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Posts Tagged ‘XLK’

Will Sovereign Debt Downgrades Sink the Global Economy?

December 11th, 2009 Brian 1 comment

There has been much hand-wringing over Dubai and other countries and their sovereign debt problems since the end of November.  There is a fear that the exposure of this debt might be the tip of the iceberg.  It is feared that the government debt crisis will spread from the small and traditionally weak and underfunded economies of Portugal, Spain, Greece, Italy and Ireland (the PIIGS) to the more substantial and traditionally strong economies of France, Germany, Japan and the United States bringing with it the fear of a global sovereign debt melt-down.  This opinion is emotional and uninformed

All the “sovereign debt default” talk about Dubai, Greece and Spain is old news that is just now getting press because what was already in motion at the top of the debt bubble in 2007 is finally coming to fruition.  Now that the commercial bank crisis has been for the most part averted, the sovereign debt issues that are closely related come to the fore. The Dubai problems were obvious two years ago or more. And Abu Dhabi and other UAE brethren have little patience for the profligacy of Dubai. They will backstop Dubai only after those who overextended get taken out. Then they will ride to the rescue and take control of many of the assets.

Same thing in Spain or Greece. Spain dug itself a deep hole by committing significant debt to aggressive expansion of public works, most notably the 3GW solar power expansion.  The EU will backstop those countries, but only at a price. It is in no one’s interest to let the fire burn out of control. I compare this to hot spots after a forest fire. If they don’t threaten to flare up and ignite new fires, you let them die out on their own.  Other times you douse them (with financial liquidity in this case) to put them out before they spread. If the infection spreads to Japan, that would be a much more serious event than Dubai, only because of the size of the Japanese economy and the relative importance of the yen. But I think the global central bank leaders have an eye on this and will prevent a Japanese economic collapse. As long as all major economies pull together, there is no reason to think we will have a financial calamity. Economic collapses require the public to panic (and stop spending). Panic is totally a psychological phenomena and can only be brought about by careless or reckless political actions (or inactions).

It is very important to note that the countries that are in danger of defaulting, are not key world economies. The talk of a major economic power like Germany, Japan or the USA being forced into insolvency is from someone ignorant of what it takes to force a financial default. Defaults don’t just happen, they are initiated by a creditor. If the debtor is large enough as compared to the creditor, then it is non-sensical or impossible for the creditor to force the default. The punishment will fall as much or more on the creditor as compared to the debtor. To force a smaller debtor to default, though, makes sense. Assets can be seized and held or resold to recoup the investment. Just who would force the USA, Germany or Japan into default? Who could gain? Who could manage the assets that were forfeited for the debt? There is no private money (hedge funds, ala John Paulsen) with the size to force a large sovereign to default.  China is the only creditor nation with the size to force such a default. But China won’t do it because it would be suicidal. China, the creditor, needs the developed world as much as the debtors need China and other developing, export-driven creditor nations. It is totally symbiotic, or co-dependent if one wants to be cynical about the situation.

To make my point about the relative size of creditors and debtors as it relates to default: I just made a good return recently on General Growth Properties (GGWPQ.pk) because I understood this dynamic. GGP was in technical default because of the financial crisis and its inability to roll forward short term debt taken on during the two to three years prior to the financial collapse. It was / is still cash flow positive and can cover the costs of its interest obligations, much like sovereigns with their ongoing ability to raise revenue from tax.  But GGP wisely had filed for bankruptcy as a single entity and had pulled all its various mall properties under the single corporate parent umbrella. This made GGP in effect, too big to fail. No single creditor had the legal power to force all the properties into a firesale. The court (Judge Gropper) saw it the same way and made the decision to force the parties to work out the mortgagtes (to refinance). When the creditors found out they were not going to be able to drive a hard bargain and take away the mortgaged property for much less than market value, they had to deal. Now GGP is close to exiting bankruptcy with all its property intact.

Even though sovereigns are unlikely to default in a cascading way, the global economy still remains weak.  It will take consumers and businesses a long time to regain their confidence to buy and bankers to lend.  For the overall American market, from this point on, the economy must improve significantly to get the SP500 much above 1200. But I think that is the higher probability over the next year or two as compared to a melt-down. Politically, I think President Obama is finding out that it isn’t prudent to be too anti-business. He seems to have finally gotten the point that the top priority is jobs. Health care and environment are lower priority since there is no money to pay for them if we don’t have near full employment and full tax revenues. We aren’t hearing too much health care talk from the Admin or Congress the past 2-3 weeks. To demonstrate his new-found love for business, Obama just had T-Sec Geithner spell out the capital gains tax freeze and investment tax credits for 2010. This will help jump start business and improve consumer sentiment as people start getting jobs.

