Author Archives: Scalper1

The Placebo Effect

I’ve had four or five true migraines in my life, mostly from getting whacked on the head with something like a baseball or a sharp elbow in basketball, and I honestly can’t imagine how horrible it must be to suffer from chronic migraines, defined by the FDA as 15 or more migraines per month with headaches lasting at least four hours. So I was happy to see a TV ad saying that the FDA had approved Botox as an effective treatment for chronic migraines, preventing up to 9 headache-days per month. That’s huge! But in the fast-talking coda for the ad, I heard something that made me do a double-take. Yes, Botox can knock out up to 9 headache-days per month. But a placebo injection is almost as good, preventing up to 7 headache-days per month. Now 9 is better than 7 … I get that … and that’s why the FDA approved the drug as efficacious. Still. Really? Most of the reports I’ve read say that the cost of a Botox migraine treatment is about $600. That’s just the cost of the drug itself. So what the FDA is telling us is that a saline solution injection (costing what? $2) is almost 80% as effective as the $600 drug, so long as it was presented to the patient as a “true” potential therapy . If I’m an Allergan (NYSE: AGN ) shareholder I’m thanking god every day for the placebo effect. And not for nothing, but I’d really like to learn more about why Botox was NOT approved for migraine sufferers with fewer than 15 headache-days per month. If I were a gambling man (and I am), I’d be prepared to wager a significant amount of money that Botox significantly reduces headache-days at pretty much any level of chronic-ness, from 1 day to 30 days per month, but that at lower migraine frequencies a placebo is just as efficacious as Botox. In other words, I’d bet that ALL migraine sufferers would benefit from a $600 Botox shot, but I’d also bet that ALL migraine sufferers would benefit from a cheap saline shot so long as the doctor told them it was a brilliant new drug, and they’d get as much or MORE benefit from the cheap saline shot than from Botox if they’re “just” enduring eight or nine migraine headaches. Per month. Geez. Of course, there’s no economic incentive to provide the cheap placebo injection nor the unapproved (and hence unreimbursed) Botox shot if you have fewer than 15 headache-days per month. Bottomline: I’d bet that millions of people who don’t meet the 15 day threshold are suffering from terrible pain that could absolutely be alleviated at a very reasonable cost if it weren’t criminally unethical and (worse) terribly unprofitable to lie about the “truth” of a placebo treatment. Of course, we have no such restrictions, ethical or otherwise, when it comes to monetary policy, and that’s the connection between investing and this little foray into the special hell that we call healthcare economics. The primary instruments of monetary policy in 2016 – words used to construct Common Knowledge and mold our behavior, words chosen for effect rather than truthfulness, words of “forward guidance” and ” communication policy ” – are placebos. Like a fake migraine therapy, the placebos of monetary policy are enormously effective because they act on the brain-regulated physiological phenomena of pain (placebos are essentially useless on non-brain-regulated phenomena like joint instability from a torn ligament or cellular chaos from cancer). Even in fundamentally-driven markets there’s a healthy balance between pain minimization and reward maximization. In a policy-driven market? The top three investing principles are pain avoidance, pain avoidance, and pain avoidance. We’re just looking to survive, not literally but in a brain-regulated emotional sense, and that leaves us wide open for the soothing power of placebos. I get lots of comments from readers who don’t understand how markets can continue to levitate higher with anemic-at-best global growth, stretched valuation multiples, and an earnings recession in vast swaths of corporate America. This week I’m reading lots of comments post the failed Doha OPEC meeting that oil prices are doomed to see a $20 handle now