Stocks & Equities

Thoughts from the Frontline: Never Smile at a Crocodile

“High debt levels, whether in the public or private sector, have historically placed a drag on growth and raised the risk of financial crises that spark deep economic recessions.”

– The McKinsey Institute, “Debt and (not much) deleveraging

Never smile at a crocodile
No, you can’t get friendly with a crocodile
Don’t be taken in by his welcome grin
He’s imagining how well you’d fit within his skin
Never smile at a crocodile
Never tip your hat and stop to talk awhile
Never run, walk away, say good-night, not good-day
Clear the aisle but never smile at Mister Crocodile

– Peter Pan

(From the staff: This week’s letter is a shortened Thoughts from the Frontline. While he was writing the letter, Mr. Mauldin had a personal situation develop that required his attention, but he wanted us to pass on these already-written notes. For those of his friends who are interested, he shares some thoughts at the end of the letter.)

As I sit here on Friday morning, beginning this week’s letter, nonfarm payrolls have just come in at a blockbuster 295,000 new jobs, and unemployment is said to be down to 5.5%. GDP is bumping along in the 2%-plus range, right in the middle of my predicted Muddle Through Economy for the decade. US stocks are hitting all-time nominal highs; the dollar is soaring (especially after the jobs announcement); and of course, in response, the Dow Jones is down 100 points as I write because all that good news increases the pressure for a June rate hike. Art Cashin pointed out that, with this data, if the FOMC does not remove the word patient from its March statement, they will begin to lose credibility. The potential for a rate increase in June is back on the table, but unless we get another few payrolls like this one, the rather dovish FOMC is still likely to wait until at least September. Who knows where rates will be end of the day, though? Anyway, what’s to worry?

Well, judging from the contents of my inbox, I’d say there is plenty going on to make us nervous. We will briefly survey my worry closet today before resuming our series on debt, in which we’ll encounter Paul Krugman’s lament that “Nobody understands debt.” Warning: this letter is going to be long on charts but hopefully shorter on words – perhaps a little heavy on philosophy. At the end I’ll make a few surprise announcements about speakers for our upcoming Strategic Investment Conference in San Diego, April 29 through May 2. You really want to try to join us for what are going to be a fabulous few days.

Never Smile at a Crocodile

The following two charts from Bank Credit Analyst found their way to my inbox last week. They are nothing if not the most gaping pair of crocodile jaws I’ve seen in many a moon. This should make you somewhat cautious in your long-only portfolios. You need to have a plan to avoid a classic crocodile trap. (And unless you are young, also avoid listening to the Peter Pan song in the YouTube link cited at the top of the letter. Those of us of a certain generation will not be able to get it out of our heads.)

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Let’s look a little deeper into the payroll report. You have to like what you see on the surface, as 11.5 million more

people are working now than at the February 2010 low. What’s not as rosy is that wages increased by only 0.1%, which is understandable when you realize that 66,000 of the 295,000 new jobs were in leisure and hospitality, with 58,000 of those being in bars and restaurants. (As Joanie McCullough pointed out, full employment now means three fingers of whiskey in the glass, neat.) Transportation and warehousing rose by 19,000, but 12,000 of those were messengers, again not exactly high-paying jobs. The oil industry is still shedding jobs, though not as fast as many of us thought it would. This employment report was very long on low-paying jobs.

 

Finally, the labor force declined by 178,000 and the Labor Force Participation Rate declined 0.1% to 62.8%. You have to go back a full 36 years to March, 1978, to find a similar rate. Yes, some of the dropoff was Boomers retiring and some of it may have been due to weather, but it is just a reinforcement of the trend that began in 2000.

Nearly all of my kids have worked in the food-service industry at some point in their lives, as did I, and we are keenly aware how fast those jobs can both appear and disappear in a downturn, not to mention how tips can get a little thinner in tougher times (which prompts me to suggest you think about bumping your tip percentage up a point or two here and there. Your waitperson is somebody else’s kid who needs all the help they can get.)

The employment report was bolstered by this week’s release of the National Federation of Independent Businesses monthly jobs report. All in all, it was a generally bullish report. Then again, the bear in me was struck by how many of the charts seem to be at levels last seen prior to recessions (one example below). The chief economist for the NFIB is William Dunkelberg, or Dunk to his friends. I shot Dunk an email, asking him “Does it bother you that we are approaching levels (in so many charts) only seen prior to the last two sell-offs?”

