Category: Industry Rotation

Industry Ranks August 2010

Industry Ranks August 2010

Industry RanksI?m working on my quarterly reshaping ? where I choose new companies to enter my portfolio.? The first part of this is industry analysis.

My main industry model is illustrated in the graphic.? Green industries are cold.? Red industries are hot.? If you like to play momentum, look at the red zone, and ask the question, ?Where are trends under-discounted??? Price momentum tends to persist, but look for areas where it might be even better in the near term.

If you are a value player, look at the green zone, and ask where trends are over-discounted.? Yes, things are bad, but are they all that bad?? Perhaps the is room for mean reversion.

My candidates from both categories are in the column labeled ?Dig through.?

If you use any of this, choose what you use off of your own trading style.? If you trade frequently, stay in the red zone.? Trading infrequently, play in the green zone ? don?t look for momentum, look for mean reversion.

Whatever you do, be consistent in your methods regarding momentum/mean-reversion, and only change methods if your current method is working well.

Huh?? Why change if things are working well?? I?m not saying to change if things are working well.? I?m saying don?t change if things are working badly.? Price momentum and mean-reversion are cyclical, and we tend to make changes at the worst possible moments, just before the pattern changes.? Maximum pain drives changes for most people, which is why average investors don?t make much money.

Maximum pleasure when things are going right leaves investors fat, dumb, and happy ? no one thinks of changing then.? This is why a disciplined approach that forces changes on a portfolio is useful, as I do 3-4 times a year.? It forces me to be bloodless and sell stocks with less potential for those wth more potential over the next 1-5 years.

I still like energy names here, some utilities, and reinsurers, particularly those that are strongly capitalized.? I?m not concerned about hurricanes for the strongly capitalized (it’s not likely to be a strong season anyway; if it hasn’t been strong yet, it likely will not be); they will be around to benefit from the increase in pricing power after any set of hurricanes.

I?m looking for undervalued and stable industries.? Human resources ? sure, more part time workers.? Healthcare information?? A growing field, even with the new ?health bill.?? Same for Biotech.

Even in a double dip, toiletries will still be purchased.? Phone calls will still be made, and the internet will still be accessed.? Perhaps life insurers are worth a look here; after all, the Bush tax cuts are expiring, and there will be more demand for tax avoidance.

I?m not saying that there is always a bull market out there, and I will find it for you.? But there are places that are relatively better, and I have done relatively well in finding them.

At present, I am trying to be defensive.? I don?t have a lot of faith in the market as a whole, so I am biased toward the green zone, looking for mean-reversion, rather than momentum persisting.? The red zone is more highly cyclical than I have seen in quite a while.? I will be very happy hanging out in dull stocks for a while.

Surviving a Bad Quarter Well

Surviving a Bad Quarter Well

To my readers: I am still in the process of blog repair.? I have heard from a few readers that I need larger type and more contrast.? I will fix that.? For now, use Ctrl-+ to expand the font.? I don’t want any of you going blind over me. 😉

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Onto tonight’s topic: asset allocation.? So, we had a bad quarter for equities.? Not that I can predict things, but I pulled in my horns progressively over the last nine months, culminating in buying a bunch of utilities at the last portfolio reshaping.? I own mostly energy, insurance, utilities, and consumer nondurables stocks, with a little tech thrown in for fun.? At present, median P/E is around 9, and P/B around 90%, with strong balance sheets, and around 17% of the portfolio in cash.? I missed roughly half of the carnage of the last quarter, and this week, I put some money to work, cash falling by 1%.

So, when are equities cheap?? Next question: cheap relative to what?? It’s difficult to say when equities are absolutely cheap, but here are some ideas on cheapness:

  • Stocks are absolutely cheap when they trade in aggregate at less than book value, or less than 8x trailing earnings.? Think of Buffett getting excited back in 1974.
  • Stocks are relatively cheap to Baa bonds when the earnings yield of stocks plus 3.9% is above the yield on Baa bonds.? But this at present depends on very high profit margins continuing, and sales not shrinking, neither of which are guaranteed.
  • When there is significant debt deflation going on, determining cheapness is tough.? Better to ignore the market as a whole, and focus on survivability/cheapness.? Aim at companies in necessary industries with relatively little debt, strong accounting practices, and cheap to earnings/book/sales.
  • I don’t have a good metric for when equities are cheap/dear to commodities.? Ideas welcome.

With respect to bonds, credit spreads are not wide enough to make me yell buy, as I did in November 2008 and March 2009.? Beyond that, the spread on GSE debt and guaranteed mortgages is thin.? TIPS look attractive, as few care about inflation.? The US dollar has been strong lately, largely due to weakness in the Euro.? I would be light on non-dollar bonds for now.

What we have been experiencing is creeping illiquidity, where the prior stimulus from the Fed and US Government has been declining.? There isn’t enough private demand growth to drive the economy, because we need to pay off or compromise on debts.? Also, the private sector looks at the growing debts of the government, and gets concerned.? How will the government deal with it?? Higher taxes, inflation, default?? No good scenarios there.

When an economy is overleveraged, there are no good solutions.? If sales fall, then corporations will fire more people, and idle more capacity in order to maintain profits near prior levels.? High quality bonds do well, but stocks do poorly, until enough debts are paid of or compromised, and the economy can work without the fear of mass insolvency again.

I have written before on a new approach to asset allocation.? Broadly, I am looking at a system that:

  • Considers the credit cycle first.? Great returns typically happen after credit spreads are wide, and are lousy after they are tight.
  • Considers the slopes of the Treasury nominal and TIPS curves.
  • Looks at the cash flow yield of all asset classes relative to history, relative to other asset class yields, etc.
  • Factors in safety provisions for each asset class.? Stocks need the most, then junk bonds, then investment grade.
  • Looks at the short-run and the long-haul returns of each asset class, attempting to analyze when the short run is way above or far below long-haul trends.

