Monday, June 30, 2008

Why is the Dow the underperformer?

The U.S. recession talk has been going on since last October, so this topic should be nothing new if you have been keeping up with the markets. Really, it is just a matter of when not if anymore. During this same time, everyone was advising to put money overseas in the stronger emerging markets (China, Russia, Brazil, and India) and avoid the frail American economy. Recently however, there are now talks that the U.S. slowdown will spill over into the global market.

The rise in commodity prices, especially crude oil, has crimped the American economy – consumer and corporation. The analysts are now expecting the emerging markets to slow with the American economy.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average contains 30 stocks which have enormous overseas exposure. The S&P 500 contains many of the same stocks, but there are also smaller, more domestically based companies that will not be as affected by slowing global demand. So relatively, the S&P 500 components are not as dependent on the global markets as the Dow components are.

For instance, Alcoa, Boeing, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intel, Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, and Proctor & Gamble (just to name a few) are all Dow components that rely heavily on international sales (and the weak U.S. dollar). These companies almost rely more on their international sales than their domestic sales (some actually do more business overseas).

This change in the global growth forecast has negatively affected American companies, especially ones that sell goods to these once-growing, now thought to be slowing, emerging economies.

Also, you can look at the Russell 2000 Index which tracks small cap stocks (minimal international exposure). This index has outpaced the S&P 500 by 4% over the last month and a half.

Market Summary: Mon. June 30, 2008

DJIA 11,350.01 +3.50 (+0.03%)
Nasdaq 2,292.98 -22.65 (-0.98%)
S&P 500 1,280.00 +1.62 (+0.13%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.61 bln

2-Yr Note 2.63% -0.02
10-Yr Note 3.99% unch
30-Yr Bond 4.53% unch

Dollar Index 72.463 +0.103
Crude Oil (Aug) 140.00 -0.21
Nat Gas (Aug) 13.353 +0.155
Gold (Aug) 926.20 -3.10

Friday, June 27, 2008

Market Summary: Fri. June 27, 2008

DJIA 11,346.51 -106.91 (-0.94%)
Nasdaq 2,315.63 -5.74 (-0.25%)
S&P 500 1,278.38 -4.77 (-0.37%)
NYSE Volume 2.24 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.65% -0.03
10-Yr Bond 3.99% -0.08
30-Yr Bond 4.53% -0.09

Dollar Index 72.360 -0.127
Crude Oil (Aug) 140.21 +0.57
Nat Gas (Aug) 13.198 -0.050
Gold (Aug) 931.30 +16.20

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Market Summary: Thurs. June 26, 2008

DJIA 11,453.42 -358.41 (-3.13%)
Nasdaq 2,321.37 -79.89 (-3.44%)
S&P 500 1,283.15 -38.82 (-3.03%)
NYSE Volume 1.54 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.68% -0.14
10-Yr Bond 4.07% -0.05
30-Yr Bond 4.62% -0.03

Dollar Index 72.487 -0.446
Crude Oil (Aug) 139.64 +5.09
Nat Gas (Aug) 13.248 +0.382
Gold (Aug) 915.10 +32.80

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Cool Numbers: Tech

"Worldwide, people sent 1.9 trillion text messages last year" <- That's a lot of money spent. That stat comes from this article, written in last month's Technology Review, a fantastic magazine put out by MIT (I guess it's like their Harvard Business Review, my all-time favorite publication).

Another cool article in the same magazine talks about the founder of modern venture capital, a Frenchman by the name of Georges Doriot. He earned his stripes in the US in the 20s-40s. They mention a biography in the article that I might pick up. I recently read Faust In Copenhagen: A Struggle for the Soul of Physics, that discusses the lives and discoveries made in the community of theoretical physicists at the beginning of the 1920 and 30s, when quantum mechanics were pioneering a new understanding of our universe. The first half of the century must have been incredibly exciting for developments in science and business, but it is nothing like we're seeing now... especially in areas where they merge so closely, like the web. Here's one last fantastic (huge) article about concerns over monetizing Web 2.0.

The biggest issue? Advertising, which these types of websites are depending on for income, is being ignored by users. Basically, the best model is Google's Adwords Auction.

"Advertising on Google works because visitors come to Google looking for specific information. If a user who types "scooter" in the site's search field is hoping to buy a scooter, the keyword ads that appear at the right of the search results can be more useful than the results themselves. In social networks, on the other hand, users show up to find friends; ads are, at best, irrele­vant to that goal. The click-through rates on social-­networking sites bear this out. While around 2 percent of Google users actually click on a given ad (and the number is much higher when users are conducting searches for purchasing reasons), fewer than .04 percent of Facebook users do, according to a media buyer's report obtained last year by the Silicon Valley blog Valleywag."