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He came back with this pithy note:

Yes, I keep trying to think of reasons why we won’t fall back, but USA INC is overvalued, stock market at a record high but output of USA INC growing slowly and under-performing. Good thing small businesses are not publicly traded. We know the Fed has boosted stock and bond values so those will [eventually –JM] succumb to rising rates. But the NASDAQ is not the same as the one in 2000, it looks a lot firmer. Lots of stock buybacks, consumer sector may still be a net seller of stocks. There is a shortage of risk-free, safe assets, the central banks are hoarding them. … A “deflation of asset prices” would likely be more like 2000 (financial assets owned by a few fools) than the housing bubble which cut deeper into the middle class wealth AND jobs. I figure you will sort all this out in one of your brilliant essays. I will be watching 🙂 – Dunk

(Dunk is obviously trying to position himself to get me to pick up his next bar tab, which I should hasten to point out can be high, not due to quantity but quality. He is a bit of a wine connoisseur.)

But he makes a point. US S&P 500 corporate profits are forecast to fall by 4.6% in Q1 and by 1.5% in Q2 this year, the first fall in profits for two consecutive Q’s in six years, if those forecasts turn out to be true. Falling earnings are not the stuff of roaring bull markets. That being said, the NASDAQ of today is not like 2000’s.

First, the NASDAQ would have to be at 6900 to give an investor a return in terms of inflation. (It’s oscillating around 4925 now.) Remember the secular bear market in 1966 to ’82? It was actually 1992 before the market reached an inflation-adjusted new high. (Tell me one more time why we think 2% inflation is good. When you lose 20% of your buying power in just 10 years, which span has included two deflationary recessions, the 2% inflation premise begins to look a little suspect.) Second, there is actually an E in the P/E ratio for the NASDAQ. Some of the stocks in the NASDAQ 100 are actually on various investors’ value lists.

Even so, valuations are stretched. Doug Short combines four different ways to compute valuations (basically, derivatives of the price-to-earnings ratio) into one average. In the graph below you will note that there was only one previous time (during the tech bubble that popped in 2000) when valuations were higher than they are now. Bear markets and recessions can start from much lower valuations.

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But then again, my friend Barry Ritholtz argues in his March 7 Washington Post column, that valuations using other metrics are quite reasonable.

If it appears I’m trying to make you nervous, that’s because I am. I’m not suggesting you exit the market entirely. As the hero of my youth, Lazarus Long (one of Robert Heinlein’s recurring characters) said, “Certainly the game is rigged. Don’t let that stop you; if you don’t bet, you can’t win.”

I am suggesting you have a well-thought-out, calmly reasoned algorithm that will tell you when to enter and exit specific markets. You should already be out of small-caps, as in a long time ago. And energy and emerging markets, etc. Trying to catch absolute tops or bottoms is a fool’s mission, but with a methodical program you can avoid large drops and, just as importantly, latch onto big runs. It takes a well-reasoned system and discipline. You or your advisor should have both.

Strategic Investment Conference 2015

I am excited to announce a few additional attendees to the Strategic Investment Conference. First, Peter Diamandis, physician, engineer, serial (and parallel) entrepreneur, founder and chairman of the X PRIZE Foundation, and an extraordinary visionary (and my friend) will be doing a keynote dinner presentation. Peter is simply mind-expanding. His latest New York Times bestseller, Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think, offers a far different vision of the future from the dystopian images that are in vogue today.

My good friend George Friedman of Stratfor has cleared his schedule to be able to drop in as well. Then, Richard Yamarone, chief economist for Bloomberg, and Gary Shilling (whom all of my readers already know) have both agreed to come grill our speakers. They will be joined by (in no particular order) Peter Briger of the $66 billion Fortress Investment Group, who will talk on the state of credit in the world; David Rosenberg; Dr. Lacy Hunt; Grant Williams; Raoul Pal; Paul McCulley; David Harding (of the $25 billion Winton fund family); Louis Gave; Jim Bianco; Larry Meyer (former Fed Governor); the irrepressible Jeff Gundlach; the wickedly brilliant Stephanie Pomboy; Ian Bremmer; David Zervos; Michael Pettis (flying in from China); and Kyle Bass, along with Jack Rivkin of Altegris and your humble analyst. Seriously, where is there a better lineup of thinkers, people who can give you the insights you need to navigate these unprecedented economic waters – not to mention that all of them are A+ speakers and communicators.

