Tag Archives: economy

Pessimistic Outlook? Maybe You Should Manage A Bond Fund

Ever notice how pessimistic bond fund managers are? They are some of the most “glass half empty” people you will ever come into contact with. Even the ones who have successfully built legacies that will endure for generations are consistently talking down on the economy, central banks, growth, and other unfavorable data points. Jeffrey Gundlach recently hypothesized that emerging markets could fall as much as 40%. He has also been an outspoken critic of the Federal Reserve’s rate hike agenda and the lack of inflation in the developed world. Gundlach is the head of DoubleLine Capital, which manages $85 billion in fixed-income assets. Similarly, renown bond investor Bill Gross railed about the problems with government debt and social service liabilities in his 2016 investment outlook . He seems very concerned about demographic trends and workforce shortages. Gross ran one of the biggest bond funds in the world at PIMCO prior to his separation from the firm he founded and transition to Janus Capital Group. These are just two of the most vocal and well-known bond managers in the world, but there are countless others that are quick to point out cracks in the global economic picture. Talking Your Book In the business we call this “talking your book” or simply slanting the facts and opinions towards a conclusion that favors your trade. Volatility, uncertainty, and fear are a bond managers dream come true. They have built empires on the back of investors fleeing the stock market in a rush to safety. Stocks usually drop in tandem with interest rates, which means that bond prices rise in kind. This favors their performance story and leads to a wave of new assets that quickly enter and are slow to leave. The returns are steady, the volatility is low, and the fees are reasonable – why would you ever want to depart that warm cocoon? These bond fund titans are simply saying ” take my hand and I’ll guide you around all the pitfalls and uncertainty “. Bless their hearts. Active managers in particular are able to shape the underlying holdings of their funds in accordance with their views. They have certain limits and mandates according to the prospectus guidelines. However, there is always some leeway to reduce exposure to areas they are concerned about, add to undervalued opportunities, or build in hedges as appropriate. This can lead to a measurable boost in performance over the benchmark if they are on the right side of the market. The best bond fund managers have risen to their status because they are right more often than they are wrong. My review of Gundlach’s predictions for 2015 were pretty spot on with the exception of his call on gold. I have been a long-time fan of his flagship strategy in the Doubleline Total Return Bond Fund (MUTF: DBLTX ) and continue to hold it in my own account as well as for my clients. The rigors of managing billions in bonds is a stress that I will likely never have to endure. As a result, I have a more even-keeled outlook for the future that balances the dangers of a bear market or recession against the opportunity for a resurgence in risk assets. This allows for a more flexible (if guarded) approach that has served me well in riding out the ups and downs of this fickle market. The Bottom Line Understanding the motivations of an investment manager can be useful in deciphering their market calls and help frame their message in the context of your personal outlook. In addition, it’s always advantageous to dig a little deeper to see how their actual portfolio is positioned versus what they are saying publicly. If there is a disconnect between these two points, it may be best to err on the side of their actions versus their words. Remember that everyone has a motivation or bias in the investment world (even me). By understanding this perspective, you can more acutely discern brains from bullshit and act accordingly.