THIS is intelligent advertising, because Google is taking advantage of people who are actively looking for something, while the Web 2.0 companies have to depend simply on a large user base. The only difference between advertising on Facebook and advertising on CNN is Facebook can better target people with specific ads - but the nature of the advertising remains the same.

The article is long, and talks about some of the interesting failures to address this issue, like Facebook's ill-fated Beacon program, and MySpace's HyperTargeting system. I'll leave it to you to read it.

Market Summary: Wed. June 25, 2008

DJIA 11,811.83 +4.40 (+0.04%)
Nasdaq 2,401.26 +32.98 (+1.37%)
S&P 500 1,321.97 +7.68 (+0.58%)
NYSE Volume 1.40 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.82% -0.05
10-Yr Bond 4.12% +0.02
30-Yr Bond 4.65% unch

Dollar Index 72.933 -0.308
Crude Oil (Aug) 134.55 -2.45
Nat Gas (Aug) 12.866 -0.260
Gold (Aug) 882.30 -9.30

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Market Summary: Tues. June 24, 2008

DJIA 11,807.43 -34.93 (-0.30%)
Nasdaq 2,368.28 -17.46 (-0.74%)
S&P 500 1,314.29 -3.71 (-0.28%)
NYSE Volume 1.34 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.87% -0.11
10-Yr Bond 4.10% -0.09
30-Yr Bond 4.65% -0.06

Dollar Index 73.241 -0.193
Crude Oil (Aug) 137.00 +0.26
Nat Gas (Aug) 13.126 -0.196
Gold (Aug) 891.60 +4.40

Those Hedge Fund Guys

American icon Tom Wolfe (think Electric Cool-Aid Acid Test, Ken Kesey, 1969) put out an awesome article for Conde Nast about the characters of the uber-rich titans who manage hedge funds, lambasting them for their coarse attempts at high-culture, and their towering hubris. "These people" are, to Mr. Wolfe, the American Pirates, burning and raiding companies

It's long, but it's a classic read.

So do yourself a favor and read it.

Here's an excerpt:
"The freebooters have only contempt for other types of money managers, who always play it safe. They reserve a special scorn for mutual fund managers, a breed they call “pure vanilla.” Corporate C.E.O.’s don’t come off much better, not even “superstars” such as Lee Iacocca and Jack Welch...C.E.O.’s are people who expend their energies in binges of insincerity, holding the hands of shareholders and board members, constantly “negotiating” with government, with labor, and with God knows who else, constantly temporizing, compromising—resorting to flattery and “charm,” both of which are unmanly—striving to look dignified, clad in the obligatory dark suit, white shirt, and red or Arctic-blue necktie. That goes for C.E.O.’s and everybody else who works in investment banking, for the Merrill Lynches and Morgan Stanleys, with one exception: the traders.

THE TRADERS ARE ON THE FRONT LINES moment by moment, pulling the trigger with only seconds to think about it. They are our kind! They are aggressive—real men! Their plain vanilla C.E.O.’s know it too. They will pay a daring, battle-hardened trader $50 million and up per year to keep him from defecting to our pirate fleet. They pay them more than they pay themselves, because they are worth more, because they are real men, because they are willing to fight."

Monday, June 23, 2008

Market Summary: Mon. June 23, 2008

DJIA 11,824.36 -0.33 (-0.00%)
Nasdaq 2,385.74 -20.35 (-0.85%)
S&P 500 1,318.00 +0.07 (+0.01%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.09 bln

2-Yr Note 2.98% +0.10
10-Yr Note 4.19% +0.03
30-Yr Bond 4.71% unch

Dollar Index 73.434 +0.404
Crude Oil (Aug) 136.74 +1.38
Nat Gas (July) 13.203 +0.209
Gold (Aug) 887.20 -16.50

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Cool Numbers: Giving

Remember these? I barely do either... But either way, here is another cool number!

According to GivingUSA, charitable giving in 2006 reached a record $295.02 billion, which Slate's Moneybox noted was something like 2.2% of our nation's GDP. Excluding disaster gifts from the year previously, (remember 2005?), that's a yoy increase of 6.6%. Pretty cool, yeah? Now, part of that 2006 record comes from Warren Buffet's 1.9billion donation (which will amount to $30 billion over the next 20 years).

The Moneybox article's focus is actually less uplifting - the author suggests that our economic turmoil has recently, and will continue to hurt charitable giving in the near future. This is because, not surprisingly, "...philanthropy is tethered directly to the health of the overall economy, and in particular to the health of the upper-middle-class consumer."

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Gone Bananas!

