Go Away in May…Or Maybe April?

Although Apple and a few other money magnet stocks are holding up, most other stocks and most sectors are starting to weaken technically. If Apple starts to sell off we’ll probably get an accelerated market selloff.

Seasonality says we stay weak through spring and summer, but Q1 earnings will set the tone for the slow months. At the end of this week we get Google and JP Morgan earnings. These should be pretty good “tells” for where the market goes in the near term.

If  Spain’s debt problems cause more general weakness in U.S. markets, it may create opportunities to buy some of our best U.S. companies that are stuffed with cash and well positioned in global markets.

What to do? Clean out underperformers. Trim position size in big gainers. Make a shopping list of stocks/funds you want to buy or add to if they get cheap.

What Divergence?

A week ago my post was about market technical indicators that seemed to be pointing to a pullback in the market. Some industry groups like energy, basic materials and transportation are still weak, but many other groups seem to be recovering their mojo. Some, like tech, healthcare, and retail, are now trading at new 52 week highs.

Good economic news and an easy Fed continue to make life difficult for those (like me) who have felt the market needs a rest. Although trading volume is low and the advance/decline line is not robust, the market does not want to go down. It seems to be the classic “Wall of Worry” condition where too many funds are caught on the wrong side of the market and are forced to buy.

Bottom Line: Can’t fight an easy Fed or a market with an unbroken trend. Trimming laggards and taking profits on partial positions is still smart, but selling aggressively or buying extended stocks aggressively probably isn’t.

Diverging

Some early technical indicators seem to be diverging from the uptrend. I’m feeling it could be the beginning of a correction (maybe 5-10% in most stock groups.) MACD is rolling over in most groups, and in recent days we’ve finished on the weak side, which is not the sign of a market that wants to continue to go higher.

Traders should prepare to close out marginal positions and tighten stops on others if a general market selloff accelerates. Investors (including 401k accounts) should then reduce or clean out this year’s underperformers, and ring the cash register on a portion of their biggest gainers.

I think the correction, if it develops, will provide opportunities to scale into a shopping list of stocks/funds. By industry I’m watching: tech, biotech, select pharma, select energy, gold, and almost anything that pays a solid dividend. I might look at some regional bank ETFs, potentially building strength after several difficult years.

Nice Start to the New Year

The Dow is up 5%, the S&P 7%, and the Nasdaq 100 12% in the New Year, continuing the trend from December. The impetus seems to have come from an improving  economy and better jobs reports in the U.S., plus the realization that Greece doesn’t spell the end of the world, whatever the outcome there.

It’s emotionally comfortable to project this trend onto the remainder of the year, but we’ve come pretty far pretty fast since the end of November. Although I feel the U.S. economy can contiue to improve this year, it looks like Europe’s economy is going to struggle some (probably in current market prices,) and there are some troubling signs in China (maybe not in current prices.)

As well, some of the most popular stocks have charts that are starting to look parabolic as others are running up against overhead resistance. There were quite a few poor end of year earnings reports and disappointing outlooks from several CEOs.

Having said all this, large cap, multi-national companies with solid and growing dividends and solid end of year reports are still attractive on pullbacks. Valuations don’t seem to be stretched in several industries like telecom, “old” tech, and healthcare, among others.

Emerging markets have rallied nicely in the past few months, after a bad 2011. It looks like time to trim a little there if you’ve got a full allocation (more than 10% of investable assets.) If you’re underinvested in emerging markets (less than 5%) a substantial (10% or more) pullback would probably be an opportunity since they are still well off their early 2011 highs. A pullback in gold could also be an opportunity as long as it stays above $1500 per ounce.

This is a very good time to go into our 401k accounts and trim laggards and research new funds that may have been added to your plan. Be willing to add to your best funds on market pullbacks. (This process is how you insulate your 401k from multi-year underperformance.)

As always, call or email with questions. Bob

 

Investing in 2012

Although the December rally seems to have stalled just above S&P 1250 (not far from where we started 2011,) there’s been a nice rally  in some big cap recession resistant stocks like food (e.g. Kraft, General Mills,) and drug stocks (e.g. Abbott Labs and Pfizer.)

Some big retailer rallied into the end of the year while others flattened out after the early December lift from the November lows. Tech also flattened out while oil and gas stocks, although not as strong as food and drugs, did pretty well by Santa.

The big market issues facing us in the New Year continue to be:

  • Will Europe’s continued incremental support of its banks and sovereign debt prevent the Eurozone from unwinding.
  • Will some important economies, like the U.S. and China, continue to grow, however slowly, even if Europe goes into recession.

