Tag Archives: etfs

Technically Speaking: The Real Value Of Cash

With the ” inmates running the asylum ” during a holiday-shortened trading week, the upward bias to the market is set to continue. However, as I addressed last week: ” As we progress through the last two months of the year, historical tendencies suggest a bias to the upside . This is particularly the case given the weakness this past summer which has left many mutual and hedge funds trailing their benchmarks. The need to play ‘catch-up’ will likely create a push into larger capitalization stocks as portfolios are ‘window dressed’ for year end reporting . This traditional ‘Santa Claus’ rally, however, does not guarantee the resumption of the ongoing ‘bull market’ into 2016. The chart below lays out my expectation for the market through the end of the year. ” (click to enlarge) ” With the markets currently oversold on a very short-term basis, the current probability is a rally into the ‘Thanksgiving’ holiday next week and potentially into the first week of December . As opposed to my rudimentary projections, the push higher will likely be a ‘choppy’ advance rather than a straight line. ” So far, the analysis over the last several weeks has continued to play out as expected. However, and this is crucially important, a near-term expectation of a bullish advance due to the recent correction and seasonal tendencies is not the same as long-term bullish outlook . As stated above, while seasonality likely holds the cards through the end of this year, projecting much beyond that window is foolishness. The Real Value Of Cash This brings to mind a call I had on the radio show recently discussing his advisor’s reluctance to hold cash . The argument against holding cash goes this way: ” If you hold cash, you lose value over time to inflation .” This is a true statement if you hold cash for an EXTREMELY long period. However, holding cash as a ” hedge ” against market volatility during periods of elevated uncertainty is a different matter entirely. As I discussed previously: ” I have written previously that historically it is relatively unimportant the markets are making new highs. The reality is that new highs represent about 5% of the markets action while the other 95% of the advance was making up previous losses. ‘ Getting back to even’ is not a long-term investing strategy . ” (click to enlarge) In a market environment that is extremely overvalued, the projection of long-term forward returns is exceedingly low. This, of course, does not mean that markets just trade sideways, but in rather large swings between exhilarating rises and spirit-crushing declines. This is an extremely important concept in understanding the “real value of cash.” (click to enlarge) The chart below shows the inflation-adjusted return of $100 invested in the S&P 500 ( using data provided by Dr. Robert Shiller ). The chart also shows Dr. Shiller’s CAPE ratio. However, I have capped the CAPE ratio at 23x earnings which has historically been the peak of secular bull markets in the past. Lastly, I calculated a simple cash/stock switching model which buys stocks at a CAPE ratio of 6x or less and moves back to cash at a ratio of 23x . I have adjusted the value of holding cash for the annual inflation rate which is why during the sharp rise in inflation in the 1970s, there is a downward slope in the value of cash . However, while the value of cash is adjusted for purchasing power in terms of acquiring goods or services in the future, the impact of inflation on cash as an asset with respect to reinvestment may be different since asset prices are negatively impacted by spiking inflation. In such an event, cash gains purchasing power parity in the future if assets prices fall more than inflation rises. (click to enlarge) While no individual could effectively manage money this way, the importance of “cash” as an asset class is revealed. While cash did lose relative purchasing power, due to inflation, the benefits of having capital to invest at lower valuations produced substantial outperformance over waiting for previously destroyed investment capital to recover. While we can debate over methodologies, allocations, etc., the point here is that ” time frames ” are crucial in the discussion of cash as an asset class. If an individual is “literally” burying cash in their backyard, then the discussion of the loss of purchasing power is appropriate. However, if cash is a “tactical” holding to avoid short-term destruction of capital, then the protection afforded outweighs the loss of purchasing power in the distant future. Much of the mainstream media will quickly disagree with the concept of holding cash and tout long-term returns as the reason to just remain invested in both good times and bad. The problem is that it is YOUR money at risk. Furthermore, most individuals lack the ” time ” necessary to truly capture 30- to 60-year return averages. For individuals, trying to save for their retirement, there are several important considerations with respect to cash as an asset class: Cash is an effective hedge against market loss. Cash provides an opportunity to take advantage of market declines. Cash provides stability during times of uncertainty (reduces emotional mistakes) Importantly, I am not talking about being 100% in cash. I am suggesting that holding higher levels of cash during periods of uncertainty provides both stability and opportunity. With the fundamental and economic backdrop becoming much more hostile toward investors in the intermediate term, understanding the value of cash as a ” hedge ” against loss becomes much more important. As John Hussman recently noted: ” The overall economic and financial landscape, then, is one where obscene valuations imply zero or negative S&P 500 total returns for more than a decade – an outcome that is largely baked-in-the-cake regardless of shorter term economic or speculative factors. Presently, market internals remain unfavorable as well. Coming off of recent overvalued, overbought, overbullish extremes, this has historically opened a clear vulnerability of the market to air-pockets, free-falls and crashes. ” As stated above, near zero returns do not imply that each year will have a zero rate of return. However, as a quick review of the past 15 years shows, markets can trade in very wide ranges leaving those who ” rode it out ” little to show for their emotional wear. Given the length of the current market advance, deteriorating internals, high valuations and weak economic backdrop; reviewing cash as an asset class in your allocation may make some sense. Chasing yield at any cost has typically not ended well for most. Of course, since Wall Street does not make fees on investors holding cash, maybe there is another reason they are so adamant that you remain invested all the time. Just something to think about.