There was a pretty cool Op-Ed in the Times recently about bananas. Not surprisingly, rising fuel costs have hurt banana distribution, and is affecting the value of publicly traded companies, like Cincinatti-based Chiquita. The Wall Street Journal attributes Chiquita's 29% dip in stock price to recent bad weather and a spike in demand for milk and meat (my guess due to the rising disposable income of people in developing countries).

Bananas, traditionally the cheapest of America's popular fruits, actually have a pretty interesting economic history.

From the NYT:

"That bananas have long been the cheapest fruit at the grocery store is astonishing. They’re grown thousands of miles away, they must be transported in cooled containers and even then they survive no more than two weeks after they’re cut off the tree. Apples, in contrast, are typically grown within a few hundred miles of the store and keep for months in a basket out in the garage. Yet apples traditionally have cost at least twice as much per pound as bananas...

They became a staple only after the men who in the late 19th century founded the United Fruit Company (today’s Chiquita) figured out how to get bananas to American tables quickly — by clearing rainforest in Latin America, building railroads and communication networks and inventing refrigeration techniques to control ripening. The banana barons also marketed their product in ways that had never occurred to farmers or grocers before, by offering discount coupons, writing jingles and placing bananas in schoolbooks and on picture postcards. They even hired doctors to convince mothers that bananas were good for children."
The article also briefly describes the terrifying control the United Banana had over the many "banana republics" in Latin America, which kept costs low by denying many human rights to the citizens of the countries they grew bananas in. One startling example was the 1954 overthrowing of the democratically elected government of Guatemala by United Fruit. And apparantly "labor is still cheap in these countries, and growers still resort to heavy-handed tactics."

Banana companies are also able to optimize economies of scale (most notably by controlling ripening rates) by only selling one species of banana, the Cavendish. Prior to that, the only thing you could get was the Gros Michel, but a blight known as the Panama disease wiped them all out. I've written previously about the growing concern over massive food loss due to disease, and it look's like the Cavendish banana's goose is cooked. The disease, which is killing off plantations of Cavendish crops as we speak, is expected to reach Latin America (where the US gets its bananas) in the next 5-20 years.

The only thing that can probably be done is to start growing a different kind of banana - but to do that, genetic engineers must research other under-used strains of banana (of which there are many), to find a more resistant cousin. This will undoubtedly be of incredible importance to the banana industry in the coming years, although some say the big companies are not moving fast enough.

A side note, ff you're really interested, the book Banana: The Fruit That Changed The World is supposed to be pretty interesting. How silly it is the titles publishers and media-makers dream up to grab our attention. And just to seal the deal on how ridiculous this article is...here's some mildly interesting banana trivia

Friday, June 20, 2008

Market Summary: Fri. June 20, 2008

DJIA 11,842.69 -220.40 (-1.86%)
Nasdaq 2,406.09 -55.97 (-2.33%)
S&P 500 1,317.93 -24.90 (-1.89%)
NYSE Composite Volume 2.01 bln

2-Yr Note 2.88% -0.11
10-Yr Note 4.16% -0.06
30-Yr Bond 4.71% -0.05

Dollar Index 73.030 -0.453
Crude Oil (July) 134.62 +2.69
Nat Gas (July) 12.994 +0.133
Gold (Aug) 903.70 -0.50

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Market Summary: Thurs. June 19 2008

DJIA 12,063.09 +34.03 (+0.28%)
Nasdaq 2,462.07 +32.36 (+1.31%)
S&P 500 1,342.83 +5.02 (+0.37%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.29 bln

2-Yr Note 2.99% +0.10
10-Yr Note 4.22% +0.06
30-Yr Bond 4.76% +0.04

Dollar Index 73.483 +0.043
Crude Oil (July) 131.93 -4.75
Nat Gas (July) 12.861 -0.349
Gold (Aug) 904.20 +10.70

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Market Summary: Wed. June 18, 2008

DJIA 12,029.06 -131.24 (-1.09%)
Nasdaq 2,429.71 -28.02 (-1.15%)
S&P 500 1,337.81 -13.12 (-0.98%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.28 bln

2-Yr Note 2.89% -0.05
10-Yr Note 4.16% -0.07
30-Yr Bond 4.72% -0.06

Dollar Index 73.440 -0.074
Crude Oil (July) 136.68 +2.67
Nat Gas (July) 13.210 +0.258
Gold (Aug) 893.50 +6.60

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Market Summary: Tues. June 17, 2008

DJIA 12,160.30 -108.79 (-0.89%)
Nasdaq 2,457.73 -17.05 (-0.69%)
S&P 500 1,350.93 -9.21 (-0.68%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.09 bln