Perception Vs. Reality And Emotion Vs. Reason

If I were to tell you that: The price of oil would decline beneath $30 dollar a barrel before Iran had economic sanctions lifted from $90 per barrel a year ago, increasing global disposable income by over $3 trillion dollars Monetary authorities would all maintain easy monetary policies with the supply of capital far outstripping demand for capital The Fed funds rate was 0.375% and was on hold for now Bank earnings, liquidity and capital ratios continue to improve The dollar remained strong and capital flows accelerated from abroad helping to push 10 year bond yields below 2.0% That there would be 3 million new jobs created in the U.S in 2015 alone with growth in wages of 2.6% year on year GNP would continue to expand between 2-2.5% led by the consumer without inflationary pressures and profits, x-energy and materials, would continue to increase China expanded by over 6.8% in 2015 despite major headwinds policy changes and would expand by over 6.0% in 2016 M & A would reach new heights and remains strong Private equity valuations and the number of new issues cooled There is a change occurring in national elections everywhere away from the establishment (look at Taiwan) Japan and the Eurozone would maintain excessive monetary ease India would continue to grow around 7% Bearish sentiment was at a multi-month high and the market was selling at 15 times earnings then; and finally, Change was happening everywhere for the better. Then, would you predict a rising stock market, excluding energy and material stocks, or a falling one? There is a major disconnect between perception and reality in the marketplace today as emotions are overcoming reason. Whose view of the global economy would you consider most relevant and on the mark: Jimmy Dimon, Chairman of JP Morgan Chase, or a market pundit/news commentator? I suggest that you read for yourself the transcripts of earnings conference calls, as the media has been taking many comments out of context. We participate in at least three conference calls a day during earnings season to gain a true perspective of what is happening in the real world. This is a period of excessive volatility. It creates tremendous opportunities to capitalize on inefficiencies in the marketplace. Each long investment in our portfolio has superior management and is going through positive change which will lead to more revenue and volume growth; enhanced global competitiveness; higher returns on revenues and capital; increased free cash flow to be used for reinvestment in growth and enhancing shareholder value; and finally, each one has a current yield over 3%. But, change does not happen overnight so you need patience and liquidity to let it unfold. For example, I owned GE for 18 months, purchased at $19 per share, before the marketplace woke up and began to re-evaluate the stock. It took Nelson Peltz’s filing to turn the light bulb on for investors. His cost is $27. We are still in the early stages of GE’s transformation. As I say, this is a market of stocks, not a stock market. Unfortunately, electronic/technical/systematic trading takes no prisoners and can override fundamentals over the short-term. Stop thinking as a trader and start thinking as an investor! Don’t buy for next quarter’s earnings but focus instead on the next few years’ volume and revenue growth, competitive position, the mix of business, operating margins and returns, cash flow, especially free cash flow, and valuations. We want multiple ways to win on each investment while protecting our downside too. We are global investors with a global perspective. Let’s take a look at the key data points by region that occurred last week: The United States takes center stage as the largest economy in the world. It appears that fourth quarter GNP growth slowed significantly from the third quarter and follows a similar pattern that has existed for several years with one strong quarter followed by a weaker one with overall growth remaining in the 2-2.5% range without inflation and led by the consumer. Jimmy Dimon, Chairman of JPM mentioned on the 4th quarter earnings call last week that he sees continued strong growth by U.S. consumers; GNP growth between 2 and 3%; continued good business demand for loans; continued strong M & A as his book is full; continued improvement in credit quality; maximum write-downs for energy loans at $750 million with oil prices around $30 per barrel and max write down exposure to the materials sector of $200 million out of a total loan portfolio of $837 billion and total assets on $2.4 trillion; continued growth in deposits and decent growth overseas. JPM has little exposure to China, which he mentioned is slowing but still showing above average economic growth. It’s quite amazing that JPM recorded record earnings despite a relatively flat yield curve. The heads of Citi (NYSE: C ), PNC , WFC and USB echoed his comments. I was on each call. Growth in the United States continues to be led by the consumer (over 68% of GNP) as the production sectors, including energy and materials, remain comparatively weak. Data points to reinforce this view include: University of Michigan consumer confidence index rose to a 7 month high of 83.3; the gauge of expectations six months out increased to 85.7; retail sales fell 0.1% in December and rose only 2.1% over the prior year (lower gasoline sales penalized this number); manufacturers sales and shipments fell 2.8% compared to a year ago while inventories rose 1.6% therefore the inventory/sales number rose to 1.32; producer prices fell 0.2% in December but rose 0.1% excluding food and energy; consumer comfort index rose to a 3-month high of 44.2; import prices fell 1.2% in December and 8.2% over the last year and finally the Beige Book was reported last Wednesday which supported an improving labor market, “slight to moderate growth” in consumer spending, weakness in manufacturing penalized by a strong dollar, additional problems in the energy patch and finally, little sign of wage pressures and minimal price pressures. I believe that the U.S economy will expand in the low end of 2-2.5% this year, inflation will run under 1.5% and the Fed will raise rates two times or less in 2016. Policy will remain accommodative. Watch the national elections as the status quo is out and change is in the air for D.C., too. