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Posted on Friday, November 6, 2009 - by Henry Walter
November Roundup
Please Note: The below information has been taken from trade and statistical sources which we deem reliable. We do not represent that it is accurate and it should not be relied upon as such. Any opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment at this date and are subject to change. The information provided is not specific financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell. We must review your profile, needs and accounts specifically to determine what is right for you.
This month we show some charts and tables we hope you will find of interest.
1. This chart shows the market’s “lost decade”. We have also superimposed a 15-month simple moving average (SMA) on the data. Notice how it keeps one on the right side of the market. Currently, the monthly closes are above the SMA, which is positive. Most investors don’t have the patience to utilize this kind of approach.

2. Note duration and magnitude of the current rally now exceeds any bear market rallies during the Great Depression, leading some to conclude we are in a new bull market.

3. Household liabilities are still high on a historical basis, not a good omen for the stock market.

4. Despite popular belief to the contrary, we have yet to see the worst of foreclosures. (original source Credit Suisse.)

5. Note that global earnings are expected to grow 15.1% in 2010. Emerging markets and Asia will do better, the U.S. and Europe worse, all according to Merrill Lynch.

6. No surprises. Emerging markets and Asia is where the action will be per Goldman Sachs.

7. Population by country. Did you know Indonesia is 4th? Some of the others may surprise you too. Pitcairn Island, where Fletcher Christian landed, has the smallest population at 50.

8. A shortage is looming – again. Demand is picking up especially in Asia, while new discoveries are unlikely to offset the natural depletion at existing oil fields. Some “experts” predict oil at $125/barrel in 2010.

9. Until recently, some advisors were telling their clients that gold was a ‘barbaric relic” to be avoided, while they added gold investments to their personal portfolios.

10. Gold bugs love to point out that the current inflation-adjusted price of gold is way below the price in 1980. Source: Common Wisdom 10/31/09.

11. Planning a trip overseas? It will cost you as a result of the weak dollar.

12. This chart plots the interest rate on the 10-year Treasury note. (Place a decimal point between the two numbers.) When the Fed ends quantitative easing and other tricks, interest rates are likely to rise, so keep your duration low. If we have another depression, all bets are off.