At present, I am still happy playing conservative, because I am less confident about debt deflation than most investors are now.? There will come a time to be much more bullish, but it will come after earnings decline, and firms have delevered still further.

Industry Ranks

Industry Ranks

Industry-Ranks-6-25-10

I?m working on my quarterly reshaping ? where I choose new companies to enter my portfolio.? The first part of this is industry analysis.

My main industry model is illustrated in the graphic.? Green industries are cold.? Red industries are hot.? If you like to play momentum, look at the red zone, and ask the question, ?Where are trends under-discounted??? Price momentum tends to persist, but look for areas where it might be even better in the near term.

If you are a value player, look at the green zone, and ask where trends are over-discounted.? Yes, things are bad, but are they all that bad?? Perhaps the is room for mean reversion.

My candidates from both categories are in the column labeled ?Dig through.?

If you use any of this, choose what you use off of your own trading style.? If you trade frequently, stay in the red zone.? Trading infrequently, play in the green zone ? don?t look for momentum, look for mean reversion.

Whatever you do, be consistent in your methods regarding momentum/mean-reversion, and only change methods if your current method is working well.

Huh?? Why change if things are working well?? I?m not saying to change if things are working well.? I?m saying don?t change if things are working badly.? Price momentum and mean-reversion are cyclical, and we tend to make changes at the worst possible moments, just before the pattern changes.? Maximum pain drives changes for most people, which is why average investors don?t make much money.

Maximum pleasure when things are going right leaves investors fat, dumb, and happy ? no one thinks of changing then.? This is why a disciplined approach that forces changes on a portfolio is useful, as I do 3-4 times a year.? It forces me to be bloodless and sell stocks with less potential for those wth more potential over the next 1-5 years.

I still like energy names here, utilities, and reinsurers, particularly those that are strongly capitalized.? I’m not concerned about hurricanes for the strongly capitalized; they will be around to benefit from the increase in pricing power after any set of hurricanes.

I’m looking for undervalued and stable industries.? Human resources — sure, more part time workers.? Healthcare information?? A growing field, even with the new “health bill.”? Same for Biotech.

Even in a double dip, toiletries will still be purchased.? Phone calls will still be made, and the internet will still be accessed.? Perhaps life insurers are worth a look here; after all, the Bush tax cuts are expiring, and there will be more demand for tax avoidance.

I’m not saying that there is always a bull market out there, and I will find it for you.? But there are places that are relatively better, and I have done relatively well in finding them.

At present, I am trying to be defensive.? I don’t have a lot of faith in the market as a whole, so I am biased toward the green zone, looking for mean-reversion, rather than momentum persisting.? The red zone is more highly cyclical than I have seen in quite a while.? I will be very happy hanging out in dull stocks for a while.

Using Industry Rotation to Gain an Edge, Maybe

Using Industry Rotation to Gain an Edge, Maybe

For the last year and three months I have written a weekly piece on industry rotation that is largely based off of price momentum, and described in this old piece that I wrote: A Different Look at Industry Momentum. I have my doubts about that piece around turning points and in choppy markets.? I stated as much in my later piece A Different Look at Industry Momentum ? II.? It seems that the momentum effect has been declining over time.

In the near future I hope to do an update for both pieces, which will show whether I have been wrong in the short run.? Unfortunately, since the original piece, I have been through a hard disk crash, so I will be rebuilding from scratch.

All that said, here are the industries with strong momentum (new industries in italic; as for the particular companies mentioned here, these are promising candidates for further due diligence):

  • Catalogue Retailers ? HSNI
  • Broadcasting & Cable TV ? CBS
  • Household Appliances ? WHR
  • Residential REITs ? AIV, UDR
  • Real Estate Services ? JLL
  • Internet Retail ? NFLX
  • Auto Manufacturers ? F
  • Computer Storage & Peripherals ? SNDK, LXK, NTAP
  • Hotels ? HOT
  • Airlines ? ALK
  • Multiline Insurance ? AIG, GNW
  • Leisure Products ? BC, ACAT
  • Health Care Technology ? CERN
  • Commercial Printing ? CGX
  • Apparel Retail ? LTD, BWS, FINL, ANN, ZUMZ, DBRN
  • Health Care Distributors ? ABC, CAH
  • Apparel & Accessories ? PERY, ZQK, MFB, LIZ
  • Cable & Satellite ? TWC
  • Gold & Precious Metals Miners ? NEM
  • Footwear ? SKX, CROX
  • Consumer Finance ? EZPW, WRLD
  • Info Tech Consulting ? ACXM, CTSH, IT
  • Real Estate Development ? FOR
  • Home Furnishings ? WSM
  • Photographic Products ? EK
  • General Merchandising ? BIG
  • Movies & Entertainment ? LYV
  • Retail REITs ? PEI, MAC, KRG
  • Office REITs ? SLG, ARE

And here are the weak industries:

  • Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing
  • Semiconductor Equipment
  • Building Products
  • Industrial Gases
  • Communications Equipment
  • Construction Materials
  • Education Services
  • Homebuilding
  • Human Resources & Employment Services
  • Brewers
  • Integrated Oil & Gas
  • Oil & Gas Drilling
  • Electric Utilities
  • Water Utilities
  • Integrated Telecommunication Services
  • Reinsurance
  • Diversified Support Service
  • Asset Management & Custody Banks
  • Heavy Electrical Equipment (AZZ)
  • Agricultural Products
  • Independent Power Production
  • Construction and Engineering
  • Investment Banking & Brokerage
  • Biotech
  • Aluminum
  • Diversified (it’s Leucadia)
  • Home Entertainment Software
  • Fertilizers & Agricultural Chemicals
  • Tire & Rubber (Goodyear)
  • Alternative Carriers

I am less than a momentum player, even though I know it works generally.? At turning points, models like these do not work well.? That has been my worry since I began writing a weekly industry rotation report for my employer in March of 2009.? Though momentum works enough of the the time that it overcomes the turning points in the long run, when the market is volatile, choppy, etc., using momentum seems to be a fool’s errand.? Industry momentum trends usually last for years, but what if they only last for months?