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang confirmed that China’s economy grew close to 7.0% in 2015 which is still quite amazing considering all the changes going on to stem past excesses and shift emphasis to consumption/services (40% of the economy) from production/exports (60% of the economy). China finished with over $3 trillion in foreign reserves and is still generating $50-$55 billion in trade surpluses per year. China’s consumer and economy has also benefitted greatly from lower energy prices. Change is hard but I applaud their government who has a five-year plan to build a stronger and sounder foundation for the future. The Asian infrastructure bank was launched this week. I expect China to grow at 6-6.5% in 2016. China is on the path towards joining the established global economic leaders with policies to back it up. Did you happen to notice what Haier was willing to pay for GE’s appliance business to become a true global competitor? Ten times trailing EBITDA vs. 7 times, which Electrolux had previously offered. Export growth in the Eurozone and Japan are suffering from changes in global trade patterns and weakness in demand. Both the ECB and BOJ are maintaining incredibly easy monetary policies but there is a limit to what that can accomplish. There is a pressing need for more regulatory and financial reform to stimulate growth in both areas. Did you notice that Germany ran a record budget surplus of $13.14 billion? The government has earmarked $6.5 billion to cover migration related costs. Regulatory, budgetary and financial change is in the air to support and stimulate growth. Here comes Iran on the global energy markets. Iran complied with the terms of its international agreement to curb nuclear development. Therefore sanctions were lifted on Saturday and $50 billion in frozen cash was released. Iran can begin trading with the rest of the world including selling oil. I believe that much of the recent decline in oil below $30 per barrel factored in Iran selling an incremental 1-1.5 million barrels per day on the marketplace by mid-year 2016. Global production currently exceeds global demand by 1.5 million barrels per day and storage is already full to the brims. It has not helped to have unusually warm weather in parts of the world curbing demand growth. Industrial commodity prices have continued to weaken, too, in concert with oil, despite reductions in production, capacity and inventory levels. If the world continues to grow even at 2.5-3%, industrial commodity prices will begin to rise as inventory levels are drawn down. I expect dividend cuts even at the strongest companies but that is a positive at this point, not a negative. Expect many bankruptcies in the energy/industrial commodity and materials markets. The financially strong companies as well as private equity funds will buy these hard assets at 3 to 5 times EBIDTA offering great value and returns on their investment even at these depressed prices as the debt gets extinguished. The reality is that the outlook for global growth is not all that bleak although it may not reach historical rates of gain. On one hand, the global consumer is the huge beneficiary of lower energy prices and low inflation but on the other hand, those countries/companies that are resource- or production-based will suffer. While price determines value, I like to invest where the wind is at your back which is the U.S. where consumption is nearly 70% of GNP compared to a much lower level in Europe, China, Japan, and most emerging markets. It is very difficult to see a recession in any of the major industrialized countries but growth will stay sub-par until there are regulatory and financial changes to stimulate growth as the most of the gains from monetary ease are behind us and depreciating one’s currency is never the answer. Don’t let the pundits fool you. A strong dollar is good for many reasons. Right now the stock markets are being controlled/manipulated by the electronic/systematic technical traders rather than investors. Fear is everywhere and capitulation may have already occurred. It does not help to hear Larry Fink, head of BlackRock, say that the market can decline near term but will increase even more later in the year. That is talk of a trader rather than an investor and argues for passive management over active management. The bottom line is that I see value everywhere and no recession. If you believe the economy will slow for an extended period of time and won’t pick up much as we move through 2016, then buy the global pharmaceuticals and consumer staple stocks. But if you see growth, albeit slow, for an extended period of time, then look at industrials, too, and eventually, some financially strong commodity companies. Banks as a group are just cheap under any scenario. It is amazing that JPM had record earnings with such a flat yield curve and that is very telling. It goes for the other major banks, too. Volatility, confusion and fear create opportunity. We love it! There is more to say but that is enough for today. Look at the facts and take out all of the emotion before making any decisions. Invest, don’t trade. So remember to review the facts; step back and reflect; consider proper asset allocation; maintain excess liquidity and control risk; do in-depth independent research on each investment and…Invest Accordingly!

