Sunday, September 8, 2013

CHART-NADO (SECTOR MODEL RECAP)


Several key things have been in play for months and I believe they will continue to be the leaders in this environment.  We'll update a few familiar charts, but also make sure to highlight the themes that will be the beneficiaries of the same sector rotation model we've based our analysis on for several years.

Let's dive in.



In my estimation we are now in the left middle 1/3 of this graph in that we have witnessed this crazy 4 year rally in stock markets, but just to throw a wrinkle at you, we have kind of limped along in the economic recovery marked with massive repression of interest rates causing some delayed impact within the normal rotation.

My thought is still that Technology, Industrials, Basic Industry, and even Energy are the key winners now and in the short to medium term.  However because of distortions related to interest rates, finance too will benefit from net interest margin spread growth, and they should continue to benefit.  (I'll hedge my bets here and suggest that regional banks and insurance companies will win, while large money center banks may lose as they are heavily dependent on mortgage activity for some of the success.)

I'll just post the charts with little comment.

COP


KMF




XLE




 MRK





PFE



IXN



SOCL



PNC



FITB



XLF



FCX



CAT



XLI



EWC



EEM:SPX



EEM


Emerging markets seemed to have bottomed relative to the SPX and may be the area to watch in terms of "better than" performance.  


SUMMARY
We've had a correction and despite all of the crazy geo-political issues, there are simply strong looking charts and reasons to watch for a good bounce.  Technology, Financials (especially regionals), Industrials, and yes, even cyclicals and emerging markets are the place to invest.  Many of the charts are at support so further weakness would take a prudent investor out of their positions.  This is a good time to re-evaluate all positions, commit to firm stops, or widen them out if you are willing to handle a bit more volatility to ensure you maintain positions.

WILD CARDS AND GEOPOLITICS
The wild card in the context of investing right now is determining a winning strategy in the midst of amateur hour at the White House.  The President is way over his head in the foreign policy arena and his adversaries (foreign and domestic political and national rivals) are circling like sharks.  His mis-steps related to Syria are serious and his weakness here has emboldened challenges from Assad, Iran, Russia, and China.  The correct thing to do for the President now is to simply state we don't know who used chemical weapons and then suggest that we'll wait for more evidence.  Meanwhile he should continue to arm and support the terrorist rebels and engage Assad to the point in which they begin to win.  At that time, our strategy should be to withdraw arms and support till they are weakened.  This approach assures no winner arises and continues to draw the evil black eyes of Iran, China, and Russia to this little spot of dirt in the Middle East. 

Our President must learn that there is no winning in winning and there is no losing if you support and are friends with the meanest and worst strong man as long as he wins and you are committed to giving him indefinite monetary support forever (where are you Mubarak, Obama didn't mean it!).  We've had our Utopian experiments by both Bushes and President Obama.  Clearly the people in this region do not have the same value system and cannot appreciate the same type of democratic approach our country actually used a long time ago.  In addition, we cannot pick winners and losers in the region as most of the time the new guy is a lot worse than the old guy.  

My point here is simply that Obama probably won't take my sage advice and I'm sure his arrogance will be more of a guide in his approach to use a "sterile" volley of tomahawk missiles to soothe his wounded pride.  An attack will result in increased oil and gas prices, refiner losses, gold and silver gains, and an uncontrollable situation.  Keep an eye on it!

GOATMUG

Goatmug is an investor that cares about you and your family. Goatmug's Blog - Financial Perspectives From The Mountain Top is a collection of thoughts on our economy and how it impacts the lives of investors and average people. While several specific investments are named in many of his posts, these articles are simply invitations for you to do your own research and reference to these securities does not constitute financial advice. Your situation is complex and unique and you should seek professional assistance with your trading and investing. Please visit Goatmug and share your comments at http://www.goatmug.com/

Monday, August 19, 2013

MELTDOWN?

Today's 70 point drop in the Dow drop the index down to the low 15,000 area, a full 600 points off the highs of recent months.  Overall, things look really interesting in a bad way as 10 year bond yields are flashing higher, quickly and the stock market isn't exactly reacting well.  Remember, it isn't the actual 10 year bond rate that is concerning as it is still freaking low at 2.88%!  What is concerning is the speed in which it moved to the 2.88%.



Look at the HUGE move since May!

Here's the 30 Year -



WARNING SIGNS
What we really need to be watching is the equity and bond market interaction given their independent moves.  For example, if stocks continue to slide, but yields in long bonds arrest their slide (yields go down instead of up and prices of bonds go up), then it will signal a level in which bond buyers feel they are compensated for their risk AND this could mean a big exodus from equities.  Think about this for a moment, even with equity weakness, traders, fund managers, and retail guys have asked themselves...."If I get out of equities, where can I go, bonds suck, so I might as well buy dividend paying stocks".  BUT, if we get to a level where managers and traders rationalize that bond yields are decent enough to be a safe haven to potentially miss out on some equity movement, the markets are in trouble as stocks have pretty much been the only game in town for almost 6 months.

