish in a decade, so it wouldn't be too smart for me to join them, even if I am suffering a drawdown right now. I'm not worried too much, because Yen has only moved 200 pips or so since I bought it and I don't use leverage so its not the end of the world to be down a bit of money or couple of percent. In this business I find it quite normal to open a trade and not for it to go my way immediately.
Tiho, i feel your pain also, but i sit tight for the moment, will not let emotion drive my decision.
ReplyDeleteMy mxn/jpy short position is being slaughtered (bought at 6.14, now at 6.34) Luckily a bit compensated by aud/usd short bought at 1.4 (now at 1.36) and spy march 2013 put bought at spy 144 (now at 138).
What is your maximum amount of pain on the yen? Personally i will sell if the previous top is overrun (mxn/jpy at 6.60).
Do you have an updated chart on the jpy sentiment? Where do you obtain these up to date charts?
Tim
Hi Tiho,
ReplyDelete- Anyone can tell me what does it mean the graph US Treasury 2s10s Yield curve ?
- tiho, i have the same view as you for softs, my doubt is if market starts a decent correction, and subsequently dollar rises, this would be also bad for soft, i'm right ?
Yeld curve is the measure of financial stress. "Old book" says: When 10 year yield is rising and 2 y decrease that means - big money refuse to invest long term in case of political or inflation risk.
DeleteOperation twist wish to cloud this indicator. As Gary Tanashin always says, when Bernanke sold all his short-term treasuries it will be very bullish for gold.
Hey there Tim and Gordon, I will answe your questions tomorrow morning (Asian time) as its getting very late here and its time to finish up work.
ReplyDeleteOne final comment, over the last few weeks many have asked me why not considering shorting Aussie Dollae. I have been following it for awhile and have noticed it has gone super quiet. Traders who are bearish and use right stop losses could consider shoring the Aussie right now as volatility is super low.
I am definitely giving it a good hard think. I might engage in a small position with leverage and a very tight stop above previous high. I will let you guys know if I do.
About agriculture: In my opinion these assets is for speculation only not for investments.
ReplyDeleteIf someone invests in food, he pays storage cost and also he loose in value in case of natural degradation of the products.
Of course this situation is well reflected in the “paper food” - futures or etfs. So, if supply/demand spread remain intact your investments will cut in half by 1-3 years.
What’s why gold is the King of commodity bull market.
VIX doesn't indicated any fear.
ReplyDeletehttp://blogs.stockcharts.com/.a/6a0105370026df970c017d3df8adb2970c-pi
Tiho:
ReplyDeleteNothing counts until it is cashed. Yen is just getting bashed on tv. Good call on the markets-not short term oversold anymore?
Hi all, does someone have view on EUR/USD short-term ? Long-term evolution shows a possible appreciation of the euro above $1.3.
ReplyDeleteTiho, may I ask you what is your risk control mecanism ?
Flo
New post is up. I will answer all the questions in the new thread in a couple of hours. Time for some gym work.
ReplyDelete