2-Yr Note 2.94% -0.08
10-Yr Note 4.23% -0.02
30-Yr Bond 4.78% +0.01

Dollar Index 73.514 -0.096
Crude Oil (July) 134.01 -0.60
Nat Gas (July) 12.952 +0.019
Gold (Aug) 886.90 +0.60

Monday, June 16, 2008

Market Summary: Mon. June 16, 2008

DJIA 12,269.08 -38.27 (-0.31%)
Nasdaq 2,474.78 +20.28 (+0.83%)
S&P 500 1,360.14 +0.11 (+0.01%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.16 bln

2-Yr Note 3.02% -0.03
10-Yr Note 4.25% -0.02
30-Yr Bond 4.77% -0.02

Dollar Index 73.610 -0.536
Crude Oil (July) 134.61 -0.25
Nat Gas (July) 12.933 +0.308
Gold (Aug) 886.30 +13.20

Friday, June 13, 2008

Market Summary: Fri. June 13, 2008

DJIA 12,307.35 +165.77 (+1.37%)
Nasdaq 2,454.50 +50.15 (+2.09%)
S&P 500 1,360.03 +20.16 (+1.50%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.22 bln

2-Yr Note 3.05% +0.02
10-Yr Note 4.27% +0.04
30-Yr Bond 4.79% +0.02

Dollar Index 74.146 +0.287
Crude Oil (July) 134.86 -1.88
Nat Gas (July) 12.625 -0.173
Gold (Aug) 873.10 +1.10

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Market Summary: Thurs. June 12, 2008

DJIA 12,141.58 +57.81 (+0.48%)
Nasdaq 2,404.35 +10.34 (+0.43%)
S&P 500 1,339.87 +4.38 (+0.33%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.33 bln

2-Yr Note 3.03% +0.20
10-Yr Note 4.23% +0.13
30-Yr Bond 4.77% +0.05

Dollar Index 73.859 +0.650
Crude Oil (July) 136.74 +0.36
Nat Gas (July) 12.798 +0.138
Gold (Aug) 872.00 -10.90

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Market Summary: Wed. June 11, 2008

DJIA 12,083.77 -205.99 (-1.68%)
Nasdaq 2,394.01 -54.93 (-2.24%)
S&P 500 1,335.49 -22.95 (-1.69%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.39 bln

2-Yr Note 2.83% -0.08
10-Yr Note 4.10% -0.01
30-Yr Bond 4.72% +0.02

Dollar Index 73.209 -0.487
Crude Oil (July) 136.38 +5.07
Nat Gas (July) 12.660 +0.225
Gold (Aug) 882.90 +11.70

The Fed & Interest Rates

In the last few trading days, expectations about Federal Reserve policy have changed drastically. When the Fed cut its target rate to 2%, Bernanke mentioned that the risks to inflation and growth were about equal. Most people took his comments as meaning that there would be no more rate cuts and rates would remain at 2% for some time (at least until the health of the economy looked a little more promising).

On Friday, the European Central Bank (ECB) President Jean-Claude Trichet made a statement hinting that the ECB will be raising rates at its next meeting. This news, coupled with the poor employment number, equaled trouble for the dollar at the end of last week. However, over the weekend Bernanke and his colleagues at the Federal Reserve stepped in and made comments that supported the dollar. Bernanke also hinted that rates could go higher to combat inflationary pressures. In a matter of three days, the dollar went from free-fall to near bull mode. All the interest rate futures are now pricing in multiple rate hikes by the end of the year. The Fed is expected to keep its target rate at 2% at its meeting later this month, but by the end of the year traders are betting on a 75 basis point increase. In my view, I think the traders are getting ahead of themselves.

As of right now, the Fed needs to keep its target rate at 2% for the following reasons:

1) Five consecutive months of contraction in the job market. The only statistic that remains strong is the initial jobless claims number which is holding steady and still above typical recessionary levels.

2) Continued weakness in the housing market. Mortgage rates are resetting and if the Fed raises rates, the delinquency rate on sub-prime loans will surely increase.

3) GDP at a standstill and a struggling consumer. With record commodity prices, the consumer has begun to shift its spending habits and many businesses are expected to slow because of this adjustment.

4) A broken financial system. When the Fed cuts rates (and the yield curve becomes steeper) banks can make more money in their lending businesses. However, if the Fed raises rates, the fragile banks will face another unneeded headwind.

5) Finally, in my opinion, if the Fed raises rates 75 basis points by the end of the year (which is very wishful thinking barring no extraordinary events) it will just look bad. What’s the point of raising rates when we just finished lowering them 325 basis points? Typically, everyone says rate cuts take about 9 months to take effect so the economy is just beginning to feel these rates cuts. It is too early for the Fed to tighten its monetary policy.

