Showing posts with label Stock Market Forecast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stock Market Forecast. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Investment in stocks NOT a must for a complete and balanced portfolio

The Economic Times reports today

Investment in stocks must for a complete and balanced portfolio
'If you really want your money to grow - stocks is the only way to go'- Haven't you heard this umpteen times. Well, it holds true every time.

As compared to fixed deposits, investments in equity will pay 26.5 per cent higher returns in 5 years. Even for a longer term, investment in stocks pay higher returns even in comparison to real estate and gold. 
Investments in equity WILL? pay 26.5% higher returns in 5 years? Well there you have it... Economic Times India writers know exactly what equity market returns will be in 5 years.  And if they know what equities are going to do, why are they writing newspaper articles, they should be hedge fund managers.


They trot out Infosys and Tata Steels.  Tata Steels share price performance is shown above.  What if you were unfortunate enough to have bought tin 2006 and sold in fear in 2009? You would have a significant loss!

That is the issue that unsuspecting investors in India are learning for themselves.  Stop listening to the mutual fund industry marketing buzz and start being wise investors.

There is a time to buy equities and when that time comes, I will invest agressively.  Today is not that time.
Success in the markets requires patience and waiting for the fat pitch.  Investors entering the market today are likely going to be disappointed as opposed to investing in secure investments.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Dell Lays An Turd -- What? Businesses are not spending?

Revenues down from last year, losing market share to Acer, profits down 54% from last year.

Expectations were priced in that Dell would beat, so the earnings ugliness is a surprise to the green shooters.

Dell reported a net profit of $337 million, or 17 cents a share, for its fiscal third quarter, down from $727 million, or 37 cents a share, in the year-ago period.
Revenue fell 15 percent to $12.9 billion, missing the average analyst estimate of $13.2 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
While the revenue shortfall was troubling, some analysts also expressed concern about Dell's margins, particularly because the company had stressed profitability over growth amid a $4 billion cost-cutting effort.
Dell, which relies primarily on sales of PCs to businesses, has suffered as companies dialed back spending during the economic downturn. Acer and HP have also been waging a price war, analysts say, particularly in consumer laptops.
 But weren't consumers the ones that were holding back the recovery? Now  businesses are unwilling to spend?  Huh, What A Surprise (sarcasm)

This will likely have a impact early in the morning, and I will look to take immediate profits on the shorts added this afternoon, and exit additional positions as the selling slows down.

It looks to be a good idea to have added shorts at the close.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Confluence of Resistance



Three way confluence of resistance - trend line, time and retrace along with pattern completion of ABC pattern from March lows - dare I say that we are finally close to being done with the sharpest rally of the century?

Again, fighting the trend is not a wise move, therefore I am leaving plenty of ammo should I be wrong to average / manage my trade.

But if these indicators hold, then we're looking at a top sometime in the next few days.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Gold & Treasury Bubbles

We are in the midst of yet another bubble yet it's very difficult to recognize bubbles until they burst.  No, the bubble isn't Gold, it's U.S. Treasuries.

John Paulson presented a simple, but compelling case for Gold. First, the monetary base has exploded in a way we've never seen before. The monetary base is essentially the Federal Reserve Bank's currency and reserves. The Fed, by buying up securities in this crisis, has pumped a lot of money into the economy.

As Paulson explained, that's because this base money has not yet been lent out and multiplied throughout the economy. Yet the monetary base and money supply are highly correlated, "almost 1-to-1 between the two," Paulson said.

That means that as the monetary base expands, the money supply surely follows, though there is a lag. (Money supply is a broader measure of money than just the monetary base, as it includes personal deposits and more. The monetary base is like a kind of monetary yeast. It makes money supply rise.)

If money supply grows faster than the economy, that will create inflation, says Paulson. As it is impossible for the economy to grow anywhere near that vertical spike in the monetary base, Paulson contends inflation is coming.