For questions or additional information on this blog entry, please contact us.
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Posted on Friday, October 23, 2009 - by Henry Walter
October 2009 Roundup
Please note – The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of High Falls Advisors, LLC. The information provided is not specific financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell. We must review your profile, needs and accounts specifically to determine what is right for you.
OUTLOOK
Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner says the signs of recovery are “stronger” than expected. If this was truly the case, why are the White House and Congress falling over themselves to introduce new and expand existing stimuli to spend taxpayer’s money and further bankrupt the nation? We don’t know, but maybe it has something to do with the upcoming election in 2010.
The automobile “cash for clunkers” program did boost sales while it was in effect, but as soon as it expired sales dropped like a lead balloon-- indicating to some the higher sales were simply borrowed from the future. In November, the housing purchase tax credit will expire and we will see what happens, although it looks like Congress is ready to extend it and even make it more generous. On the business side, most of the programs simply prevented healthy change by supporting zombie banks and corporations.
Currently, investors are enjoying the ride but are becoming concerned that the ongoing rally has run too far, too fast, and may be due for a correction. What is driving the rally? Possibly the tidal wave of excess liquidity washing into stock markets as central banks around the world are flooding their economies with money. Or it could be that we have seen the bottom and economic growth is expanding. Or it could be both, or some other forces. Second quarter earnings reports were better than expected, principally due to cost cutting. But now most companies are down to the bone and will have to find other ways to improve results, like increasing revenue. So the next few weeks of earnings reports will be key. If we can get through the third quarter reports without major upsets, we may enjoy the usual seasonal strength towards the end of the year. Don’t count on it; that’s a big if.
Investment performance depends to a large extent on investors’ entry and exit points. Tactically, the rally provides an opportunity for investors to reduce risk in their portfolio by taking some chips off the table, and/or shifting from risky assets to less risky assets. What ever you do, don’t become complacent. Short-term the environment for investors may seem to be improving, but longer-term the U.S. faces major problems and the experts tell us most of the growth going forward will be in Asia.
STABLE VALUE FUNDS
Kodak employees and retirees have large stakes in the Fixed Income Fund, on average approximately 70% of their SIP balances, compared to only 20% for the average participant in a 401(k) plan with the stable value option. As a result, SIP participants are extremely interested in the safety of the fund and we have written on this subject frequently (see bulletins on Oct. 22, 2008, April 3, 2009, and May 5 and 27, 2009).
Michael Markov, head of Markov Processes International LLC, which offers quantitative investment tools and technologies, principally to institutional investors, has written some interesting pieces on stable value funds on his blog ( March 5th, 2009). http://5minforecast.agorafinancial.com/:
“In all recent cases of alleged fraud including Madoff, Stanford and WG Trading, investors were looking for stable positive returns and were willing to take risks and invest in investment products with no protection and no transparency. Stable Value funds, while providing very similar smooth positive returns, are legitimate registered products but investors have to understand that they carry certain risks. Unlike money market funds, SVF invest in longer-term high grade bonds and, therefore, are exposed to interest rate and credit risk. At the same time, these risks are not visible to investors because SVF are priced at book value rather than market value which allow them to report such stable positive returns. Principal and accrued interest is guaranteed by a number of insurance-wrapper contracts with multiple insurers, AIG included. As of today, almost 20% of all DC assets (defined contributions) or over $400 billion is invested in SVF."
To read more on this topic Google “MPI Blog Stable Value a free lunch?”
INDEX or ACTIVELY-MANAGED FUNDS
It is well known that most actively managed funds lag their comparable index funds over time. A new study by Morningstar further twists the knife. Active management funds suffer even more by comparison on a risk-adjusted basis.
Over the past three years, about half of actively-managed funds outperform their respective Morningstar style indexes, but only 37% did on a risk-, size-, and style-adjusted basis. The number is similar for five- and 10-year returns.
To read more, check out the Morningstar web site or Google “Active Managers Fail on Performance, Risk”.
CHINA
According to the IMF’s World Economic Outlook, China could be the world’s second biggest economy as soon as 2010, and the world’s largest in as little as twenty years. China is growing at around 8-9% a year as Japan, currently the world’s second largest economy, will be lucky to grow much faster than 1.7%.
Researchers at the Nomura Institute of Capital Market Research estimate that China will pass the U.S. sometime between 2026-2039, depending on the Yuan appreciation.
You may recall that 20 years ago every broker was convinced that Japan would be the world’s economic powerhouse, so it pays to be skeptical. In 1988, eight of the world’s ten biggest companies were Japanese, today there are none. The biggest, Toyota, is 22nd.
DIVIDENDS
While dividend cuts are becoming less common, increases are hard to come by. According to Jim Nelson's blog ( on Agora Financial), "active income investors should look to where the least number of cuts are occurring. And more importantly, which sectors are the few increases coming from?"