The market has been extremely choppy and volatile of late, mostly due to uncertainty about the economy, surging energy prices, continued weakness in the housing market, and renewed concerns among the financials.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Market Summary: Tues. June 10, 2008

DJIA 12,289.76 +9.44 (+0.08%)
Nasdaq 2,448.94 -10.52 (-0.43%)
S&P 500 1,358.44 -3.32 (-0.24%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.39 bln

2-Yr Note 2.91% +0.18
10-Yr Note 4.11% +0.09
30-Yr Bond 4.70% +0.06

Dollar Index 73.696 +0.842
Crude Oil (July) 131.31 -3.04
Nat Gas (July) 12.435 -0.169
Gold (Aug) 871.20 -26.90

Monday, June 9, 2008

Market Summary: Mon. June 9, 2008

DJIA 12,280.32 +70.51 (+0.57%)
Nasdaq 2,459.46 -15.10 (-0.61%)
S&P 500 1,361.76 +1.08 (+0.08%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.36 bln

2-Yr Note 2.73% +0.33
10-Yr Note 4.02% +0.08
30-Yr Bond 4.64% -0.01

Dollar Index 72.854 +0.464
Crude Oil (July) 134.35 -4.19
Nat Gas (July) 12.604 -0.089
Gold (Aug) 898.10 -0.90

Unbelievable...

I'm averse to making short posts, but this is just too unreal, and really needs no amount of introduction, nor any kind of "analysis."

Check. This. Out.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Market Summary: Fri. June 6, 2008

All I can say is ‘wow!’ Thursday morning crude oil was just below $122 per barrel and Friday it touched $139 per barrel. That is a 14% move in less than two days! The Commodity Futures Trade Commission (CFTC) has mentioned price manipulation in certain markets and I am becoming more and more convinced with this recent move in crude oil prices. To put this move in perspective, just ten years ago crude oil was at $11 per barrel. On Friday the price of one barrel increased by $11. Off of this ridiculous move in crude oil prices, the national average for a gallon of gas surpassed $4 for the first time.

Thursday, the markets got a nice boost from Wal-Mart and CostCo after the companies posted better-than-expected same store sales for May. Oil did manage to gain $5 on the day thanks to comments from the European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet. Trichet said the ECB might raise rates to combat inflation. This statement put downward pressure on the dollar because the Euro will become relatively stronger and consequently, commodity prices rallied. I was a little surprised the markets did not sell off in the afternoon after the release of this statement. Also, S&P finally lowered its ratings on Ambac and MBIA, but it was not too much of a market moving event because S&P and the other credit rating agencies have been so far behind the curve.

Friday was a completely different story for the markets as they finished down about 3%. The unemployment number came in at 5.5%, much higher than the expected 5.0%. This unexpected news caused the markets to open significantly lower and the selling pressures increased when Morgan Stanley said it expects oil prices to be at $150 by July 4th. Off of this news, the dollar and stocks tanked while crude oil surged to another new record.

Financials were also very weak the entire week. There have been concerns regarding Lehman Brother’s liquidity and speculation that the company will be raising capital. Washington Mutual and Wachovia both gave their CEOs the ax. Right now, the markets are on edge waiting for the next shoe to drop in the financial sector. Adding to the uncertainty is surging crude oil and gas prices which are significantly pinching the consumer.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Obama vs. McCain: Economics

The first of many posts, no doubt, here is a quick breakdown of some important economic differences between John McCain and Barack Obama.

This WSJ article has done a good job of laying out the differences, although I am sure positions will change as we approach November.

Concerning taxes, Obama is following the traditional Dem policy: lower taxes for middle class, and raise for the wealthy. In terms of business, Obama wants to support a capital gains tax on private equity and hedge funds, and an overall raise for capital gains and dividend tax rates from 15% to somewhere between 20% and 25%.

Now hedge funds and PE shops are pretty easy targets for politicking liberals. They have gotten some bad press (I remember reading a lot of griping over the winter) about the meager taxes they pay, relative to other financial companies. However, as David Rubenstein, co-founder of Carlyle Group, noted, private equity has grown to be an incredibly important part of the US economy, and is one of the last bastions of US business dominance. Furthermore, private equity has largely been financed by investments from pension funds, who have grown dependent on PE's high returns; so taxation would inadvertently hurt retirees dependent on their pensions.

McCain wants to lower the corporate tax from 35% to 25%, and require a 3/5 majority in Congress to raise taxes in the future. McCain cap gains and dividends tax the same as it is. This would (probably) do a lot of good to foster growth in our near-recessionary economy (although the verdict is still out on whether or not this "recession" is limited to housing and finance).