That is what makes analysis of price trends in the market difficult.? There is not a consistent periodicity to market cycles.? I might argue that bull markets tend to correspond to long cycles, and bear markets to short/nonexistent cycles.? So, maybe the answer stares me in the face — though I have a variety of models for industry rotation, I use them as guides, not rules.? When I am more concerned that short term performance may not persist, I pick from the bottom of the list rather than the top, seeking mean reversion.? When I don’t see headwinds for the economy as a whole, I pick more from the top of the list.

But, I like picking from both ends of the list, because the top end makes me ask the question: “have people underestimated this?”? The bottom of the list makes me ask: “is there are great big sign over the industry that reads, ‘Abandon all hope, all ye who enter here.’ ?”? Both conditions offer opportunities for profit.

And, given the preponderance of top-down players out there who hug the indexes (much institutional money), and my friends who are bottom-up stock pickers (but still glance at the indexes and adjust), it leaves room for those of us who are willing to express distinct views regarding industries.? For me today, it is fourfold:

  • If you are going to buy cyclicality, you may as well own energy names.? Energy drives the economy, and they aren’t making any more of it.? (Unless we get higher efficiency means of converting solar, wind, or tides.)
  • Insurers are relatively safe from an asset standpoint and undervalued.
  • Utilities throw off relatively safe cash flows in a bad environment.
  • Well-financed companies that are needed regardless of the cycle, and are cheap-ish.

If you have been reading me for any significant length of time, you know that I eschew simple answers.? Life, and investment performance, are complex beasts.? My view of the markets at present is mixed; there are reasons for optimism, and reasons for fear.? Typically, I don’t give into fear in full, rather than leave the markets, I take a more conservative position within them.

And, I don’t let inflation fears scare me out of the markets.? Equity markets don’t respond to inflation that much.? Scarcity of capital, or high real interest rates are another matter — at that point, far better to hold money market funds, gold, etc., though? energy stocks should work there as well, and utilities will be middling.

Depression would be another matter, but I see our politicians fighting depression as they see it, leading to a Japan-style economy, where there is no bad asset that can’t be financed through the monetary base at 0%.? (They are willing to inflate assets, but not goods prices.)? That is, if they can avoid a full-scale run on the currency, such as may be beginning to happen with the Euro now.? (What taxation authority stands behind the Euro?? Please ask Mr. Sarkozy or Ms. Merkel, though I think you will get different versions of obfuscation out of each.)

I am working to preserve capital now, and year-to-date in 2010 I am down a little less than a percent.? Though Value Line recently got a little more bullish, I am waiting to get more bullish.? I will add little bit by little bit to my positions as they go down, but I see no reason to add dramatically today.

So, be wary as always, and conservative in your decisions.? Better to avoid errors than to hit home runs in this environment.

Industry Update April 2010

Industry Update April 2010

Industry_Ranks1

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Industry_Ranks2

With regard to equity market performance, I am torn.? My head says, “Go with the momentum. Broad rally here.”? My heart says, “Profit margins will be at records with the 2011 earnings estimates; aim for industries that are out of favor.”

If I try to unify the two, I remain convinced that high quality companies are the better place to be — better valuations and far less risk.

In any case, I am looking at modifying my portfolio, and the industries that interest me fall into energy, utilities, healthcare, and stable sectors.

Note for my first model, the green zone is the anti-momentum or value zone.? The red zone is the momentum zone.

Use the model consistent with your personality.? If you like buying mean-reversion buy in the green zone.? Momentum, buy the red zone.

My selections in “Dig Through” reflect higher quality areas of the market that I think will be rewarded over time.? Remember that I am for outperformance over a three-year period, though I have often done that over shorter periods.

The second industry table comes from the S&P 1500 supercomposite, while the first comes from Value Line.? The results are broadly similar.? Still, at this point in the markets, I am more inclined to caution than risk-taking.? I feel that it is 10% upside and 30% downside here.

These are only educated guesses, but as I readjust my portfolio, I sense that I will toss out cyclicality, and buy utilities and other stable? companies.

Book Review: Diary of a Hedge Fund Manager

Book Review: Diary of a Hedge Fund Manager

This is a book that gives a feeling for being in hedge fund management, rather than a dry description of what needs to be done if you are in the rare position of being asked to manage a hedge fund.

The author was an ambitious guy.? Growing up in Canada, he wanted to play professional hockey.? He played ably in youth leagues, the minors, and college.? Making the pros was not to be.

So, what does a competitive guy do when he can’t pursue his dream?? He pursues another dream, managing money. He works hard, and gets one break after another, and eventually manages his own firm, which he sells out to a larger one.? He gets a plum job at a firm that proves less than patient with his current performance, and he gets let go.? Even that is a triumph for the author.? He starts his own firm, which is what he is still doing today.

Think of an analogy to sports — every player makes mistakes, but the best players recover from mistakes well and learn from them.? The author definitely got his share of breaks, both good and bad, but he responded to the bad breaks well, and came out the better for it.

