Tag Archives: stocks

Shifts In Leadership: Rules 3 And 4 For Investing

The stock market has moved towards new highs on the backs of the new leaders—the economically sensitive stocks. It’s not that the global economy has improved that much but it is that these companies have retooled to do better in a weaker environment. Expectations have been brought so far down and the stocks got so cheap that it has been easy to beat expectations with first quarter results. The market likes it when companies exceed expectations. Commodity prices, the bell weather for cyclicals, are increasing too, benefiting from a weaker dollar, which has now hit a multi-month low for reasons discussed in prior blogs and a somewhat stronger China. There has clearly been a mindset shift away from the old leaders towards the new and unless you recognize this shift, your performance will continue to lag behind the averages. Fortunately for our investors, we made these changes months ago beginning with covering our energy shorts, increasing our exposure to economically sensitive (especially commodity) stocks that are financially strong. We also are over-weighted banks and financials as discussed previously as a win/win proposition regardless of the economy. The best part about this change in leadership is that future earnings comparisons get easier for them as the year progresses as their results turned down dramatically beginning with the second quarter of 2015. Secondly, a weaker than expected dollar for 2016 has caused management to lift forecasts for this year. We made the shift in investment emphasis months ago aided in good part by utilizing our Rules #3 and #4 for investing. After looking at managements and strategies, we look for companies with rising incremental rates of returns and margins. In addition we are always searching for companies nearing their inflection point for earnings. Companies increasing their returns and margins are potential long investments as it tends to boost valuation and stock prices over time and it’s the reverse for the shorts. In addition, companies nearing an inflection point in earnings from negative to positive or visa versa as additional tools for investing. Anticipating with accuracy the inflection point as well as changes in incremental rates of returns are two of my time-tested rules for investing. These stocks tend to rise on a wall of worry or decline on a wall of exuberance… all the way to the bank. Patience is needed to let them unfold. None of these rules work in a vacuum. A successful investor needs a systematic approach combining a global macro-view for the proper asset allocation and risk controls with a bottom-up selection of each investment, which requires first hand research and and in-depth testing. While I agree with Warren Buffett that hedge funds have unperformed as a group over the last few years. It would be unwise to paint all managers with the same brush. A handful, who really understand what it takes to be a global investor today and abide by their time-tested methodologies, have done quite well and are worth every penny that they earn. Paix et Prospérité is one of them. Let’s take a quick look at the data points from last week and see if there were any changes in our core beliefs, asset allocation, risk controls and stock selection: The United States reported first quarter GNP increasing at an annual rate at 0.5% as we predicted down from a gain of 1.4% in the fourth quarter. Consumer spending led the way with a gain of 1.9% in the quarter down from 2.4% in the prior quarter; service spending rose by a healthier 2.7%; the trade gap widened reducing GNP by 0.34%; housing rose at a 14.8% rate; nonresidential fixed investment fell 5.9% and the GDP price index increased by only 0.7%. It was important to note that disposable income accelerated to a 2.9% gain in the quarter from 2.3% in the fourth quarter and the savings rate rose to 5.2% from 5.0% in the prior quarter. Growth in employment and wages combined with low inflation will result in more consumer discretionary income, which will support continued growth in consumer spending and the economy in 2016. The Fed also met last week and there was no surprise that the Fed policy was left unchanged. It is obvious why the Fed remains on hold: the U.S. economy weakened in the most recent quarter; inflation remains well below the 2% Fed target; problems abound abroad and finally fear of the ramifications of Britain potentially leaving as a member of the Eurozone. Economic activity and employment accelerated in the Eurozone in the first quarter with a gain of 0.6% from the fourth quarter and up 1.6% from a year ago. It was important to note that consumer prices reported for April were 0.2% below the prior despite all the actions of the ECB. Expect no changes in monetary and fiscal policies until after the Brexit vote at the end of June. China’s official manufacturers index was reported yesterday at 50.1 down from 50.2 the prior month. A number above 50 signals that the economy continued to expand after seven months of contraction. New factory orders and the production sub-index both fell slightly but also remain over 50 indicating continued expansion too. I remain confident that China will expand by at least 6-6.5% this year bolstering world growth. Japan remains the trouble spot amongst all major industrialized countries. The BOJ met and maintained its policies; the yen strengthened as investors sold risk assets and the stock market fell dramatically. Etsuro Honda, an advisor to Prime Minister Abe, raised concerns that monetary policy alone cannot lift the economy however the country’s debt situation precludes much stimulus. I remain cautious on Japan. Let’s wrap up. Events of the last week reinforced many of our core beliefs. One of my key beliefs, “This is a market of stocks, not a stock market”, was bolstered this week by a combination of disparate earnings reports and commentary by companies across a wide spectrum of industries but also by the clear shift in mindset from old leadership to new. This doesn’t mean that an Amazon, Facebook, Alibaba or a LinkedIn cannot still stand out, but I am suggesting that you need to recognize the changes occurring and invest stock-specific rather than by groups, regions or industries. In closing, review the facts, and then pause to reflect on proper asset allocation, risk tools, mindset changes by investors and managements. Lastly, do in-depth research on each investment… and invest accordingly!