As Obama and other world government leaders turn their attention towards restarting business, the world economy will heal and the markets will respond. Asian stock markets might be a little overdone just because of being the crowded trade, so I have backed off on them, for now. I have moved almost everything back to domestic large cap stocks or energy / commodities. I think 2010 will be a “consolidation” year with only a little index movement, maybe from 1100 to 1250. 2011 might be a similar year, with gradual improvement from 1250 to 1400. That would get us back to May 2008 which was about where the final dive started (down to 666). Maybe we pull back 100 points (10-12%) somewhere in the next 2-3 years. But by 2014 we can pass 1550 and set new highs, if the government continues to be supportive of business and doesn’t get too radical (seems more likely right now than 6 months ago).

I am buying up some of the banks that look like they are turning the corner and will be survivors. I have a bunch of the leveraged financial index, UYG, which is weighted towards the survivors like GS, JPM or WFC. But I also am buying some BAC now (as of two weeks ago). Even Citi might be a buy at this point, now that they have a plan to exit TARP. But I am passing on them for now.

Otherwise, my theme is Tech, commodities, energy and materials. Tech is due for a positive replacement / upgrade cycle after 10 years of being down.  Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows 7 should be the catalyst in 2010 once the IT budgets are approved. Just buy the XLK if you don’t have any favorites. SMH is the semicon index which has more beta than the XLK. My favorites in commodities tend to the miners and energy stocks, though I have recently picked up some Potash (POT).  I also have call options on (FCX) and (BHP).  This is a better way to play the weak dollar trade than gold, in my book, as operating leverage contributes to performance and generates cash flow which actually has value to an investor.  They have all outperformed Gold in 2009.  Commodities and Energy will benefit from the global economic expansion that is the natural reaction to the collapse. I find it interesting that Suncor (SU) was going up the last two days while oil futures are going down. I find that a very positive sign. I have really loaded up on Pennwest (PWE) and Provident Energy (PVX) .

Categories: Economics, Forecast

Trading Update – April 15, 2009

April 15th, 2009 Brian No comments

This market is looking very strong. Every day there is another challenge by the bears, and every day, the bulls shake it off and drive the market further up.

Today, the challenge was to Intel (INTC). It reported good earnings (well above consensus) and also decent future prospects, which is a big change for people in the tech space. The future prospects, though, were less than what some analysts expected, so the stock was sold off on profit taking. But now it is bouncing back along with the tech sector and the whole market.

Same thing happened with the financials this week. Goldman reported great earnings on Monday, stock sold off from $140 to $115 by this morning, and has now bounced back to $120 as of noon. JPM reports tomorrow and we may see a big day after the knee-jerk sell-off.

I am positioned for all of this as I have bought more Proshare Ultra Financials (UYG) today at $3.33 (sold off 1000 shares on Monday at $3.58 to take some profit, after buying for $3.15 last Friday). I have another order in at $3.05, should it fall that far, but I don’t think it will. I also have an order in for INTC at $15.05 trying to catch a bounce down from a high of $16.40 yesterday leading up to earnings. To catch more of the tech rally, I also have another order in for both XLK (tech ETF) stock at $16.30 and XLK put options for the May 17 (XLKQQ) at $1 a contract.

I am still of the belief that we will trade up like this in sawtooth fashion with a bullish trend through April and into May. Then, we will bump into the 200 day EMA for SP500 at around 970. That will represent long term resistance coinciding with the typical summer selling season. We will then move down to around 760 through the summer selloff. But until then, we have another 15% to rally and good trading opptys.

Categories: Trading

Playing the Rotations at the Bottom

August 13th, 2008 Brian No comments
Today I am sharing with you some of my recent experiences in “playing the rotations”. While I don’t have any evidence that the current market is typical of a deep market selloff, like we just experienced (I would need to research in detail 2002-03 and 1991-92 to make a proof), it is logical. At the bottom of a deep selloff, the typical pattern is a “smiley face”. The price action decelerates from the selloff into a long “basing” pattern where there is much treading of water. Traders will just move between sectors to get some action during this sideways trend. The market will consolidate behind typical early stage leaders as the market moves up the right side of the smiley face, which might be 2009 or even 2010 given the depth of this selloff.

A good example of the “Smiley Face” basing pattern is the US Currency vs. other world currencies. There is an ETF with ticker of (UUP) that allows us to chart this pattern. Notice how the declining trend is broken by the right corner of the smile. The breakout above the declining trend line at around $22.70 on July 17 (same day as Financials bottomed) was the buy signal.

So, for those who want to stay active in the market, a shorter term trading mentality is required, for at least part of the portfolio. A close eye on individual sectors and their trends along with well defined buy limits and sell stops (at chart bottoms and tops) are a must.