Having said that, if both equity markets and bonds go down too, you better hope you locked in gains when they were easy as I think everyone but Joe 6 Pack has been identifying exits and ensuring they aren't the last out the door.  Remember, Mom and Pop probably just entered this market fully in the last six months, it is probably time to let them have it.

MELTDOWN?
Emerging markets are struggling now and India is certainly in a total meltdown.




The Dow certainly looks like it could drop a minimum of 200 to 300 points here to get back to the lower support at 15,750.

And, speaking of meltdowns, I am no tree hugger, but I'm simply awed by the silence of the commie media when it comes to the potential threats of something that is going on right off the left coast.  I am concerned about this as I'm looking to schedule a trip to Hawaii next summer.  If any readers have some guidance for what to do and where to go, please share them via email or in the comments.

Some light hearted stuff for Monday night.....
Professor Christopher Busby speaks with the RT on the anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear accident to discuss the ongoing Japanese nightmare in Fukushima.  Like most important and real happenings in our country and in the world, you almost have to go to a foreign source for news to get a decent perspective on reality.  In the US media we'll discover that Beyonce got booed and that everyone needs medical marijuana or each boy and girl deserves to make a choice of what sex they are for that day, but we'll never hear anything meaningful about our constitutional rights being whisked away or the absolute destruction that is occurring in the Pacific Ocean right now.




Word is that the damming of the area and continuous pumping of water into the fuel holding areas has caused the underlying ground and sediment to subside.  Millions if not trillions of gallons of contaminated water are leaking into the ocean which is a nutshell, isn't good.


Have a great week, and you'd better figure out where the nearest exit is....

GOATMUG

Goatmug is an investor that cares about you and your family. Goatmug's Blog - Financial Perspectives From The Mountain Top is a collection of thoughts on our economy and how it impacts the lives of investors and average people. While several specific investments are named in many of his posts, these articles are simply invitations for you to do your own research and reference to these securities does not constitute financial advice. Your situation is complex and unique and you should seek professional assistance with your trading and investing. Please visit Goatmug and share your comments at http://www.goatmug.com/

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

FINAL CHART ROUND UP - BANKS, DIV PAYERS, AND TECH


This is the final slug of charts that I examine almost daily.  These have been the safety and defensive names that have provided such great performance over the last 3 or 4 years.  Recently, several of these "safe-trades" have been beat up as some memory of valuation and risk management must have taken hold for a brief month or two.  I'm not sure if reality or sanity will continue to persist, but if it does, the utility space along with some consumer staples should be ones to sell.

XLF


While XLF (big banks) looks a smidge weaker in the last month, it is still higher than 3 months ago.  In the last 10 months, XLF seems to get down to the mid-line of the rising channel and simply stair-step higher.  The recent headwinds seem to be nothing more than an opportunity to see XLF move to $20 where it should be a good place to add.


KRE


KRE does look nice and very similar to XLF.  The price action seems to be in uncharted territory here, I do think that like XLF we could see a slight pullback where it should be a buy.  I actually like the regional banks much more than the larger money-center banks as they are not dependent on the mortgage business.


FITB


Hum.  The risk manager in me looks at this chart and thinks that the $19.75 level could be more than just a little resistance for FITB.  If you haven't sold already, a thrust higher may be the opportunity to get out before a fall.

PNC


PNC has logged an impressive run and was swiftly knocked back as it tried to exceed $78.00.  The $76 seems to be good support.  Below that, $72 may be the next place the stock tries to defend.


MRK


$47 seems like a nice place to put a stop on MRK if you are a trader and don't want to give up big gains.  If you are looking for a longer term investment the perspective simply could be that it is still within a huge rising channel and a bounce off the lower line could bring great things.  I'm willing to be patient with this one, but am still wary of a potential double top here.

PFE


Pfizer too looks to have fallen a bit, but isn't over bought and looks actually to be building a very nice base to move higher.  I'm sticking with this one.

XLU


Call it sector rotation, call it a valuation move, call it higher interest rates.  No matter what you call it, XLU has been a fantastic longer term play for me, yet I punted it.  While one could argue that in a risk-off fall, XLU will outpace other sectors in relative terms, I think the upward momentum baton that XLU has carried has been passed on to the financials, energy, and industrials (perhaps even cyclicals!).