that there’s no supply limitation agreement forthcoming. Yep, that’s the real world. And there’s zero monetary or fiscal policy in the works that has any direct beneficial impact on any of this. But that’s not what matters. That’s not how the game is played. So long as the Fed and the ECB and the BOJ are playing nice with China by talking down the dollar regardless of what’s happening in the real world economy, then it’s an investable rally in all risk assets , and oil goes up more easily than it goes down, regardless of what happens with OPEC. The placebo effect of insanely accommodative forward guidance that has zero impact on the real economy is in full swing. Oil prices are driven by forward guidance and the dollar, not real world supply and demand . Every day that Yellen talks up global risks and talks down the dollar is another day of a pain-relieving injection, regardless of whether or not that talk is “real” therapy. Does this mean that we’re off to the races in the market? Nope. The notion that we have a self-sustaining recovery in the global economy is laughable, and that’s what it will take to stimulate a new greed phase of a rip-roaring bull market. But by the same token I have no idea what makes this market go down, so long as we have monetary policy convergence rather than divergence, and so long as we have a Fed that loses its nerve and freaks out if the stock market goes down by more than 5%. So long as the words of a monetary policy truce hold strong, this isn’t a world that ends in fire and it isn’t a world that ends in ice. It’s the long gray slog of an entropic ending . Anyone else intrigued by the potential of a covered call strategy in this environment? I sure am. But wait, Ben, isn’t a covered call strategy (where you’re selling call options on your long positions) the opposite of convexity? Haven’t you been saying that a portfolio should have more convexity – i.e. optionality, i.e. buying options rather than selling options – rather than less? Yes. Yes, I have. But optionality isn’t the same thing as owning options. In the same way that I want portfolio optionality that pays off in a fire scenario (a miracle happens and global growth + inflation surges forward) and portfolio optionality that pays off in an ice scenario (China drops a deflationary atom bomb by floating the yuan), so do I want portfolio optionality that pays off in a gray slog scenario. That’s where covered calls (and covered puts for short positions) come into play. It’s all part of applying the principles of minimax regret to portfolio construction , where we don’t try to assign probabilities and expected return projections to our holdings, but where we think in terms of risk tolerance and minimizing investment pain for any of the market scenarios that could develop in a politically fragmented world. It’s all part of having an intentional portfolio , where every exposure plays a defined role with maximum capital efficiency, as opposed to an accidental portfolio where we just slather on layer after layer of “quality” large cap stocks . The Silver Age of the Central Banker gives me a headache. I bet it does you, too. Let’s take our relief where we can find it, placebo or no, but let’s not mistake forward guidance for a cure and let’s not forget that sometimes pretty words just aren’t enough. The truth is that the global trade pie is still shrinking and domestic politics are still anti-growth in both the US and Europe . Neither math nor human nature gives me much confidence that the currency truce can hold indefinitely, and I still think that every policy China has undertaken is exactly what I would do to prepare for floating (i.e. massively devaluing) the yuan. It’s at moments like this, though, that I remember the short seller’s creed: if you’re wrong on timing, you’re just wrong. I don’t know the timing of the bigger headaches to come, the ones that words and placebos won’t fix. What I do know, though, is that an investable rally in risk assets today gives us some breathing space to prepare our portfolios for the even more policy-controlled markets of the future. Let’s not waste this opportunity.