Though this book is about hedge funds and other areas of investing, really, this book is about the author.? It tells his story, and as the story gets told, you pick up incidental points along the way:

  • What is it like to be an intern at a trading firm?
  • How do you learn as you go?
  • What was it like inside CSFB during the dot-com bubble?
  • How to interview management teams to get an edge.
  • How to sense if someone is lying.
  • In general, the Fund of hedge funds operators are not desirable clients.
  • Get a sense of the strength of consumers
  • Get a sense of the three time horizons — days/weeks, months, and years.? (He uses other terms than this, but I appreciated his logic here, because it seemed a lot like what I did as a corporate bond manager.? Have a sense of short-term momentum, medium-term trend and long-term mean-reversion.)
  • Very good to good means sell
  • Very bad to bad means buy
  • The value of keeping a trading journal, and reviewing performance.
  • Be careful who you do business with, because eventually they may show you the door for less than good reasons.
  • Surviving the credit bubble’s bust.? Buying back in when people are panicking.

The book runs 204 pages, but roughly 30 don’t have much on them.?? The book is breezy, and though I mentioned a lot of things that I got out of the book, readers less familiar with the subject matter might miss some of the points.? He does not spend a lot of time on the details. On the other hand, a reader less familiar will get a feel for what it is like to be a part of a fast-paced area in investments.

Who would benefit from the book:? Those that would like to read the tale of an interesting guy who had a tiger-by-the-tail initial career in investments.

If you want to but the book, you can get it here: Diary of a Hedge Fund Manager: From the Top, to the Bottom, and Back Again.

Full disclosure: The publisher sent me this book. They send me a lot of books, and I review as many as I can. I don’t like every book that I receive, but typically I review the ones that seem the best, and let the rest pile up. Anyone entering Amazon through my site, and buying anything, I get a small commission, but your price does not go up. Such a deal.

PS — the blog for the author’s firm is here.

Catching up on Blog Comments

Catching up on Blog Comments

Before I start, I would like to toss out the idea of an Aleph Blog Lunch to be hosted sometime in January 2010 @ 1PM, somewhere between DC and Baltimore.? Everyone pays for their own lunch, but I would bring along the review copies of many of the books that I have reviewed for attendees to take home, first come, first served.? Maybe Eddy at Crossing Wall Street would like to join in, or Accrued Interest. If you are an active economic/financial blogger in the DC/Baltimore Area, who knows, maybe we could have a panel discussion, or something else.?? Just tossing out the idea, but if you think you would like to come, send me an e-mail.

Onto the comments.? I try to keep up with comments and e-mails, but I am forever falling behind.? Here is a sampling of comments that I wanted to give responses on.? Sorry if I did not pick yours.

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Blog comments are in italics, my comments are in regular type.

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/16/notes-on-fed-policy-and-financial-regulation/#comments

Spot on David. I often think about the path of the exits strategy the fed may take. In order, how may it look? What comes first what comes last? Clearly this world is addicted to guarantees on everything, zirp, and fed QE policy which is building a very dangerous US dollar carry trade.

Back to the original point, I would think the order of exit may look something like:

1. First they will slowly remove emergency credit facilities, starting with those of least interest, which were aggressively used to curb the debt deflationary crisis on our banking system. The added liquidity kept our system afloat and avoided systemic collapse that would have brought a much more painful shock to the global financial system. Lehman Brothers was a mini-atom bomb test that showed the fed and gov?t would could happen ? seeing that result all but solidified the ?too big to fail? mantra.

2. Second, they will be forced to raise rates ? that?s right folks, 0% ? 0.25% fed funds rates is getting closer and closer to being a hindsight policy. However, I still think rates stay low until early 2010 or unemployment proves to be stabilizing. As rates rise, watch gold for a move up on perceived future inflationary pressures.

3. Third, they can sell securities to primary dealers via POMO at the NY Fed, thereby draining liquidity from excess reserves. I think this will be a solid part of their exit strategy down the road ? perhaps later in 2010 or early 2011. As of now, some $760Bln is being hoarded in excess reserves by depository institutions. That number will likely come way down once this process starts. The question is, will banks rush to lend money that was hoarded rather then be drained of freshly minted dollars from the debt monetization experiment. For now, this money is being hoarded to absorb future loan losses, cushion capital ratios and take advantage of the fed?s paid interest on excess reserves ? the banks choose to hoard rather then aggressively lend to a deteriorating quality of consumer/business amid a rising unemployment environment. This is a good move by the banks as the political cries for more lending grow louder. The last thing we need is for banks to willy-nilly lend to struggling borrowers that will only prolong the pain by later on.

4. And finally, as a final and more aggressive measure, we could see capital or reserve requirements tightened on banks to hold back aggressive lending that may cause inflationary pressures and money velocity to surge. Right now, banks must retain 10% of deposits as reserves and maintain capital ratios set by regulators. Either can be tweaked to curb lending and prevent $700bln+ from entering the economy and being multiplied by our fractional reserve system.

I think we are starting to see #1 now, in some form, and will start to see the rest around the middle of 2010 and into 2011. The last item might not come until end of 2011 or even 2012 when economy is proven to be on right track and unemployment is clearly declining as companies rehire.

Thoughts????

UD, I think you have the Fed’s Order of Battle right.? The questions will come from:

1) how much of the quantitative easing can be withdrawn without negatively affecting banks, or mortgage yields.

2) How much they can raise Fed Funds without something blowing up.? Bank profits have become very reliant on low short term funding.? I wonder who else relies on short-term finance to hold speculative positions today?

3) Finance reform to me would include bank capital reform, including changes to reflect securitization and derivatives, both of which should require capital at least as great as doing the equivalent transaction through non-derivative instruments.

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/15/book-reviews-of-two-very-different-books/#comments

David,
A few years back you mentioned to me in an e-mail that Fabozzi was a good source for understanding bonds (thank you for that advice by the way, he is a very accessible author for what can be very complex material.)? In the review of Domash’s book you mention that he does not do a good job with financials. I was wondering, is there an author who is as accessible and clear as Fabozzi, when it comes to financials, who you would recommend.