The conference is in San Diego, April 30–May 2, and will once again be at the Hyatt Manchester. For the first time this year, our conference is open to everyone, not just accredited investors.  

Attendees routinely tell me that this is the best conference anywhere, every year. And most of the speakers hang around to hear what is being said, which means you get to meet them at breaks and dinners. Plus, this year I am arranging for quite a number of writers and analysts to show up, just to be there to talk with you. And I must say that the best part of the conference is mingling with fellow attendees. You will make new friends and be able to share ideas with other investors like yourself. I really hope you can make it.

Registration is simple. Use this link. While the conference is not cheap, the largest cost is your time, and I try to make it worth every minute. There are also two private breakfasts where hedge funds will be presenting. Altegris will contact you to let you know the details.

Mildred Duke Mauldin, RIP

This last week has been full of paradoxes. I’ve been on the phone and writing with my friend Patrick Cox on some very exciting developments in the whole anti-aging and life-renewal/regeneration arena. Pat in particular, with some cheerleading help from me, has been involved in midwifing several new technologies into companies and people who can actually take them to completion. When these amazing breakthroughs become available, they will have a significant impact not just on our lifespans but on our healthspans. We will live better as we live longer. It is truly an exciting era we live in.

Then Saturday I went with my daughter Tiffani to a surprise birthday party for her high school classmate Scott, who is the son of one of the most remarkable couples I know. Darrell and Phyllis Wayman had six biological children but also adopted 17 special-needs children. Because of my activity in adoption circles (I adopted five children), we became close friends. For the most part, they did not adopt the “easy” kids. Most of them had serious handicaps, problems that would need lifelong special attention. Going to the Wayman’s house was always an adventure, but I always found it full of happiness and love. I never truly understood how they did it. Just thinking about what they did left me exhausted.

Tragically, Darrell passed away suddenly in the mid-’90s, and Phyllis joined him in the middle of the last decade. To watch those children rally around each other, even the young ones, and take care of each other and make sure they all stayed together was very inspiring. With all the bad news about the depravity of humanity on TV, knowing this family gives you hope for the human race. You can see the legacy of Phyllis and Darrell in the way these children work together and care for each other, persevering in the midst of what (to merely normal human beings like myself) seem like overwhelming circumstances.

Those 23 kids now have 21 grandkids; and once again, walking into their family home, we felt the love and happiness. Scott, at 40, has become quite the young software executive and is getting ready to launch his next venture. I’m not certain I understand it, but if you are ever going to bet on a young man with character, drive, and perseverance, this would be that man. I know some venture capital experts who say that picking the right management team is more important than picking the project. I may just ride along on this one, if for no other reason than to see how it turns out.

And, as we were in the area, we dropped by afterwards to see my mother. She has been bedridden for almost two years and has been visibly failing for the last few months. At 97½ years, she has lived a long and amazing life, persevering through many good and some very difficult times, spreading happiness to all who knew her.

When we walked into the family home where mother had lived for almost 50 years, we knew as soon as we saw her that the end was quite close. You could see in her eyes that she knew it, too. She did not want to go to the hospital, but my brother did call hospice, who came and offered some care that provided some relief, and she passed away quietly a short while later.

Even though this was an event we knew was coming for some time, the finality of death always brings a personal confrontation with your own mortality. The loss of a parent compounds the emotions in complex ways. The juxtaposition of the conversations I was having with Pat on our efforts to postpone our own personal eventuality, the overwhelming joy of those 23 kids who I no longer see as having special needs but rather special lives, and then the cruel finality of my mother’s parting, is a bit overwhelming.

We all go through such experiences, and if past performance is somewhat indicative of future results, we endure and go on with our lives. But such times do give us pause for reflection.

I want to believe there is a Very Special Place, beyond a mere heaven, where certifiable Saints like Darrell and Phyllis and my Mother are rewarded for a lifetime of caring for others and spreading blessings in the midst of the chaos of normal human life. If I were a god, I would make it so.

Your reflective analyst,

John Mauldin

The Top 10 DividendRank’ed Canadian Stocks

#10. BCE Inc. (TSE:BCE.CA) — 4.8% YIELD

At #10, BCE provides residential, business and wholesale customers with communications solutions including wireless, Internet, Internet protocol (IP) television (TV) and satellite TV, local and long distance, business IP-broadband and information and communications technology services. Co.’s key operation, Bell, is a local exchange carrier in Ontario and Quebec, and consists of its Bell Wireline, Bell Wireless and Bell Media segments. Bell Media is a multimedia company that holds assets in TV, radio, digital media and out-of-home advertising. Co. also owns a 44.1% interest in Bell Aliant, which include the incumbent carrier in Canada’s Atlantic provinces and in rural areas of Ontario and Quebec.