PFF


PFF is one of those preferred stock etfs that looks to capitalize on rising interest rates.  Unfortunately the mixed-bag of holdings in PFF cause it to be subject to significant risk as it holds Reits and other financial firms that may suffer if interest rates rise quickly.  I think PFF may be a punt in favor of cyclicals we've discussed in other posts.


XLP


Does this thing ever go down?  It's funny that even though we are not in a recession, typical recession favored type investments are simply kicking ass.  The general playbook in a recession is to buy utilities, healthcare, defense, and consumer staples.  Well somehow no one ever got the memo that we are not still in a recession as XLP continues to fire higher.  Just as a matter of good financial and portfolio management you've got to sell XLP, even though it may go higher.


IXN


I really started looking at IXN and buying it about six months ago.  I actually really liked the chart of MSFT, but didn't want to just buy that name.  IXN looks really, really nice here even though MSFT doesn't.  Here is another view of the same chart.  Let me know your thoughts as this is actually one of my favorites.



SOCL


Alright, don't laugh at this one.  This is the social media etf.  This is actually one of the few pure-play social media internet efts out there, and better ones in my opinion (if you don't mind some of the garbage in it!).  I first came to know SOCL when they announced that they would actually add the FB IPO to their etf, which made me want to short the heck out of them.  (Yes, I still think FB is a zero despite its recent big move).  Despite my thoughts on FB, SOCL contains other social media firms I actually respect like LNKD and YELP that actually have a usable and money making function.  It does contain loser stocks like Groupon too, so it isn't without its flaws.  Anyway, I put this up to highlight just how fired up these types of investments have been and remind you to party like it's 1999!  

I hope you've enjoyed the round up.  Let me know if you have questions and if you think I should begin looking at some other good set ups.

GOATMUG

Goatmug is an investor that cares about you and your family. Goatmug's Blog - Financial Perspectives From The Mountain Top is a collection of thoughts on our economy and how it impacts the lives of investors and average people. While several specific investments are named in many of his posts, these articles are simply invitations for you to do your own research and reference to these securities does not constitute financial advice. Your situation is complex and unique and you should seek professional assistance with your trading and investing. Please visit Goatmug and share your comments at http://www.goatmug.com/

Sunday, August 11, 2013

CYCLICALS CHART ROUND UP



Until the last week or so, you might have thought that gold, silver, and every metal on earth was worthless.  Chinese real data, or fake data was released and gave the shiny stuff and cyclical stuff a life saving does of drugs to perhaps stave off death for a month or two.  All intra-market analysis I do suggests that we are at extremes in terms of how far the US markets have gone relative to other markets.  It frankly may just be a cycle of cyclicals and emerging markets coming up a bit to bring things in line.  Here we go!

$GOLD


$1340 looks to be the magic number.  If I'd have to guess, I think we'll see a bit more upward momentum and then a slam down here for gold once again.  $1180 looks like support to keep loading up the truck for the zombie apocalypse.

$SILVER


Dare the shiny silver one get back into the channel of death?  Maybe.  If silver can climb just a bit further it has the possibility to go as high as $26, however if my hunch is correct, silver will fail and fall to the high $17 range.

$COPPER



China's latest doctored reports last week seems to be the saving grace for all cyclicals and copper.  JJC may be a nice option for the speculator looking to ride copper's recovery to $3.80.


FCX


I'd feel a bit more comfortable with a pound on the table buy for FCX if it were able to power convincingly over $32.  If it does, $39.00 is back in play.  Go long with a good surge higher.


DD


Nice breakout here for Dupont.  It's hard to buy more here and with any overall market weakness, it is probably time to finally harvest nice gains.

XLI


Wish I'd bought this rather than watching for literally the last 2 years.  There is probably room for this to come down to the $39 area, which at that point would be just another opportunity to buy the dip, until proven otherwise.


CAT


CAT has been the victim of a terrible global growth story.  It has still managed to fight back from the scary free-fall in the summer of 2012 and December of that year.  For all its scratching and clawing to stay above the $80 level it just seems as though a break lower is inevitable.


EEM



EEM, the emerging market ETF looked like someone was going to put it out of its misery once and for all.  The bounce off of $35 was very nice and I fully expect to see an attack on the upper boundary of $42.  Will it succeed in going higher?  If it does, it is game on for all emerging markets and we'll see massive out-performance of them relative to domestic equity markets.

EEM:SPX


Inter-market analysis of emerging markets (EEM) to the S&P500 is shown here.  Since 2011, emerging markets have been under-performing significantly and we've gotten to the point where there HAS to be some reversion to the mean where emerging markets actually post some gains on a relative basis against the US markets.  There really has only been two other times since 2007 that the EEM:SPX relationship has been this low, and in both instances, emerging markets posted monster gains.  Please note, this does not mean that the US markets will go down, it simply means that emerging markets could really outshine and US markets could be seen as fully valued while shoppers choose the potential up and coming asset class.