How To Trade A China GDP Crash

The theme early in 2016 has been China and oil crashing, which both go hand in hand. If growth in China is slowing, global demand for oil will slow as well, thus creating lower oil prices. This factor, along with the recent rise in global supply, has oil in a free fall. At the moment, there is a lot of uncertainty creating negative sentiment in every global market, not just China. The Chinese economy is the second largest in the world and a key driver of growth for the world. A slowing China would facilitate a dull global economy and lower revenue for U.S. companies. Foreign sales account for over 30% of revenue for S&P 500 companies; a global slowdown will have a significant impact on the bottom line and stock prices. This potential sluggish growth and slowing investment in China has investors and traders speculating how bad China might be. They will get their answer soon. The Event Monday night, at 8pm CST, China will announce Q4 GDP. The number is expected to come in at 6.8% versus 6.9% last year. Industrial production, retail sales, and fixed asset investment are all expected out as well. These numbers will give us insight into why global markets have been hit with such extreme selling pressure. The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank, predicted the economy could expand at a slower pace between 6.6 percent and 6.8 percent in 2016. This would be due to weak external demand and cooling domestic investment. In addition to the GDP announcement, the Chinese New Year comes on Feb. 8th. Markets are closed for the whole week, and you can bet most investors do not want to have exposure over the holiday. I would expect if we see a bad GDP print, volatility and selling pressure will continue, at the very least, until the holiday. I grabbed a chart from tradingeconomics.com to show the declining trend in quarterly GDP. As you can see, this is not something new; China has been slowing and now we are at a crucial point. Let’s go over three potential scenarios into how to trade the number. Scenario 1: Chinese government fudges numbers and GDP comes in at 6.8% or above There is a lot of doubt when it comes to Chinese economic numbers. These accusations have been made before, but if China were to announce a number above consensus, nobody would believe it this time. There are signals that the Chinese economy is slowing down, their stock market being one of them. If China were to post 6.8% or a couple ticks above or below the consensus, we might see a calming of markets into the Chinese New Year. Scenario 2: 6-8% GDP print This is the most likely and the closer to 6.8% the calmer the markets. Scenario 3: Number comes in at 6% or lower This scenario shows us that China’s economy is significantly slowing and that the recent global stock market selloff was warranted. Due to doubt in government numbers, most people will speculate it’s even worse, so bad even that the government had to give the world a more realistic number. Global markets seem to be expecting a lower print, perhaps in the low 6% area. It is not the end of the world and does not mean markets go into a panic; however, if we see something in the low-high 5% area, or below that, there will be significant pressure on global markets. How to trade the number: ETFs There are 38 ETFs that enable you to play china in a variety of ways, but if you are trading this number, you might as well play the aggressive ones. The two ETFs below are for you if you are bullish. A trader can benefit if he thinks China is oversold and will print the number as expected…or because the government says it must be. Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 300 China A-Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHR ) will give you exposure to the Shanghai stock market. Direxion Daily CSI 300 China A Share Bull 2x Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: CHAU ) will move up and down twice as much as the CSI 300, giving you double exposure. If you are bearish and think China will print a significantly lower number, then go with Direxion Daily FTSE China Bear 3x Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: YANG ). This is Direxion’s triple leveraged ETF product that will go up as the Chinese market goes down. Be cautious on this one, leveraged bear products can have significant downside when markets rally. Below is a 10-year chart of ProShares UltraShort Financials ETF (NYSEARCA: SKF ) as an example. These leveraged bear ETFs should only be treated as short-term trades or hedges, not investments. How to invest the number: Three top-rated stocks JinkoSolar (NYSE: JKS ) is a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy) and a Chinese solar play. While a disappointing GDP number will hurt the overall story of Jinko, the company is diversified with a global network across Europe, North America and Asia. 2016 estimates have risen from $3.93 to $4.40 over the last 90 days, showing strong growth potential over the next year. The company also sports an “A” rating in value, in a strong rated industry, currently ranked 13 out of 265 (Top 5%) Zacks industries. Momo (NASDAQ: MOMO ) is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) and Chinese social networking play. Momo is a free instant messaging application for smartphones and tablets. The company also sports an “A” rating in momentum and is currently ranked 95 out of 265 (Top 36%) Zacks industries. 2016 estimates have risen from $.23 to $.54 over the last 90 days. Weibo (NASDAQ: WB ) is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) and a Chinese social media play. Weibo is a Chinese microblogging site similar to that of Twitter (NYSE: TWTR ) and Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ). The site is very popular in China and used by over 30% of China. The company is not a value play, but has momentum behind it with a Zacks “B” rating. 2016 estimates have risen from $.38 to $.49 over the last 90 days, showing us that the analysts believe the company has the ability to grow through monetization. Most of these stocks are down over 30% from last year’s highs and down big today as I type. There is a rather large risk that another leg down is coming on a bad GDP number. If that’s the case and scenario 3 plays out, I would suggest you take that opportunity to limp into these high-rated stocks for a long-term China play. Original post