Regards,
TDL

TDL, no, I have not run across a good book for analyzing financial stocks.? Most of the specialist shops like KBW, Sandler O?Neill and Hovde have their own proprietary ways of analyzing financials.? I have summarized the main ideas in this article here.

http://alephblog.com/2007/04/28/why-financial-stocks-are-harder-to-analyze/

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/05/the-return-of-my-money-not-the-return-on-my-money/#comments

Sorry to be a bit late to this post, but I really like this thread (bond investing with particular regard to sovereign risk). One thing I’m trying to figure out is the set of tools an individual investor needs to invest in bonds globally. In comparison to the US equities market, for which there are countless platforms, data feeds, blogs, etc., I am having trouble finding good sources of analysis, pricing, and access to product for international bonds, so here is my vote for a primer on selecting, pricing, and purchasing international bonds.

K1, there aren?t many choices to the average investor, which I why I have a post in the works on foreign and global bond funds.? There aren?t a lot of good choices that are cheap.? It is expensive to diversify out of the US dollar and maintain significant liquidity.

A couple of suggested topics that I think you could do a job with:? 1) Quantitative view of how to evaluate closed end funds trading at a discount to NAV with a given NAV and discount history, fee/cost structure, and dividend history;?? 2) How to evaluate the fundamentals of the return of capital distributions from MLPs – e.g. what fraction of them is true dividend and what fraction is true return of capital and how should one arrive at a reasonable profile of the future to put a DCF value on it?

Josh, I think I can do #1, but I don?t understand enough about #2.? I?m adding #1 to my list.

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/05/book-review-the-ten-roads-to-riches/#comments

I see that Fisher’s list reveals his blind spot–how about being born the child of wealthy parents. . .

BWDIK, Fisher is talking about ?roads? to riches.? None of us can get on that ?road? unless a wealthy person decided to adopt one of us.? And, that is his road #3, attach yourself to a wealthy person and do his bidding.

I am not a Ken Fisher fan, but I am a David merkel fan—so what was the advice he gave you in 2000?

Jay, what he told me was to throw away all of my models, including the CFA Syllabus, and strike out on my own, analyzing companies in ways that other people do not.? Find my competitive advantage and pursue it.

That led me to analyzing industries first, buying quality companies in industries in a cyclical slump, and the rest of my eight rules.

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/28/the-right-reform-for-the-fed/#comments

“The Fed has been anything but independent.? An independent Fed would have said that they have to preserve the value of the dollar, and refused to do any bailouts.”

This seems completely wrong to me.? First, the Fed’s mandate is not to preserve the value of the dollar, but to “”to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.”? I don’t see that bailouts are antithetical to those goals. Second, I don’t see how the Fed’s actions in 2008-2009 have particularly hurt the value of the dollar, at least not in terms of purchasing power.? Perhaps they will in the future, but it is a bit early to assert that, I think.

Matt, even in their mandates for full employment and stable prices, the Fed should have no mandate to do bailouts, and sacrifice the credit of the nation for special interests.? No one should have special privileges, whether the seeming effect of purchasing power has diminished or not.? It is monetary and credit inflation, even if it does not result in price inflation.

?Make the Fed tighten policy when Debt/GDP goes above 200%.? We?re over 350% on that ratio now.? We need to save to bring down debt.?

David, I fully agree (as with your other points).
However, I do not see it happening.

Why would we save when others electronically ?print? money to buy our debt?

See todays Bloomberg News:
?Indirect bidders, a group of investors that includes foreign central banks, purchased 45 percent of the $1.917 trillion in U.S. notes and bonds sold this year through Nov. 25, compared with 29 percent a year ago, according to Fed auction data compiled by Bloomberg News.?

Please note that last year the amount auctioned was much lower (so foreign central banks bought a much lower percentage of a much lower total).

Please also note that all of a sudden, earlier this year, the definition of ?indirect bidders? was changed, making it more complicated to follow this stuff. What is clear however, is that almost half of the incredible amount of $ 2 trillion, i.e. $ 1000 billion (!!), is being ?purchased? by the printing presses of foreign central banks.

This could explain both the record amount of debt issued and the record low yields.

As the CBO has projected huge deficits PLUS huge debt roll-overs (average maturity down from 7 years to 4 years) up to at least 2019, do you think we could extend the ?printing? by foreign central banks? — CB?s ?buying? each others debt — for at least 10 more years?
That would free us from saving, enabling us to ?consume? our way to reflation of the economy (as is FEDs/Treasuries attempt imo).

I?d appreciate your, and other readers?, take on this.

Carol, you are right.? I don?t see a limitation on Debt to GDP happening.

As to nations rolling over each other?s debts for 10 more years, I find that unlikely.? There will be a reason at some point to game the system on the part of those that are worst off on a cash flow basis to default.

The rollover problem for the US Treasury will get pretty severe by the mid-2010s.

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/13/the-forever-fund/#comments

Any chance of you doing portfolio updates going forward? I?d be curious to see if you still like investment grade fixed incomes, given the rally.

Matt, I would be underweighting investment grade and high yield credit at present.

As for railroads, I own Canadian National ? unlike US railroads, it goes coast to coast, and slowly they are picking up more business in the US as well.

Long CNI

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/10/my-visit-to-the-us-treasury-part-7-final/#comments

Did none of the bloggers raise the question of the GSEs? I can understand Treasury not wishing to tip their hands as to their future, but I would have expected their status to be a hot topic among the bloggers.

I also don?t buy the idea that the sufferings of the middle class were inevitable. Over the past 15 or so years the financial sector has grown due to the vast amount of money that it has been able to extract. Where would we be if all of those bright hard working people and capital spending had gone to the real economy? I?m not suggesting a command economy, but senior policymakers decided to let leverage and risk run to dangerous levels. Your comment seem to indicate that this was simply the landscape of the world, but it seems more to be the product of a deliberate policy from the Federal government.

Chris, no, nothing on the GSEs.? There was a lot to talk about, and little time.