His conclusion, based on his own research, is that consumer staples, industrials and utilities are the three sectors still increasing their dividends consistently. Financials is a sector to stay away from.
OUT OF FAVOR
In the July 2009 Roundup we covered the opportunitis in natural gas stocks with some additional comments in the August 2009 Roundup. In a nutshell, industrial demand, which usually represents 35-40% of total demand, fell precipitously as the recession took hold, and supply increased at a rate much higher than in the past, due to new discoveries and improved technology. The combination caused the price of natural gas and natural gas stocks to crater. Already, with winter approaching and industry recovering, albeit slowly, the price of natural gas is up approximately 40%, and all the stocks we mentioned in July have recovered nicely. Industrial energy users are swapping out of relatively high priced oil to relatively low priced natural gas. We still believe there is much more to go on the upside, provided the economy cooperates.
OUR THREE BOMBS
Thomas L. Friedman, in an OpEd in the October 7 New York Times notes that as a 56-year-old baby boomer, "We grew up in the shadow of just one bomb--the nuclear bomb." He continues, "Today's youth are growing up in the shadow of three bombs--any one of which could go off at any time and set in motion a truly nonlinear, radical change in the trajectory of their lives."
The nuclear threat is still with us but can now be delivered by all kinds of states or terrorists, including suicidal jihadists. At least in the cold war the threat was from one seemingly rational enemy, the Soviet Union.
"But there are now two other bombs our children have hanging over them: the debt bomb and the climate bomb." To read the complete article, Google "Our Three Bombs."
GOLD
We commented on gold in the last Roundup, but buying it over $1,000 makes us nervous. So we will take the easy way out and quote an expert. Sean Brodrick of Uncommon Wisdom gives four reasons to buy gold now:
- Investor demand is strengthening as central banks have cranked up the printing presses and produced a mountain of paper currencies destined to steadily lose value. Gold is one form of money that can't be printed and is universally viewed as an alternative to paper currencies.
- Central banks are buying. For a decade they have been sellers, but have now turned into net buyers.
- A big gap is developing in production as exploration budgets dropped by 40%, according to Canada's Metals economic Group.
- Gold is still cheap. Adjusted for inflation it has a long way to go to match 1980 prices.
And don’t forget silver, it might do even better than gold.
We expect a sharp sell off one of these days, maybe in conjunction with a correction in the stock market, so patience may be a virtue.
MORE BAILOUTS?
Here are three organizations that will probably go to the Treasury very soon with hat in hand:
- FDIC – Its reserve fund will soon be depleted.
- FHA – It is on the same path as Freddie Mac and Sallie Mae.
- GM and Chrysler – will need additional funds to make it.
For questions or additional information on this blog entry, please contact us.
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Posted on Thursday, September 10, 2009 - by Henry Walter
September 2009 Roundup
Please note – The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of High Falls Advisors, LLC. The information provided is not specific financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell. We must review your profile, needs and accounts specifically to determine what is right for you.
OUTLOOK
If you are an optimist there is a lot of good news out there to support your views. First and foremost, the market has been on a tear since the low of March 9 and extrapolation is so easy. Second, the government and many gurus are telling us the worst is over and it’s back to normal. Third, investors have $3.5 trillion sitting in money market accounts and are just waiting to buy stocks. And there are probably another 20 or so reasons to be bullish.
We think it better to be a realist. But rather than give you our views, we are going to highlight some comments Bill Gross of PIMCO made in his September manager commentary. We think this is an important article for anyone serious about developing an investment strategy, regardless of whether you agree with him or not.
Gross begins by relating that he heard Barton Biggs on Bloomberg Radio in early 2009 say that he (Biggs) was a “child of the bull market”. Barton Biggs is a well-known figure on Wall Street and currently a hedge fund manager and author. Biggs went on to say that for as long as he has been in business – and that’s a long time - it has paid to buy the dips, because markets, economies, profits, and assets always rebounded and went to higher levels.
Gross thought “child of the bull market” was a brilliant phrase and continues, “This is not only the way he learned it, but that is the way, basically, that capitalism is supposed to work. Economies grow, profits grow, just like children do. I think that’s why he said he was a child of the bull market, not just because he had experienced it for so long, but also because economic growth and higher asset prices are almost invariably a natural evolution, much like the maturation of a person. That’s how people grow, and so I think Barton was saying that capitalism just grows that way too.”
And then Gross introduces his concept of a New Normal, “Well, the surprise is that there’s been a significant break in that growth pattern, because of deleveraging, de-globalization, and reregulation.
All of those three in combination, to us at PIMCO, means that if you are a child of the bull market, it’s time to grow up and become a chastened adult; it’s time to recognize that things have changed and that they will continue to change for the next – yes, the next 10 years and maybe even the next 20 years. We are headed into what we call the New Normal, which is a period of time in which economies grow very slowly as opposed to growing like weeds, the way children do; in which profits are relatively static; in which the government plays a significant role in terms of deficits and reregulation and control of the economy; in which the consumer stops shopping until he drops and begins, as they do in Japan (to be a little ghoulish), starts saving to the grave.”