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Fundamental Perceptions

perspectives header weekly

perspectives commentary

In This Week’s Issue:

In This Week’s Issue:

– Stockscores Free Webinar – Trading Styles
– Stockscores’ Market Minutes Video – Playing Defense
– Stockscores Trader Training – Perception of Fundamentals
– Stock Features of the Week – Stockscores Simple Weekly

Stockscores Free Webinar – Trading Styles
There are many ways to trade the market, the choice you make depends on your time, capital, personality and skill. This webinar will consider the different choices, demonstrate the process for each and answer your questions on whether you should be a long term investor, a short term active trader or something in the middle.

Click here to register

Stockscores Market Minutes Video -Playing Defence 
The markets are starting a pull back phase in the long term upward trend, making it appropriate to play defence. This week, I discuss ways to do that plus my regular weekly market analysis. Click here to watch

Trader Training – The Perception of Fundamentals
What moves stock price? Information filtered by the psychology of the market defines the market’s perception of a company’s fundamentals. It is the perception of fundamentals that determines stock price, and it is changes in the perception that leads to changes in price.

There are many investors and market experts who base investment decisions on fundamentals alone. They apply scientific analysis to the financial reality of a company’s business to arrive at the value of their stock. If this logical value of the stock is higher than the price the stock trades at, the stock is deemed worthy of purchase.

This analysis process leaves little room for the artful interpretation of value. Fundamental analysis is either black or white, leaving little room for the color of reality.

What make the financial markets colorful are the characters, motives and moods that taint the process of logical deduction. A stock whose fundamental value is $20 may only trade at $10 because a large investor has lots of stock to sell, a group of short sellers may have the stock gripped in fear, or investors may simply not like the color of the story.

There is an art to predicting stock price change.

It is not enough to know what the fundamentals will be tomorrow, it is also important to know how the market will judge those fundamentals. It seems obvious that a company announcing positive news will go up in price, yet we as investors have often seen the opposite happen.

Investors will judge fundamentals not only on their merit, but also on how they relate to expectations. Sometimes, fundamental change will be ignored in favor of more pressing macro economic issues.

Suppose you are told that a mining company will announce the discovery of a significant gold discovery in two days. In anticipation of news, and based on your privileged information, you buy the stock. You are excited by the prospect of what will be easy money, to materialize when the news is made public.

Two days later, the news is announced and you watch the stock with excited anticipation. But instead of jumping higher and higher, it goes up for a couple of minutes, and then suddenly begins a free fall lower. Your expectation of quick and easy profit quickly and easily turns to loss.

You can not understand why, it seems to make no logical sense.

Here are some of the possible reasons why the trade did not work:

1. The stock market is not fair. The inside information that you received two days before the news was obtained by others weeks earlier, and the stock already priced in its value. Your stock has been going up in anticipation of news for some time.

2. Expectations rarely live up to reality. Investors have a wonderful imagination, and the visions of those who were buying the stock in anticipation of the news pushed the stock beyond what the news was worth.

3. Without a reason to own, investors will sell. Many short term investors bought this stock in anticipation of news. When the news came out, so went the reason for owning the stock. Investors who buy in anticipation of news often sell when it is released.

4. The exit door is only so big. When a stock starts to do what investors don’t expect it to do, investors panic and all try to get out at once. This creates emotional selling that has no regard for fundamentals.

5. The tipster has motives different than yours. Believe it or not, the only person who cares about your money is you. Whoever gave you the “inside” information is only concerned about their money, and probably encouraged you to buy the stock because they already had.

6. Every stock correlates to the market. If the market is going down and pessimistic, buying a stock is like trying to paddle up stream. Some can succeed, but most eventually go with the flow.

Do not ever judge a stock through scientific analysis of fundamentals alone. You must always ask, what does the market think? How will the market judge this company? What effect will the mood of the market have on the perception of fundamentals?

Fundamentals don’t matter, only the perception of fundamentals is important.

perspectives strategy

With the markets starting a pull back, I think it is a good time to be cautious with stocks. There will likely be lower prices in the near term.

With that in mind, I went in search of strong long term charts where an uptrend appears to be in an early stage. I focused on finding stocks that have built a strong base of optimism and are breaking through some resistance with the idea that money may rotate out of the strongest stocks and search for value in those that have lagged.