I believe there have been policy errors made by our government ? one the biggest being favoring debt finance over equity finance, but most bad policies of our government stem from a short-sighted culture that elects those that govern us.? That same short-sightedness has helped make us less competitive as a nation versus the rest of the world.? We rob the future to fund the present.

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/07/my-visit-to-the-us-treasury-part-6/#comments

it?s not clear from your writing whether the treasury officials talked to you about the GSEs or whether your comments (in the paragraph beginning with ?When I look at the bailouts,?) are your own. could you clarify?

q, That is my view of how the Treasury seems to be using the GSEs, based on what they are doing, not what they have said.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/31/book-review-nerds-on-wall-street/

?There are a lot of losses to be taken by those who think they have discovered a statistical regularity in the financial markets.?
David, take a look at equilcurrency.com.

Jesse, I looked at it, it seems rather fanciful.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/27/book-review-the-predictioneers-game/#comments

David,
Just wondering if there?s an omission in this line:

?The last will pay for the book on its own. I have used the technique twice before, and it works. That said, that I have used it twice before means it is not unique to the author.?

Did you mean to write ?that I have used it doesn?t mean it is not unique?.?

In the event it is, I?ll look it up in the book, which I intend to buy anyway.
Otherwise, may I request a post that details, a la your used car post,your approach to buying new cars?

Saloner, no omission.? I said what I meant.? I?ll try to put together a post on new car purchases.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/22/book-review-the-bogleheads-guide-to-retirement-planning/

thanks for the book review. it sounds like something that i could use to get the conversation started with my wife as she is generally smart but has little tolerance for this sort of thing.

> unhedged foreign bonds are a core part of asset allocation

i agree in principle ? it would be really helpful though to have a roadmap for this. how can i know what is what?

I second that request for help in accessing unhedged foreign bonds ? Maybe a post topic?

JK, q, I?ll try to get a post out on this.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/20/toward-a-new-theory-of-the-cost-of-equity-capital-part-2/#comments

to the point above, basically just an IRR right?

JRH, I don?t think it is the IRR.? The IRR is a measure of the return off of the assets, not a rate for the discount of the asset cash flows.

When I was an undergraduate (after already having been in business for a long time), I realized that M-M was erroneous, because of all the things they CP?d (ceteris paribus) away. For my own consumption, I went a long way to demonstrating that quantitatively, but children, work and family intervened, and who was I to argue with Nobel winners.

But time, experience and events convince me that I was right then and you are right now. As you?ve noted the market does not price risk well. In large part this is due to a fundamental misunderstanding of value. The professional appraisal community has a far better handle on this, exemplified by drawing the formal distinction between ?fair market value as a going concern?, ?investment value?, ?fair market value in a orderly liquidation?, ?fair market value in a forced liquidation? and so on. One corollary to the foregoing is one of those lessons that stick from sit-down education, that ?Book Value? is not a standard of value but rather a mathematical identity.

Without going into a long involved academic tome, the cost of capital (and from which results the mathematical determination of value per the income approach) has a shape more approaching that of a an asymmetric parabola (if one graphs return on the y axis and equity debt weight on the x.).

If I was coming up with a new theorem, risk would be an independent variable. So for example:

WAAC = wgt avg cost of equity + wgt avg cost of debt + risk premium

You?ll note the difference that in standard WAAC formulation risk is a component of the both the equity and debt variable ? and practically impossible to consistently and logically quantify. Yes, one can look to Ibbottson for historical risk premia, or leave one to the individual decision making of lenders, butt it complicates and obscures the analysis.

In the formulation above, cost of equity and cost of debt are very straightforward and can be drawn from readily available market metrics. But what does risk look like? Again if you plot risk as a % cost of capital on the y axis and on the x axis the increasing debt weight, on a absolute basis risk is lowest @ 100% equity. From there is upwards slopes. However, risk however is not linear, but rather follows a power law.

The reason risk follows a power law is that while equity is prepared to lose 100%, debt is not. Also, debt weight increases IRR to equity (in the real world) contrary to MM. Again, debt is never priced well, because issuers don?t understand orderly and forced liquidation, whereby in ?orderly?, e.g. say Chapter 11,recoveries may be 80 cents on the dollar, and forced, e.g., Chapter 7, 10 cents on the dollar. One really doesn?t begin to understand the foregoing until you?ve been through it more than a few times.

So in the real world, as debt increases, equity is far more easily ?playing with house money.? A recent poster child for this phenomena is the Simmons Mattress story. In the most recent go round equity was pulling cash out (playing with house money) and the bankers were either (depending on one?s POV) incredibly stupid for letting equity do so, or incredibly smart, because they got their fees and left someone else holding the bag. I?m seen some commentators say that ?Oh it was OK because rates were so low, the debt service (the I component only) was manageable.? Poppycock; sometime it?s the dollar value and sometimes it?s the percentage weight and sometimes it is both.

But you?ve already said that: ?company specific risk is significant and varies a great deal.? I would also add that ? or amplify ? that in any appraisal assignment the first thing that must be set is the appraisal date. Everything drives off that and what is ?known or knowable? at the time.

Gaffer, thanks for your comments.? I appreciate the time and efforts you put into them.? This is an area where finance theory needs to change.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/10/pension-apprehension/

I have a DB plan with Safeway Stores-UFCW, which I?ve been collecting for a few years. I?m cooked?

Craig, not necessarily.? Ask for the form 5500, and see how underfunded the firm is.? Safeway is a solid firm, in my opinion.

Long SWY

http://alephblog.com/2009/09/29/recent-portfolio-actions/#comments

David, I am curious about your rebalancing threshold. Do you calculate this 20% threshold using a formula like this:

= Target Size / Current Size ? 1

I have a small portfolio of twenty securities. A full position size in the portfolio is 8% (position size would be 1 for an 8% holding). The position size targets are based generally on .25 increments (so a position target of .25 is 2% of the portfolio and there are 12.5 slots ?available?). I used that formula above for a while, but I found that it was biased towards smaller positions.