Industry Group Rankings Can Shed Light On Market Status

The market’s uptrend is under pressure. The Nasdaq is below its 200-day line and testing support at its 50-day moving average. So what are industry groups telling us about current market circumstances? IBD tracks industry group rankings for many reasons. Rising industries can be indicators of where money is flowing and where leadership might come from to support unfolding market rallies. Within rallies, top-ranked industries act as breeding grounds for new leaders. When markets turn difficult, changes in industry rankings can counsel investors on how defensive or how aggressive to be. What do they say right now? At first glance, industries don’t appear to be in much of a defensive stance. Utilities, which are classic defensive indicators, led the rankings near the beginning of March. Now they have pulled back to just outside the top 20 industry groups that normally constitute the core leadership of the market. Water utilities ranked No. 22 on Monday. Electrical utilities were No. 35. Diversified utilities were No. 39. There are some defensive flashes in the top 20. The Retail-Discount & Variety stores group is made up primarily of dollar store chains. Those stocks have some growth characteristics but are often considered a defensive group. The bigger defensive caution comes from gold miners. The Mining-Gold/Silver/Gems group continues to hold its No. 1 ranking. The position owes to gold prices, which are up about 21% this year and could move higher as the Federal Reserve contemplates furthering its rate hike program in June. But it also shows investors seeking a safe haven from volatile assets — this makes gold defensive. Rising gold prices also tend to mean more profit from gold miners, which have struggled against falling profits since 2011-12. This year that appears set to turn around. Barrick Gold ( ABX ) last week reported stronger-than-expected Q1 results, and its first profit increase since Q4 2012. Analysts expect the triple-digit gain to be followed by another in Q2, with consensus EPS forecasts for a 60% gain this year. Try a free trial at IBD’s Leaderboard to get in depth chart analysis of gold ETF SPDR Gold Trust A number of other miners, including Newmont Mining ( NEM ), Randgold Resources ( GOLD ) and Goldcorp ( GG ) are also expected to see an earnings turnaround this year. That suggests that the strength of the mining group is not strictly linked to defensive factors. Non-defensive groups in the top 20 strongest industry groups include heavy construction firms, building products retailers and the material handling/automation group, home to additive printer makers 3D Systems ( DDD ) and Stratasys ( SSYS ). The rebound in makers of heavy mining and construction equipment goes hand in hand with gains by makers of heavy trucks and parts: Both are positive signs for investor confidence. The rise of medical systems makers suggests hospitals may be returning to a buying mode. The collection of steel and metal groups in the top rankings is more of a question mark. Steel makers have climbed on optimism that China, by far the world’s largest steel maker, has pledged to deal with overcapacity in its steel sector. As a group, steel makers are up 90% from a January low, which explains the group’s No. 4 ranking. Earnings forecasts call for a patchy recovery across the group this year, led by Ternium ( TX ), Steel Dynamics ( STLD ) and South Korea’s POSCO ( PKX ). At the bottom of the industry rankings, retail groups hold 4 of the 5 weakest positions. No. 197 is Retail/Wholesale Automobile, with department stores, jewelry and consumer electronics close behind. Generic drug makers and drug distributors are also in the hole. The overall message appears to be that the market could turn defensive quickly, but it is not there right now, and it’s currently in position to offer new leadership if the market turns more bullish.