I searched using the Stockscores Simple Weekly Market Scan and found a couple names to consider:

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1. EBAY
EBAY has been stuck under $58 for most of the past two years but this week broke out to $60, a sign that investors have found a reason to accumulate the stock. Support at $57.50.

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2. AEO
AEO made a good breakout this week through $15 and looks like it is making a long term turnaround as this break is from a rising bottom. Support at $14.50.

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References

 

 

Disclaimer
This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don’t consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligenc

tim-cook-511Apple is holding its first major event of the year on Monday, and it’s going to be all about the Apple Watch, along with a few possible surprises thrown in.

Business Insider will be at the event at the Yerba Buena center in San Francisco starting at 10 a.m. PT (1 p.m. ET), so stay tuned for all the latest news right here.

In the meantime, here’s a quick breakdown of what to expect.

1. Final features of the Apple Watch

Apple gave us a taste of what the Apple Watch can do in September when the company first introduced the device, but it also teased that we hadn’t seen everything yet. Besides Apple Pay, fitness tracking, maps, messaging, and all the other stuff we saw last year, expect to get a full picture of the Apple Watch’s capabilities.

2. The Apple Watch price

Apple already said the Apple Watch would start at $349, but that’s just for the “Sport” model made out of aluminum.

There is also a version made out of steel and another made out of 18-karat gold. The common speculation is that the gold model, which Apple calls the Apple Watch Edition, could start between $5,000 and $10,000. The steel model will most likely cost a few hundred dollars more than the Sport.

 

Screen Shot 2015-03-09 at 5.16.12 AM3. Apple Watch apps

Some developers have shown their Apple Watch apps already, but we should see a lot more third-party apps at the event on Monday. It’ll be interesting to see how major apps and services adapt to the watch.

4. Apple Watch launch date

Apple CEO Tim Cook has already said the Apple Watch will go on sale in April, but we won’t get a specific date until Monday. Apple will also most likely announce when or if you can preorder the watch.

5. A new 12-inch MacBook?

In January, 9to5Mac’s Mark Gurman broke the news that Apple was working on a new MacBook with a 12-inch screen and thinner design. The Wall Street Journal recently reported that the new MacBook could be ready to ship in the second quarter of this year. It’s possible Apple gives us a first look at the new computer on Monday.

6. The new Photos app?

We’ve already seen an early version of Photos, the new app for Macs that will replace iPhoto. It’s still in beta, but we do know that it’s getting close to launch. There’s a chance Apple will announce the official launch date for Photos on Monday.

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Bob Hoye: “Dow Theory Is Working”

 

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Stock Markets

Clearly, William McChesney Martin’s job description of the Fed is no longer applicable. The Fed and other senior central banks are not only drinking, but have embraced the punchbowl. What’s worse, they are too far into the party to quit. Compulsive policymaking, so to speak.

When opportunity presents, the Chartworks notes excesses as they occur in commodities ranging from copper to coffee to cotton as they reach identifiable peaks. This would also include precious metals as such opportunities show that “overboughts” do work in un- manipulated markets.

Overboughts in most Euro-Bonds have not worked.

Central bank manipulation of stock and bond markets is celebrated and regarded as ongoing. After all, policymakers will know when it is time to quit. Our view is that they will not willingly quit. At some point, Mother Nature and Mister Margin will take away the punchbowl.

This formidable tag team ended the rally in Junk in June. Using seasonal forces, the price peaked and fell into a Springboard Buy in December. This put an end to the decline and associated widening credit spreads. Both needed a correction and now JNK has bounced enough to register a Springboard Sell.

Resumption of widening spreads will be a negative.
The Treasury curve continues flattening, which is a positive. The Advance/Decline line on the S&P remains positive.

We have been using the NYA to keep track of the broad market. It stayed above the 50-Day ma and then popped to a new high yesterday. Widely followed senior indexes jumped to new highs as well.

The overall stock market is stretched as to duration of the run and intensity of speculation. One should be watching for change and on Valentine’s Day Ross reviewed his unique approach to the Dow Theory.

Both the Dow and the Transports set new highs on December 29th. DJIA set a fresh high yesterday. Transports have not set a new high. Non-confirmations that last for less than six weeks tend to generate modest corrections. This week is number eight, which suggests a more-than-modest correction is at hand.