Instead I began using this formula:

= (Target ? Current Size) / .25

So a .50 sized holding and a full sized holding may have both been 2% below the target (using the first formula), but using the second formula, they would be 8% and 16% below the target respectively. I found this showed me the true deviation from the portfolio target size and put my holdings on an equal footing for rebalancing.

I was curious how you calculated your threshold, or if it was less of an issue because you tended to have full sized positions. For me, I tend to start small and build positions over time. There are certain positions I hold that I know will stay in the .25-.50 range because they either carry more risk, they are funds/ETFs, or they are paired with a similar holding that together give me the weight I want in a particular sector.

Brian, you have my calculations right.? I originally backed into the figure because concentrated funds run with between 16-40 names.? Since I concentrate in industries, I have to run with more names for diversification.? I don?t scale, typically, though occasionally I have double weights, and rarely, triple weights.? The 20% band was borrowed from three asset managers that I admire.? After some thought, I did some work calculating the threshold in my Kelly criterion piece.

A fuller explanation of the rebalancing process is here in my smarter seller pieces.

http://alephblog.com/2009/09/04/tickers-for-the-latest-portfolio-reshaping/

Have you seen DEG instead of SWY?
Extremely able operator. Some currency diversification as well. I?d like to know your thougts.

MLS, I don?t have a strong idea about DEG ? I know that back earlier in the decade, they had their share of execution issues.? It does look cheaper than SWY, though.

Long SWY

http://alephblog.com/2009/06/11/problems-with-constant-compound-interest-2/

I like your post and want to comment on a couple of items.? You point to the peak of the 1980’s inflation rates and the associated interest rates.

Robert Samuelson wrote a book called The Great Inflation and it’s Aftermath.?? http://tiny.cc/z9H9V

Basically you can explain a great deal the US stock market history of the 40 years by the spike in interest/inflation until the mid 80’s and the subsequent decline.? Since you need an interest rate to value any cash flow, the decline in interest rates made all cash flows more valuable.

The thing that is odd and sort of ties this together is the last year.? After interest rates crossed the 4% level things started blowing up.? The amount of debt that can be financed at 3% to 4% is enormous.? That is, as everyone knows, on of the root causes of the housing bubble.? Anyway, starting last year, treasury interest rates continued to decline and all other rates went through the roof.

I was looking at this chart yesterday.? _ http://tiny.cc/eCZzF The interesting thing to me was that when the system blew up, treasury rates continued to decline and all non guaranteed debt rates went through the roof.

Most of this is obvious and everyone knows the reasons.? The one thing that seems novel is thinking of this as the continuation of a very long secular trend — or secular cycle.? I don’t want to get overly political, but the decrease in inflation/interest in the 90’s to the present was a function of productivity/technology and Foreign/Chinese imports.? Anyway, one effect of these policies was a huge rise in asset values, especially in the FIRE (finance, insurance, real estate) sector of the economy at the expense of our industrial and manufacturing sectors.? This was also a redistribution of wealth from the rust belt to the coasts.

It is much more complicated then the hand full of influences I mentioned, but the one thing i haven’t seen discussed a lot is the connection of the current catastrophe to the long term decline in inflation/interest rates since the mid/late 1980’s.? If you think about it, declining interest rates increase the value of financial assets and are an enormous tailwind for finance.? I suppose if you had just looked at the curve, it would have been obvious that the trend couldn’t continue.? Prior to the blowup, there were lots of people financing long term assets with short term, low interest rate liabilities. That was a big part of the basic playbook for structured finance, hedge funds, etc.

The reason that the yield spread exploded is well known.? Here is a snippet from Irving Fisher.? http://capitalvandalism.blogspot.com/2009/01/deflationary-spirals.html

CapVandal ? Great comment.? A lot to learn from here.? I hope you come back to blogging; you have some good things to say.? Fear and greed drive correlated human behavior.

Industry Ranks, Two Looks

Industry Ranks, Two Looks

It is getting close to the time for my next portfolio reshaping, and so I look at my industry models, because industry performance is critical to the performance of stock portfolios.? Here is the main model that I use:

This model uses industries from Value Line, and as such, the rankings incorporate earnings surprise, earnings momentum, price momentum, and analyst opinion, and a few other things as well.? But here is another model that is mostly intermediate-term (10 month) price momentum:

These ranks are based off of the industry ranks in the S&P 1500.? But both of these rankings tell a similar story.? As I have said before, the red zone is for momentum players and the green zone for mean-reversion players (usually, value investors).? Given the relatively hard run-up over the past nine months, I am inclined to favor safety over aggression.? I am considering more stocks in the green zone, which has more stable defensive stocks, than the red zone, which has stocks that will do well if the economy has a strong recovery.

All that said, I tend to be eclectic — I look for industries where conditions can’t get much worse, and industries where the current trends are under-discounted.

What you want to do here is your choice, but I am aiming at the “green zone” and will lean against the idea of a sharp recovery.

Book Review: Market Indicators

Book Review: Market Indicators

Every one one us has limited bandwidth for analysis of data.? We pick and choose a few ideas that seem to work for us, and then stick with them.? That is often best, because good investors settle into investment methods that are consistent with their character.? But every now and then it is good to open things up and try to see whether the investment methods can be improved.

For those that use market indicators, this is the sort of book that will make one say, “What if?? What if I combine this market indicator with what I am doing now in my investing?”? In most cases, the answer will be “Um, that doesn’t seem to fit.”? But one good idea can pay for a book and then some.? All investment strategies have weaknesses, but often the weaknesses of one method can be complemented by another.? My favorite example is that as a value investor, I am almost always early.? I buy and sell too soon, and leave profits on the table.? Adding a momentum overlay can aid the value investor by delaying purchases of seemingly cheap stocks when the price is falling rapidly, and delaying sales of seemingly cheap stocks when the price is rising rapidly.