Tactical Models Under Pressure As U.S. Stocks Rebound

The US stock market may be on the verge of decisively throwing off its bear-market shackles and making fools of analysts (including yours truly) who’ve been issuing cautious commentary in recent months. It’s also been clear for more than a month that a previously issued markets-based warning on US business-cycle risk has been wrong, at least so far. As yesterday’s broad-minded review of economic indicators relates, the US economy wasn’t in recession in March, based on data published to date. In the wake of the equity market’s rally in recent weeks, the call that stocks were at risk of a bear market may be about to fade too. So it goes in the dark art/science of trying to outwit Mr. Market and look for signals in the noise. The risk of being wrong is an occupational hazard for anyone who practices investing with something other than a buy-and-hold strategy. To be fair, every model that attempts to engineer higher returns, lower risk, or some combination is subject to failure at times. It’s the nature of the beast – no one can outfox the crowd all of the time. Even if you’re right 70% of the time, being wrong in real time outweighs previous successes on an emotional level. The question now is whether we’re on the cusp of one of those times when model failure is about to spill out across the market landscape from a broad US equity perspective? The S&P 500 ticked higher again yesterday, posting another new year-to-date peak. Measured from the previous trough in early February, the index has climbed roughly 15%. In just over a month’s time, the mood has shifted from deep pessimism to exuberance. In the days ahead, analysts and investors will be under pressure to decide if the current exuberance is irrational or warranted. Click to enlarge For some perspective on where we’ve been, recall that the current phase of volatility began last August, when China unveiled a surprise currency devaluation and global markets swooned in response. Bear-market signals from various models followed, including a popular tactical model that seeks to filter out noise by focusing on monthly data-current month-end price relative to a 10-month moving average-for monitoring market trends ( “A Quantitative Approach to Tactical Asset Allocation” ). But this model, like so many others, has been whipsawed in recent months via the monthly readings for the S&P. In the current climate, the bear-market signals have recently given way to bull readings… again. (For charts tracking various ETFs in context with this model’s signals, see Meb Faber’s updates here. ) The Capital Spectator is fair game for criticism as well in the wake of recent market volatility. For instance, an econometric application based on a Hidden Markov model that’s been discussed on these pages continues to signal that the US stock market remains in a bear market. This model has been consistently profiling a negative regime for equities since last fall, but that won’t mean much if it turns out to be wrong. For investors who favor a buy-and-hold strategy, a hefty dose of vindication may be near. If you want to know why most efforts to generate superior risk-adjusted returns through time via various flavors of tactical asset allocation usually come to naught, recent action in the US equity market offers a real-time education. But let’s not put a fork in the tactical models just yet. Even if the past six months have been an extended head fake for bearish signals, there’s still prudent reasons for embracing some degree of tactical models. Expecting superior results at all times, alas, is expecting too much. But that’s a subject for another day. Meantime, back on the front lines of market action, the S&P has retraced all its losses-twice-since last August’s slide. In addition, the case for seeing an imminent recession for the US is still MIA, based on numbers in hand. But there have been worrisome signs of macro weakness in some corners of the economy-last week’s March numbers for industrial production and retail sales are the latest examples. Meantime, next week’s first-quarter GDP report is expected to deliver a tepid 0.3% rise, based on the Atlanta Fed’s Apr. 19 nowcast. Are these reports the raw material for a resumption of the bull market that was rudely interrupted last August? We’ll have the answer shortly, perhaps within a few weeks. If the US stock market runs decisively higher from current levels, the sound you hear of crashing will be disgruntled tactical asset allocators throwing their models out the window. But that’s not yet fate. There’s a severe round of comeuppance lurking around the next bend. The only mystery is where the axe will fall. Some of us think we already know the answer, but perhaps it’s time to roll out Robert Goldman’s famous phrase: “Nobody knows anything.” Actually, let’s rephrase that for use with market analytics: Nobody knows anything… in real time.

F5 Networks Fiscal Q2 Revenue Light Amid Weak Corporate IT Spending

F5 Networks ( FFIV ) late Wednesday reported mixed fiscal Q2 results and forecast current-quarter profit above estimates, with revenue guidance below views. The Seattle-based data center gear maker said March-quarter EPS minus items rose 6% to $1.68 while revenue rose 2% to $483.7 million. Analysts had estimated $1.63 and $486.2 million. “F5 Networks reported mixed March-quarter results with revenue falling below expectations, but lower taxes and an aggressive share repurchase helped EPS come in better than consensus,” said Troy Jensen, analyst at Piper Jaffray, in a research report. F5 is the leading maker of application delivery controllers (ADCs)– electronic boxes that direct data traffic to computer servers. Top rivals include Cisco Systems ( CSCO ) ( IBD ). The company forecasts current-quarter revenue of $495 million at its midpoint, up 2.4% from the year-ago quarter and below. consensus estimates of $503 million. It expects EPS in a range of $1.77 to $1.80, up from $1.67 and above analyst consensus of $1.74 per share. “Management guided revenue below the Street, citing ongoing uncertainty in the macro and IT spending environment and potential pauses ahead of the new product cycle,” said Jason Ader, an analyst at William Blair, in a research report. “Looking beyond the current quarter, even with a product refresh cycle on the horizon, we believe F5 will struggle to grow its product sales on a sustainable basis due to multiple headwinds from a maturing on-premise ADC market, competitive pressure from the public cloud, and a stand-alone security portfolio that has so far been unable to compete effectively in an already crowded security market,” Ader wrote. F5 Networks stock was up 2.5% in premarket trading Thursday, near 96 and just about even for 2016.