Transports accomplished an Outside reversal yesterday and were weak earlier today. Can the Venerable Dow Theory overwhelm Modern Portfolio Theory?

Another timing item is the Chartworks review on the S&P rally following a severe low in crude oil prices. It counts out to around March 6 to 13.

A loss of momentum in the senior indexes would suggest an important change.

Commodities

This week, Business Insider repeated the standard definition of inflation as “Too much money chasing too few goods”. Considering the unprecedented “accommodation” by frantic central bankers, goods should be at the moon. But they are not. The problem is not in the markets but in the definition. The classic definition was “An inordinate expansion of credit”, which explains today’s rampant inflation in financial assets.

Both in base and precious metal circles the notion remains that all of that “ease” will eventually drive up commodity prices. Well, that’s how it worked in the 1970s and the link should be continuous. 

Shouldn’t it?

Please!

Afraid not, the inflation in credit has been associated with soaring prices for financial assets. Eventually there will be “too many goods (paper) and not enough bids”. Have you ever seen a hot IPO market last forever? New issues always satisfy excessive demand, and then some. A future Pivot will tell some stories about the 1968 example, which was outstanding.

If history continues to guide, the failure of speculation in a bubble in financial assets will not see a massive rotation into tangible assets.

Crude continues in the forefront and satisfied our target of a possible low in January. Following previous such crashes, it took months to set a bottom. The shortest was two months and the longer the process extends, the closer it will be to the start of the next global recession when most commodities will be weak.

Rallies in crude have prompted minor rallies in other commodities, which could last for a while.

Lumber fell out of its sideways pattern and the March contract has dropped to 282. The last high was 364 in August. On the continuous contract the cyclical high was 411 set in early 2013. Importantly, it has taken out the slump in June to 295.

Rice set its cyclical high at 17.75 in 2011 and traded in a range from 14 to 16 from 2012 to early 2014. It is now at 10.45.

The old formula that a reckless Fed drives commodities is not working.

Currencies

Last June we thought that the action in the DX would go from overbought to super- overbought. That was accomplished at 95.85 on January 26th. The trading range has been between 93.85 and 95. This could be easing the overbought condition and the range could continue for a month or so.

The “World” is short the dollar. Just think about all of that debt service payable in US dollars into New York.

The Canadian dollar plunged to a “super-oversold” and has been stabilizing. The low was 78.13 set in late January. The trading range has been between 78.75 and 80.80. This could continue for some weeks.

Credit Markets

The key to a number of successful trades in lower-grade bonds as well as the stock market has been the action in JNK. At the plunge-low of 37.26 in December it registered a Springboard Buy. Last week the rally was strong enough to register a Springboard Sell.

It is now giving the latter signal on the Weekly as well as a Daily Upside Exhaustion. The latter has only been seen only 7 times since 2007 and each was followed by a significant setback. 

Credit spreads which seriously widened from June until January have enjoyed a very good correction. The worst was 213 bps and the best was 191 bps on Friday. The spread is now at 193 bps. Not much but the correction could be over.

We were positive on long-dated Treasuries from January 2014 until early in December when this page started looking for “Ending Action”. The ChartWorks identified the top and we have been expecting a significant price decline.

The high for the future was 152 set at the end of January. The initial slump was a quick 8 points to 144. Most quick breaks are around 4 1/2 points. The rebound reached 147.7 earlier today, which was right at the 50-Day ma.

This is close to a 50 percent retracement and looks like a good test of the high. The forecast has been for much lower prices.

Comments on European bonds will be updated next week.

Precious Metals

When looking at gold’s real price, as in relative to commodities, it has been becoming more precious. The long decline reversed in June and increased to 505 in January. It has corrected to 451 on February 14. Now at 461, rising above 463 would end the correction. The rise of real gold prices has been one of the main features of a post-bubble contraction.

Silver’s price relative to the CRB soared to 323 (moved the decimal point) in May 2011 and plunged to 117 in December. Cleary silver was vulnerable to the crash in crude. The index has recovered to 144 in the middle of the month and has checked back to 135, which is support at the 50-Day ma.

Another feature of the post-bubble condition is silver underperforming gold. It could modestly outperform most commodities as gold outperforms “most everything”.

With our special study in November, we began to accumulate gold stocks on weakness. The sector is in a bottoming process and we are not yet fully invested.

Gold stocks are for traders and investors, gold itself is a trade against whatever currency you are in.

Link to February 27 Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com:

http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2015/02/us-economy-slowing/