In terms of trade, the Journal suggests that this is a matter of pro- and anti-globalization, although that may be putting words in Obama's mouth, who is arguably anti-globalization. Trade hasn't been much of an issue recently, as exports are up 15.5% this year (probably due to our weak dollar more than anything else).

Obama said in Pennsylvania in April that “trade should work not just for some Americans, but for all Americans, not just for Wall Street, but for Main Street,” and is a proponent of including labor and environmental provisions in trade agreements with other countries. Elsewhere, Obama has promised that he “will fight for a trade policy that opens up foreign markets to support good American jobs,” although I have no idea how he expects that to happen, as opening up foreign markets would do anything but support costly American jobs.

McCain expresses a much less isolationist rhetoric, stating that "the U.S. should engage in multilateral, regional and bilateral efforts to reduce barriers to trade, level the global playing field and build effective enforcement of global trading rules." The result of this rhetoric is theoretically healthier and more competitive multinational corporations (many of which are based in the US), as well as raising the standard of living in developing countries through increased foreign direct investment (a good thing).

Now as a good college student, I am naturally leaning towards Obama, and look forward to seeing how his rhetoric (hopefully) shifts towards the center as debate heats up between the two. It is worth mentioning as well that McCain is notoriously ignorant of economics, which is also pretty disappointing.

And something of a surprise, guess who Mr. Murdoch is leaning towards....

The January Effect


I learned this at work the other day and thought I would share. Turns out taxes do more than just take your money away. The January effect is a bounce in stock prices in January due to the absence of abnormal selling pressure taxes create. This does not happen in all stocks; you see the most results from small cap stocks that have gotten beaten down during the previous year, although mid to larger cap stocks are affected also, just not as much. There are a couple reasons for this phenomena. First is because of window dressing from professional investors that manage large funds. They eliminate their losses from their portfolio and add winners to improve their perceived performance. This is
because professional investors are evaluated on both their investment results and consistency of their investment philosophy. This also occurs at the end of each quarter because of professional investors; however, it does not result in the same increase in stock prices. The second reason is because of abnormal selling pressure prior to the end of the year. This pressure is a result of taxes. People/investors want to sell their stocks that have lost them money during the year to obtain the tax losses. Thus, towards the end of the year everyone sells their losers which causes them to go down more. When the New Year begins there is no abnormal selling pressure from taxes. This lack of selling pressure results in increased prices of stocks that were affected from the abnormal selling pressure. The bounce usually occurs within the first 10 – 14 days of the year. If no bounce occurs within the first two weeks, there usually will not be a bounce. Here is a good example of the January Effect on Las Vegas Sands Corp (LVS). Back In 2005 LVS hit a high of $49.05 in Feb; hit its low of $31.37 in Oct.; rebounded to 45.51 on Nov 25 and closed two weeks later at $38.73. This decrease could have resulted from the abnormal selling pressure. The last trading day of the year, Dec 30, the stock was at $39.47. By January 6, ’06 the stock price was at $41.61, by Jan 13 it was at $48.35, and by Jan 20, $49.66. After looking at past predictions for possible Jan. Effect stocks, the best way to win by using this theory is to use a basket of stocks that you have researched and that you believe could bounce in Jan. Some of our own Professors and alumni at U of I have written on the topic as well.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Market Summary: Thurs. June 5, 2008

DJIA 12,604.45 +213.97 (+1.70%)
Nasdaq 2,549.94 +46.80 (+1.84%)
S&P 500 1,404.05 +26.85 (+1.91%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.31 bln

2-Yr Note 2.52% +0.05
10-Yr Note 4.06% +0.08
30-Yr Bond 4.75% +0.04

Dollar Index 73.038 -0.386
Crude Oil (July) 127.79 +5.49
Nat Gas (July) 12.519 +0.140
Gold (Aug) 875.50 -8.30

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Market Summary: Wed. June 4, 2008

DJIA 12,390.48 -12.37 (-0.10%)
Nasdaq 2,503.14 +22.66 (+0.91%)
S&P 500 1,377.20 -0.45 (-0.03%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.29 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.47% +0.02
10-Yr Bond 3.98% +0.08
30-Yr Bond 4.71% +0.04

Dollar Index 73.424 +0.184
Crude Oil (July) 122.30 -2.01
Nat Gas (July) 12.379 +0.158
Gold (Aug) 883.80 -1.70

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Market Summary: Tues. June 3, 2008

Lehman Brothers and General Motors were the two stocks that caused the market to be lower today. If it wasn’t for a better-than-expected factory orders number, we would have seen 2+% declines in the major indices.