The U.S. is not alone in its money-printing exercise. The supply of most currencies is expanding rapidly – even the normally tame Swiss franc. In the race of paper currencies, they are all dogs. Hence Paulson's interest in gold, which no government can make on a whim.

Therefore, in the context of the exploding monetary base, gold seems relatively cheap. In other words, as the money supply rises, so does the price of gold, eventually. As a result, says Paulson, "gold has been a perfect hedge against inflation."

There is some slippage over time. The gold price can change faster or slower than the money supply. But when the market gets worried about inflation, the gold price usually changes much faster – as happened in the 1970s. In 1973 – to pick a typical year – inflation was 9% and gold rose 67%. That was a pattern common in the 1970s.

The potential for inflation this time around is greater than it was in the 1970s, given that the growth in the monetary base is so much greater than it was in the 1970s. Gold could do much better this time around, reaching "$3,000 or $4,000, or $5,000 per ounce" as Paulson said.

Future historians will look back at the present day and see clearly how this unfolded. They will see the litany of news items that pointed to the dollar losing its top perch: China and Brazil are settling up trade in their own currencies. The Russians and others are openly calling for a new monetary standard. Even mainstream outlets are discussing alternatives to a dollar-based standard, a province once solely occupied by cranks and gold bugs. Not a week goes by without these kinds of stories.

The gold supply, too, is limited against the vast pool of dollars. As Paulson points out, global money supply is 72 times the value of gold. I'm betting that gap will narrow. It only has to narrow a smidgen and the gold price flies.

As Grant eloquently put it: "Gold is a speculation. But it is a speculation on a certainty: the debasement of the currency." Gold stocks, too, are a speculation. But they are a speculation on an inevitably higher gold price.

A leveraged play on Gold are the small cap Gold Miners.  Miners benefit from the inflationary pricing trends in the price of Gold while also benefiting from the deflationary trends in the production and mining of Gold.

Currently I'm Long New Gold NGD, Aurizon Mines & Newmont Mining, as well as the GDX.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Strongly Bearish - Strong Recovery, Weak Markets Going Forward

Just as 2009 was a tale of a weak economy accompanied by a strong stock market, we forecast that next year will reverse the situation with strong economic news accompanied by a weak stock market.
A lesson that I was well aware of has been reinforced in the minds of market participants yet again and this time indelibly. After a very large decline, the market was poised to recover sharply with the assistance of rocket fuel provided by the Fed. A review of the 1929 crash showed a last hurrah when after the sharp decline in the fall of 1929, the S&P 500 rallied 46% from its low in November to the rally high of April 12, 1930. It then, of course, fell by over 80%.
1929-rally
History’s greatest stimulus program, desperate bailouts, and clear promises of years of low rates and an ocean of liquidity ensured that this cycle's rally was going to be the best ever. Looking at previous rallies following deep corrections, this market followed the same playbook. Lesson: Don't Fight the Fed, yet again. Some things never change.
However, considering recent history as well as past cycles, these types of interventions - and this one was unprecedented - do seem to breed
severe problems down the road. So, we anticipate that the markets will continue to be a minefield for many years going forward, confounding investors and destroying wealth of those that are unwary. Good reasons to consider competent long / short wealth managers.
As we move forward, we expect to see economic green shoots of some variety and corresponding good to decent economic news. Inventories will recover, capacity utilization will bounce back and we are already seeing signs of rising real estate prices. It is our opinion though that this is a headfake, the mother of all headfakes.
Market valuation will be an issue at some point. P/E ratios are at historically high levels. Until we consume less, pay down debt, and realign our
lives to being less capital-rich, this market and economy will not be healthy and this could be a period similar to the mid 70s or late 30s. The other scenario that comes to mind is Japan as we have followed a resolution model that closely mimics theirs with a leverage factor many times greater.
Finally, China looks to be an economic ponzi scheme perpetuated by the government. More later.
To put it briefly, I am decidedly bearish going forward and am looking for a major correction in the coming months, one that will take us past 800 on the downside at the minimum.

S&P 500: 1069
DJIA: 9925
Nasdaq Comp: 2135