IDX


As much as I've been a fan of Indonesia for years, the recent beat down of IDX has been heart-breaking and wallet destroying.  There is not option here, if you are a supporter of IDX, it must hold a close over $27 this week; otherwise it is a sell or a short candidate down to $24.

EWM


$15 is a potential destination for EWM the Malaysian etf.  I would look for pretty strong lower support and if it does not bounce, it too is a sell.

EWS


Support for EWS is at $13.25.  A move below this level brings the lower channel into play, almost a full dollar lower.

EWC


EWC (Canada) just looks to be locked in a battle between levels of support.  I think this is a very nice range to trade, however the area where EWC sits now is simply in no-man's land.  Wait for a move lower to $26 or a break higher to short at $29.

EWA


As China goes, EWA goes.  If we see good news from the Asian tiger, EWA will resume its ascent.


EWJ


While not an emerging market, Japan certainly trades like it is.  Abe is showing the Fed its future, and while the threat of unlimited stimulus shocked the market for a time, we are finding that reality always comes back to bite you.  Sell Japan and anything not nailed down in Japan.  Toyota (TM) has had the mother of all moves, I think it is a fine time to sell.

GOATMUG

Goatmug is an investor that cares about you and your family. Goatmug's Blog - Financial Perspectives From The Mountain Top is a collection of thoughts on our economy and how it impacts the lives of investors and average people. While several specific investments are named in many of his posts, these articles are simply invitations for you to do your own research and reference to these securities does not constitute financial advice. Your situation is complex and unique and you should seek professional assistance with your trading and investing. Please visit Goatmug and share your comments at http://www.goatmug.com/


Saturday, August 10, 2013

ENERGY CHART ROUNDUP

I wanted to post copies of many of the charts I examine on a daily basis.  I found that there are just too many to post in one entry, so I'll blast them all out over the course of the next couple of days.  We'll look at other cyclical names, dividend payers, banks, and health insurers.  Simply drop by goatmug.com later this weekend.  We'll start with energy as it has been quite interesting of late.  If inflation and global growth is muted, why do we still have $105 oil?  Let's jump in.

XLE

Recent weakness is displayed in the last week, but up, up and away seems to be the overall trend.  The overhead resistance level is at $84.50, but this certainly could continue with this week's negative direction and go lower to the high $70's.

$NAT GAS


If $3.25 doesn't hold, it is bombs away to $2.75

$WTIC

There's a bunch going on in this chart, but if oil gets above $107 area, we could be talking about $150's.  We'll need some type of event in the Middle East.....lucky for us, the Middle East is calm and there are never any situations that boil over and cause tensions that impact the rest of the world.


UGA


Gas looks weak and supply data suggests that UGA will go lower.


COP

Um, just fantastic.  With nice gains on the books and nat gas looking weak there might be a reason to sell with overall market weakness.  The aim would simply to reload and buy more on a pullback in the $58 area.


PSX


The COP-cousin just doesn't have the same mo-jo as it's close relative.  Higher oil prices and lower gasoline prices will hurt this guy and this is why the stock looks poor.


OXY


This has been one of my favorite charts to watch over the last 4 or 5 years.  Weakness here is seen in the chart and we could see a pretty significant plunge to the high 70's or lower.


APA


Short.  I've hated this one for a long time, it seems like it won't be long till it rejoins its old channel much lower.



KMF


This is a MLP type investment closed end fund.  It is still within its upward channel and we may have an opportunity to see it test the lower limit.  If it bounces, buy.


CHK


Despite my many posts citing my dislike for CHK, the shedding of Aubrey McClendon seems to have been a very good thing for the stock.


SRV

My guess is that you'd call this a diamond pattern if I drew it correctly.  I'd have to guess that it ends up to $8.80.  This is another version of a closed-end fund for MLPs, but is more leveraged and has a poorer management from what I can tell.

Oil and gas have often times adhered to the sell in May and go away saying.  That would not have served you well here in the energy sector this year, but could August be the time to get out of dodge?  I believe we'll see lower prices in the equities and perhaps oil my go higher if the Middle East tensions do not abate.




GOATMUG

Goatmug is an investor that cares about you and your family. Goatmug's Blog - Financial Perspectives From The Mountain Top is a collection of thoughts on our economy and how it impacts the lives of investors and average people. While several specific investments are named in many of his posts, these articles are simply invitations for you to do your own research and reference to these securities does not constitute financial advice. Your situation is complex and unique and you should seek professional assistance with your trading and investing. Please visit Goatmug and share your comments at http://www.goatmug.com/