As the market rebounded in April and May, news – especially bad news – from the financials was essentially non-existent. In the last few weeks, the financials have come back to the spotlight amidst new liquidity rumors. The most frightening one is Lehman Brothers because its business is so similar to Bear Stearns’ business. David Einhorn, a billionaire hedge fund manager, has been short Lehman and has been coming on CNBC talking about how Lehman will take larger-than-expected write-downs when it reports earnings.

Rumors circulated today that Lehman borrowed funds from the Federal Reserve’s discount window. But Lehman came out and said it did not access the lending facility. Remember, just days before Bear Stearns’ collapse its CEO said the company’s liquidity position was adequate. Well, this story sounds eerily similar. Maybe that’s why the $2 put options for Lehman traded over 1,000 contracts on the day! Shares of LEH closed the day at $30.61.

The Wall Street Journal also reported that Lehman will be raising $4B of additional capital through an equity offering; Lehman did not dispel this rumor, though. LEH finished the day down over 9%.

The automakers, specifically General Motors (GM), also weighed on the markets. The

Asian automakers, Honda and Toyota, had their May sales increase 3.7% while the American automakers, GM, Ford, and Chrysler, had their May sales decrease 21%. With gasoline at $4 per gallon, consumers are switching from SUVs and trucks to more fuel efficient sedans. GM announced is will close four of its truck plants and it is considering selling its Hummer brand. When GM’s CEO made his comments around noon the markets began to sell-off.

Oil continued its slide ending the day $3.45 lower. I am very cautious on all commodities now; I’m least cautious on natural gas, though. I feel there is too much downside risk thanks to possible government intervention. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is already looking into price manipulation for crude oil and other commodities that soared last year. When crude oil spiked to $135 per barrel, the news stations led their broadcasts with oil-related stories. Today, the carmakers are already feeling the pain and I expect it to spread even further. The consumer has already cut back and I expect demand to decline. I have also heard rumors that China and some other countries might stop subsidizing oil (should lower global demand because prices will not be kept artificially low). I’m letting all the speculators unwind their positions before I make any moves.


DJIA 12,402.85 -100.97 (-0.81%)
Nasdaq 2,480.48 -11.05 (-0.44%)
S&P 500 1,377.65 -8.02 (-0.58%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.29 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.45% -0.06
10-Yr Bond 3.92% -0.06
30-Yr Bond 4.63% -0.05

Dollar Index 73.240 +0.311
Crude Oil (July) 124.31 -3.45
Nat Gas (July) 12.221 +0.252
Gold (Aug) 885.50 -11.50

Monday, June 2, 2008

A few interesting plays

Here are things that I am watching closely:

-J Crew (JCG) got hit for 20% on Friday on lowered guidance. It's the best operator in the space, it targets and gets rich clients that are loyal and it is still growing at a 18% clip going forward. The revised guidance brings it's forward multiple back equal to it's growth rate and I can see this one springing back nicely. I took my first bite this morning. If you like the "rich people are still going to shop" theory, the other one I like is Coach (COH). The ones I would pass on are TIF, JWN and SKS.

-DryShips (DRYS). I started building in a position in this one last week, and I have not even done comps on shippers yet. It trades around 5 times forward earnings from continuing ops... dirt cheap. The catalyst: it's in the process of building the only exclusive deepwater drilling company (i.e. they don't even do the shallow water stuff; they are only where all the demand is building). They plan to spin off this subsidiary in about a year. I think it gets up near 200 in that time frame. The downside: just about the only shipper with a bad yield. I will post a full write up on DRYS when I have time to do comps.

-Chesapeake (CHK). Just about the only thing that worked today was natural gas. CHK's CEO made another multimillion dollar purchase of the stock last week. It is real close to the trend line it pulls back to, and this is a great time to get in a leading nat gas company. XTO and APA are also cheap, I'd watch out for SWN and UPL. I am long CHK.

-If you want to play steel the 2 cheapest companies out there are MTL and MT. I would go with MTL between these two. MTL is a vertically integrated (aka not getting killed by raw material prices) steel manufacturer in Russia. Personally, I own SID, which is a vertically integrated steel manufacturer in Brazil because I have more faith in that country's operating environment. You have a golden opportunity to get in SID right here where it is now.

-There's a nice long/short set up in the rails if you were to go long NSC and short KSU, the cheapest and most expensive of the major rails, respectively. On top of it, NSC has a 1.7% yield while KSU has none.

Those are some names peaking my interest right now.