Looking outside your current circle of competence may yield some useful ideas, then.? But how do you know where you might look if you’re not aware that there might be indicators that you have never heard of?? Market Indicators delivers a bevy of indicators in the following areas:

  • Options-derived (VIX, put/call)
  • Volume and Price driven (Money flow, rate of change, 90% up/down days, and more)
  • Where the fast money invests (money in bull vs bear funds, sector fund sizes, and more)
  • Analyzing the likely motives of other classes of investors (margin balances, short interest, etc.)
  • Price Momentum and Mean-Reversion
  • Measuring asset classes and sectors using fundamental metrics? (Fed model, sector weightings, Q-ratio, etc.)
  • Investor sentiment surveys
  • How to use analyst opinions, if at all?
  • News reporting and reactions of stocks to news
  • Odd bits of news (CEO behavior, little things that indicate a qualitative change in the life of a company)
  • Insider buying and selling
  • Commodity market data (COT, etc.)
  • Bond market behavior (credit cycle, Fed moves, Credit Default Swaps, and more)
  • Changes in the capital structure (M&A, equity/debt issuance, etc.)
  • Monitoring the greats (13F filings)

No one can use all of these indicators.? You can probably only use a fraction of these indicators.? But being aware of how others view the market can widen your perspective, and help to reduce negative surprises on your part.

Quibbles

By its nature, since the book cuts across a wide number of areas in 216 short pages, you only get a taste of everything.? I liked this book, but there is room for a second book in this area — one of additional indicators passed over (I have a bunch!), or going into greater depth on the indicators covered.

Who will benefit from this book?

You have to have a quantitative bent, at least to the level of being willing to go out and collect simple data in order to benefit here.? Now, most serious investors do that, so I would say that serious investors can benefit from the “cook’s tour” of market indicators that this book gives, unless they are so serious that they know all of these indicators.? (Like me.)

If you would like to buy the book, you can buy it here: Market Indicators: The Best-Kept Secret to More Effective Trading and Investing.

Full disclosure: This book is unusual for me in two ways.? First, the author (not the PR flack) sent me a copy, with a nice handwritten letter thanking me for my blog and my assistance.? That is why there is the second reason.? Pages 80-81 summarize the longer argument made in my blog post, The Fed Model, where I take the so-called Fed model, and rederive it using the simple version of the Dividend Discount Model, giving a more robust model with reasonable theoretical underpinnings.

I earn a small commission from Amazon for anyone entering Amazon through my site, and buying anything there.? Your price does not rise from my commission.? Don’t buy anything you don’t want to buy if you want to reward me for my writing.? Only buy what you need if Amazon offers you the best deal.

Recent Portfolio Actions

Recent Portfolio Actions

Sorry, it’s been a while since I listed my equity portfolio moves.? I made the following trades yesterday:

New Buys:

  • Chubb
  • Computer Sciences Corp
  • Dominion Resources
  • Northrup Grumman
  • National Presto (beware, less liquid)
  • SCANA Corp
  • Safeway Corp
  • Total SA

New Sells:

  • iShares Brazil Fund
  • General Dynamics
  • Honda Motors
  • Mosaic Inc
  • Nucor
  • Vishay Intertechnology

And over the past few months, I made the following trades:

Rebalancing Buys:

  • Conoco Phillips
  • Mosaic Co
  • PartnerRe
  • Pepsico Inc
  • Safety Ins Group Inc
  • Shoe Carnival Inc
  • Valero Energy Corp
  • Vishay Intertech Inc

Rebalancing Sells:

  • Assurant Inc
  • Companhia De Saneamento Basico Do Estado De Sao Paulo
  • Conoco Phillips
  • Dorel Inds Inc
  • Ensco International Inc
  • Industrias Bachoco SA ADR
  • iShares Inc MSCI Brazil Index Fund
  • Magna Intl Inc
  • Mosaic Co
  • Nam Tai Electronics Inc
  • National Western Life Insurance
  • PartnerRe
  • Pepsico Inc
  • Reinsurance Group Amer Inc
  • Shoe Carnival Inc (2)
  • Valero Energy Corp
  • Vishay Intertech Inc (2)

Thoughts

1)? I try not to trade too much.? For those that are new to my writings, rebalancing buys and sells are meant to bring the positions back to target weight after they have moved 20% away from the target weight.

2)? I consumed some cash today, enough to get me inside my 20% cash limit.? I don’t believe in the rally, but I maintain my discipline that I don’t let cash get too large.

3) I tried to take some cyclicality off of the table today.? I end up with a little more insurance, utility, and energy exposure, but less of industrials and basic materials.

4) Assurant and SABESP are still double weights.? The rest of the portfolio is equal-weighted aside from that.

5) In terms of balance sheets, and industry factors, this is my most conservative portfolio ever.

6) I still don’t trust the financial sector aside from insurers here.

7) I had some runners-up in my analyses: ACE AEE EE HELE TFX UGI

8 ) I think my portfolio is cheaper and more defensive now.

9) That said, I also raised my central band by 11% today, raising all of my target weights by that amount.? That makes me more likely to be a buyer than a seller, though the change caused no buys yesterday.

10) Dropping the iShares Brazil Fund seemed to be wise.? The run in the emerging markets has been huge, and Brazil is more export and commodity dependent than most.

Full disclosure (here is the whole portfolio): ADM AIZ ALL CB CNI COP CSC CVX D DIIB ESV GPC IBA LNT MGA NE NOC NPK NTE NWLI ORCL PEP PRE RGA SAFT SBS SCG SCVL SWY TOT VLO

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