The focus on what Gross calls the DDRs – deleveraging, deglobalization, and reregulation is a little hard to get one’s arms around. Why would they necessarily lead to a new, slower growth normal?
“A little easier to grasp might be the following approach, which feeds off the same concept, but which extends it a little further by suggesting that DD and R lead to a number of broken business or economic models that may forever change the world we once knew and make even Barton a chastened adult.”
And he goes on to describe four examples:
- “American-style capitalism and the making of paper instead of things. Inherent in the ‘great moderation’ of the past 25 years was the acceptance of a sort of reverse mercantilism. America would consume, then print paper assets and debt in order to pay for it. Developing (and many developed) countries would make things, and accept America’s securities in return. This game is over.
- Private vs. public-driven growth. The invisible hand of free enterprise is being replaced by the visible fist of government, a temporarily necessity, but (if permanent) damnable condition itself in terms of future growth and profits.
- Global economic leadership. It’s premature to award the 21st century to the Chinese as opposed to the United States, but if the last six months have been any example, China is sort of lookin’ like Muhammad Ali standing over Sonny Liston in 1964 yelling, ‘get up, you big ugly bear!’
- United States housing and employment. Old normal housing models in the U.S. encouraged home ownership, eventually peaking at 69% of households. The model has been broken if only because home ownership is declining, not rising, sinking to perhaps a New Normal level of 65%."
Then Gross notes that savings rates are headed up, consumer spending growth rates moving down, and says, “Get ready for the New Normal”.
At the end of the article he notes, “The investment implications of this New Normal evolution cannot be easily modeled econometrically, quantitatively, or statistically. The applicable word in New Normal is, of course, ‘new’. The successful investor during this transition will be one with common sense and importantly the powers of intuition, observation, and the willingness to accept uncertain outcomes. As of now, PIMCO observes that the highest probabilities favor the following strategic conclusions:
- Global policy rates will remain low for extended periods of time.
- The extent and duration of quantitative easing, term financing and fiscal stimulation efforts are keys to future investment returns across a multitude of asset categories, both domestically and globally.
- Investors should continue to anticipate and, if necessary, shake hands with government policies, utilizing leverage and/or guarantees to their benefit.
- Asia and Asia-connected economies (Australia, Brazil) will dominate future global growth.
- The dollar is vulnerable on a long-term basis.”
To read the complete thought-provoking article Google “On the course to a new normal.”
GOOD ADVICE
We like the story from Russell Fuller who came into the financial world from academia. On the first day of classes, Professor Fuller’s advice to his finance students went something like this: “You’ll get your full tuition’s worth today.” This got their full attention. “When you graduate, if you’re not an active trader, follow three lessons and you’ll win. One: Save regularly and invest wisely. Two: Buy no load index funds. Three: Here’s Vanguard’s telephone number.”
GOLD
Since the gold price is flirting with the $1000 mark for the third time this year, here are some quotes of interest.
On buying gold now. Some thoughts from Bill Bonner, founder of Agora Financial. “Should you buy gold and hope to get rich when gold shoots up to $3000 an ounce? A bad idea, in our opinion. You should use gold to protect your assets. The risk is in the paper money . . . because they can create as much of it as they please. And they’re under pressure now to create a lot. You buy gold as insurance against inflation, a dollar bust, a bear market in stocks and bonds, or a financial crisis. Gold is nature’s money. It is better than manmade money. Because, with gold, what you have is what you’ve got. They can’t artificially depreciate it or easily increase the quantity of it. That’s why the feds don’t like it. It won’t support their cause du jour – whether it is a war, a bailout, stimulus, health care, or whatever. Gold doesn’t cooperate with the financial engineers. That’s why it’s a good thing to hold when you think the financial engineers are making a mistake.”
You’ve heard of the “Greenspan Put”, the idea that the Fed would always bail investors out of a jam. Now we have the “Beijing Put” on gold!
At the recent Ambrosetti Conference in Italy (September 6, 2009), Cheng Siwei had some very interesting comments. Cheng Siwei is Dean of the Management School, Graduate University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The following, taken from his address at the Ambroseti Conference, helps us understand the current thinking of the Chinese.
- “If they (the Fed) keep printing money to buy bonds, it will lead to inflation, and after a year or two, the dollar will fall hard. Most of our (Chinese) foreign reserves are in U.S. bonds and this is very difficult to change, so we will diversify incremental reserves into euros, yen and other currencies.”
- “Gold is definitely an alternative, but when we buy, the price goes up. We have to do it carefully so as not to stimulate the markets.”
- “The U.S. spends tomorrow’s money today. We Chinese spend today’s money tomorrow. That’s why we have a financial crisis.”
And he ends his speech with a quote from one of our founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin: “He who goes borrowing, goes sorrowing.”
For questions or additional information on this blog entry, please contact us.
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