My view is that Europe doesn’t get enough credit in the U.S. financial press for what they have done already to stabilize thier financial system. I believe they will continue to work on it in their slow, incremental way, and the Euro will still be one of the world’s top currencies at the end of 2012.

In the U.S. the job picture doesn’t look much better going into the New Year than it has been in most of 2011, but there are consistent signs of growth in several of the recently announced economic stats, especially manufacturing.

The U.S. consumer came alive in the 4th quarter, although it’s not clear that will continue into 2012. People are still paying down debt and not optimistic about their home values. Most analysts expect the Fed to maintain an easy monetary policy through 2012, as do I.

Europe is China’s largest end market, so if Europe slows down so will China. Too, the property boom in China shows signs of slowing. However, few analysts expect China’s growth rate to slow to the point where it’s a problem, as long as the U.S., China’s second largest export market, avoids recession.

So, global recession concerns and Euro problems balanced by an easy Fed and some U.S. growth seems to be already reflected in stock (and bond) prices, and I don’t see much changing in 2012.

What to do? Dividend yield on stocks bought on market or sector pullbacks have the best chance of providing positive returns in this coming year’s probable environment. The stock groups mentioned above, food, drugs, energy,  would be the first place to look. 

Bonds, having  priced in Fed Policy and a slow economy, offer little return potential in 2012, although they are still an important asset class for diversification.

Some selected short and intermediate term high grade corporate bonds in the banking and deep cyclical sectors, as well as selected muni’s, may offer good entries during the year for both decent yield and some appreciation.

Gold? Hold it if you own it. Buy it on dips if you don’t own enough (5-10% of your investments.)

As always, stops are important, cash is not trash, and stay diversified.

Happy New Year

Here Comes Santa Claus?

Well, after my early November post the market did test support at 1200 (S&P 500) and promptly went down another 3% to 1162, basically the middle of the late summer/early fall trading range.

Then we found support. This last weekend Central Bankers, led by our Fed, brought the markets a gift, actually a gift swap-Dollars for Euros. Now we’re back over 1200 at 1250 and looking good technically.

The market’s Season of Good Will is upon us and, assuming more progress in Europe, we’ve got a good set up for a market that will be reluctant to go down. Several big funds may be under-invested and feeling the need to buy pullbacks.

Testing Support

Big (3%+) sell off today off the continued dithering in Europe-adding Italian dithering to Greek dithering.

We’re getting near the top of the late summer/early fall trading range and near to the 50 dma on the major U.S. indices. I think these levels will prove to be good support, assuming the EU doesn’t disintegrate. (Earnings season is out of the way.)

What to do? Add to your best growth and dividend positions when they begin to bounce off important support. Use stops under the recent lows where you can.

Good Set-Up?

From early August through early October the market (S&P 500) traded in a range roughlybetween 1120 and 1220. In late October we broke out to 1280, then pulled back this week to 1220, the top of the late summer base. We’re holding above 1220  (in spite of the fixation on Europe debt.) This is known as a Good Set Up. Combined with good seasonality (The Holidays,) we could end the year with a better market than many expect.

Although the Greek Prime Minister’s referendum may not survive the week, we still have a softening global economy and shaky banks to check our enthusiasm. We should continue to hold our best dividend paying stocks and funds. A few select  growth stocks can be added on pullbacks to support. Use stops, and keep cash (money market, short term bonds) nearby.

Wow!

Up 2.75-5.25% on the major indices today. Looks like we got enough of a “fix” out of Europe. Earnings, although somewhat mixed, didn’t seem to get in the way.

It’s not a good idea to chase them, especially since the market technically is overbought, and many charts look extended. If one were feeling left out, adding to laggards could work, as long as earnings are out of the way or seem safe. I’m also seeing a few good stocks not too far above trend lines.

Traders should take some off the table. Investors, aside from my comments above, should wait for trend line support to catch up with the stocks/funds on their buy list.

As always, email or call with questions (or answers :) ) Bob

 

What? Good Behavior?

The market is like a teenager; you can’t consistently predict its behavior. I rarely expect it to behave the way I want it to in the near term, but it seems to be consolidating last week’s run-up quite well, holding above 1200 on the S&P. Hoping for a Q4 move up, we like this action.

We’ve got another week of heavy earnings announcements. So far they’re coming in mixed, which I think was expected. If they continue mixed but with a few important really good ones I think we hold something close to current levels.

As well, lower levels of frustration from Europe should keep markets steady. There’s been some positive merger (Kinder Morgan and ElPaso) and spinoff (Abbott) news that helps the tone, too.

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