Market Summary: Mon. June 2, 2008

DJIA 12,503.82 -134.50 (-1.06%)
Nasdaq 2,491.53 -31.13 (-1.23%)
S&P 500 1,385.67 -14.71 (-1.05%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.15 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.51% -0.15
10-Yr Bond 3.98% -0.08
30-Yr Bond 4.68% -0.04

Dollar Index 72.929 +0.050
Crude Oil (July) 127.76 +0.41
Nat Gas (July) 11.969 +0.266
Gold (Aug) 897.00 +5.50

New Opportunities for China's Banks

I wrote an economics term paper while studying abroad in Singapore about the huge menace that non-performing loans (NPL) were to China's banking system during its post-Mao economic reform. In 2004, NPLs accounted for anywhere between 11 and 26% of China's GNP, depending on how the loans were classified. This is obviously a pretty staggering concern (and especially interesting, considering how China overcame these large defaults, in comparison to how the US has been handling the recent wave of home mortgage defaults, which of course resulted in this "subprime crisis").

To offer a brief history lesson, before 1978, the majority China's GDP came from its state-owned enterprises. These companies were big, inefficient (quota rather than profit driven), corrupt, communist manifestations that were funded by the central bank (as one would expect for a controlled economy). After Mao died, China set on a slow and deliberate change from a planned to a market economy. They mostly have Deng Xiaopeng to thank, although Zhao Ziyang officially kicked things off. China designed a very clever "dual track system" (shuangguizhi) to ween companies off of planned economics piecemeal. If you're interested in how this worked, email me, but the explination is too long for this post. After this policy was implemented, the previously monopolistic SOEs started to beat up by the new market competition. Because they were losing money, the SOEs decided paid off less and less of their bank debt, and instead, because of remnant bureaucratic inefficiencies, piled on more debt to finance their operations. As a result, the debt/equity ratio ballooned from 12% in 1978, when policy change began, to 211% in the early 90s. China ended up stepping in and infusing these insolvent banks with cash.

With this history lesson, I found it interesting to read today a McKinsey Quarterly report entitled "Global Investment Strategies for China's Financial Institutions," which had a lot to say about far financial institutions in China had come. As the report put it:
The shift from investment target to investor came suddenly and many Chinese institutions are not fully prepared for their new role. Not long ago, state-owned Chinese banks were saddled with nonperforming loans, which effectively blocked their global aspirations. But the level of bad loans has dropped rapidly—from about 30 percent of total loans in 2001 to 7 percent in 2007, according to official figures...
Why is this important? Well, this global credit crisis is creating great investment opportunities for cash-flush companies like China's financial institutions. McKinsey also notes that these purchases will do much to also bring in needed expertise, particularily in areas such as risk management, IT, product development, and customer service.

What I found most interesting about this report was in the suggestions McKinsey had for these banks' strategy. They are currently looking at investment opportunities on a case-by-case basis, without enough regard towards a larger strategy. As McKinsey puts it: "Chinese managers [should] consider how many deals they want to complete in the medium term, what type, and in what markets. They should also think about how deals can add value not only in a portfolio but also independently. With a better game plan, they can weigh opportunities against their longer-term goals and become much less reactive." If you have been reading this blog religiously, you may be wondering how this relates to US anxiety over the security ramifications of foreign SWFs strategically investing in different companies.]Well, these are just banks, not sovereign wealth funds, and therefore do not carry the same type of political tension, because they cannot possibly have any "devious political motives," as some hawks might suggest SWFs have.

The report goes on to suggest that China looks beyond mere portfolio returns when choosing deals. Buying minority stakes in companies across the world would allow access to many companies' inner workings via seats on the BOD. Through these investments, China can have access to important management and human capital opportunities - including hiring one of us to go out there one day...

Sunday, June 1, 2008

An Underappreciated Industrial Revisited

Let's take a look at Trinity Industries (TRN), a stock Dave Light suggested to buy May 14th at $35.08 (5/14 closing price). Since then, TRN has rallied to $40.85 (5/30 closing price)

If you took Dave's advice you would have caught a quick 16.4% gain. During this same time, the S&P 500 declined 0.7%. You would have handily beat the market.

Nice pick Dave!

Market Summary: Week Ended 05/30/2008

Here is a link for a CNBC.com market recap for the week that was. It takes a look at earnings reports, economic data, best and worst performers, and even a look at the week ahead.

Market Summary: Fri. May 30, 2008

DJIA 12,638.32 -7.90 (-0.06%)
Nasdaq 2,522.66 +14.34 (+0.57%)
S&P 500 1,400.38 +2.12 (+0.15%)
NYSE Composite Volume 1.41 bln

2-Yr Bond 2.66% -0.01
10-Yr Bond 4.06% -0.02
30-Yr Bond 4.72% -0.04

Dollar Index 72.879 -0.144
Crude Oil (July) 127.35 +0.73
Nat Gas (July) 11.703 +0.229
Gold (Aug) 891.50 +9.80

As of 02/26/08

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