Current Recommendations For Dual Momentum Portfolio

How to construct a dual momentum portfolio using a few simple rules. Applying absolute and relative momentum to build a portfolio. Current recommendation is to invest 100% of the portfolio in U.S. Equites. Gary Antonacci’s popular book, Dual Momentum Investing: An Innovative Strategy for Higher Returns with Lower Risk is used as a template for the following analysis. The primary deviation from Antonacci’s logic is the choice of securities used to populate the portfolio. To hold down trading costs, the following commission free ETFs from TDAmeritrade are used. They are: VTI – Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF VEU – Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US ETF BIV – Vanguard Intermediate – Term Bond ETF SHY – iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond SHY is not used as a potential investment, but rather serves as a cutoff or “circuit breaker” ETF. The dual momentum rules are quite simple as they make use of absolute and relative momentum principles. Absolute momentum is where the investor examines the performance of the security with respect to its own past. Relative momentum is where the investor compares the trend or past performance with respect to other securities. Dual momentum makes use of both concepts. Antonacci recommends a look-back period of one year or 252 trading days with a monthly review. Think of this as one of those monthly reviews. With the ETFs selected for possible purchase, the cutoff ETF ((NYSEARCA: SHY ))) identified, and the look-back period settled, here are the few rules for portfolio management. This is a simplification of the diagram shown on page 101 of the dual momentum text. Rank VTI and VEU with respect to SHY. If both VTI and VEU rank above SHY, invest 100% of the portfolio in the highest ranked ETF. VTI is that ETF in this review. If neither VTI or VEU rank above SHY, invest 100% in the bond ETF, BIV. Other options for bonds are AGG or BND. I selected BIV for this example as I expect interest rates will rise so I am reluctant to use long-term bond ETFs. Wait a month for the next review. Current Recommendations: Based on 11/23/2015 data and a look-back period of 252 trading days, the highest ranking ETF on an absolute scale is VTI. Since it is ranked higher than VEU and is performing above SHY, we invest 100% of the portfolio in VTI. Had VEU ranked above VTI and SHY, 100% would have been invested in VEU. If neither VTI or VEU ranked above SHY, 100% of the portfolio would go to BIV. (click to enlarge) The above worksheet is designed for a more complex portfolio, but still works for a dual momentum portfolio with very minor adjustments.

Do Covered Call ETFs Deserve A Look?

Covered Call ETFs (or Buy-Write ETFs as they’re known to some) are an intriguing option for investors looking to generate a little extra portfolio income. But you have to have some sense of where the market is heading in order to really profit from them. Covered Call ETFs are generally known for their high yields. One of the largest covered call ETFs – the PowerShares S&P 500 BuyWrite Portfolio (NYSEARCA: PBP ) – sports a trailing 12 month dividend yield of just over 4%. That number is actually low in the covered call ETF universe as smaller funds like the Recon Capital NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF (NASDAQ: QYLD ) offer yields in the 8-9% range. Here’s how they work. In a typical equity ETF the fund’s managers buy individual stocks and hold them within the portfolio. In a covered call ETF, managers take the same stock positions but simultaneously write call options on those positions (thus the name “buy-write”). The goal is to benefit from the equity position while at the same time generating an income on the side. While the yields are nice, the overall performance of the buy-write ETF really depends on the direction of the market. In up markets, buy-write ETFs tend to underperform as the written calls start getting exercised limiting an individual stock’s upside potential. Conversely, these funds tend to outperform in sideways or down markets as many of the written calls expire worthless leaving the fund to simply collect the option premiums. The PowerShares S&P 500 BuyWrite Portfolio has historically performed about as would be expected. It outperformed the S&P 500 during the time right after the financial crisis as stock prices were dropping and subsequently lagged the index for much of the last four years. However, the fund has returned roughly 5% year-to-date outpacing the S&P 500’s return of almost 2%. If global economic weakness would be expected to continue, covered call ETFs could begin outperforming again.