Today I made a couple trades that reflect this concept. I have been playing the basing of the Financials sector, as expressed by XLF or its levered cousin, UYG on the long side from $20 on up. But when UYG gets to $23, I jump back into SKF, the inverse ETF fund for the Financial sector (goes up when financial stocks go down). This pattern has been very solid since late July and I have participated in each direction each time, using sold put options on the near month, making profits on both the up and downside. This trend could continue much longer. If the financials bottomed on July 17, it will take some time before they regain their earning power so that the stock prices can advance significantly. In between, the price will just gyrate in a fairly narrow zone, as it has for a month.

I have created a “Prophet Chart” on the UYG to illustrate this action and the potential buy and sell levels based on the short term trends (usually only a few days long each). It is easy to see the pattern than is now established between $20 and $23 on this chart. This sideways action can continue for some time, until fundamentals change significantly one way or the other.

Another chart that shows promise for the sideways action is the Tech index, XLK. There is a levered version of this sector as well, the ROM which will provide a lot of volatility in its near term options. Because the Tech sector was not as overpriced in 2007 and so was not as damaged by the selloff, it is possible, even likely, that the XLK will break out sooner rather than later. Tech is typically an early cycle sector. As soon as the economy looks to recover, the Techs will break out. See the flag pattern on the chart? This is the narrowing funnel trending the highs and the lows. If the price action breaks out of a “flag” pattern, it will have quite a bit of momentum. Watch to see if XLK breaks out to the high side, at around $25.

Finally, let’s look at the Energy sector, XLE. Here is a sector that has had a large correction, but looking over a one year time frame, it can be shown that the correction may have just run its course, as it approachs the bottom from January this year. There is definite trading support for oil at $100 a barrel. So, unless we are entering a deep global recession that shuts down demand, the trading action shows that we are nearing the bottom of the materials / commodity selloff and are getting ready to bounce (and may have done so today). The price line today is just moving above the downward trend line of the recent highs. The best way to play this sector is to the upside, but with very tight stops to get out if the economy does change the fundamentals of the commodity boom, drying up demand.

See you soon.
Categories: Uncategorized

Watching the Indexes for Direction

August 7th, 2008 Brian 4 comments

Jeff asked me yesterday to keep an eye on a few key charts for signals to buy or sell within that sector, or the sector itself. So, I will monitor the S&P; 10 sectors plus a few other specialty sectors like Materials and Mining. I will post them here regularly, as there are changes to report.

We talked about Technology. After hearing the Cisco news yesterday, it seems like Tech might be taking a little turn for the better. Tech is a good sector to buy as a sector since there are a lot of casualties in that sector. The chart for the S&P; Tech is XLK. It does show a recent breakout where the third green arrow was made two days ago, so now is a time to buy the sector, or good stocks within the sector. I hope this change in trend helps out Microsoft, which I have in a big way:

Another sector to monitor is the Energy sector. We recently looked at the OIH (yesterday it was in a report I sent out). Jeff was concerned about the prospects of equipment builder RIG, which has been declining steadily along with the entire sector. You can make the comparison yourself, but both charts are down about 25% from their high and are trending lower.

RIG is getting very cheap by all measures (P/E, P/CF, Book Value, PEG, etc). But what about the overall Energy Sector, XLE? It is in a downturn and should be watched for a break to the upside. But there is no rush. When a chart is in steep decline as this one is, it can continue quite a bit lower. Don’t try to catch the falling knife, is the saying. A cheap Value guy like me, has been stabbed numerous times by not heeding this advice. The 12 month low in XLE is 10 points lower than where it is today (62.50). Don’t fight the tape is another of the oldest sayings in investing. We should wait till we get three Green arrows, before we commit new money to Energy stocks.

Finally, we should continue to watch the Banking and Financials sector as it is the source of all our economic problems (Housing is a huge contributor to economic decline with Mortgages and Building Materials in the tank, plus high construction unemployment). When Financials turn higher for good, the economy will be on its way back. But the chart right now suggests that while it may have made a bottom on July 23 when the XLF spiked lower to $17.50, it may also take a long time to come back. It looks like a sideways phase has begun where the stock price will form a “base” in the chart. This phase could take months, so represents a trading opportunity as the line wiggles within its range between 20 and 23 (today, it is right in the middle of that range, so no action is called for).

Finally, I would like to congratulate Jeff for getting out of Walmart recently, after a nice gain. It is down big today, and the chart would not have got him out till today’s drop. It had just recently started moving up to over $60 off a holding level around $57.50. Earlier the past 12 months it was as low as $42.50, so had been making higher highs for some time. This is typically very bullish. But, today’s drop is below the MA, so it is likely it will cause a breakdown in the indicators and create a Sell signal, unless quickly reversed. Jeff got out in front of this and saved himself a few bucks. Sometimes instincts are better than charts.
Categories: Uncategorized