Showing posts with label Energy funds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Energy funds. Show all posts

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Questions Without Answers Indicate Uncertainty - Weekly Blog # 712

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Questions Without Answers Indicate Uncertainty


Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018 –



Searching for Direction

Investors gain confidence when they have a clear sense of direction, particularly regarding short-term market moves. They ask a lot of questions in the hope of finding concrete answers. This is increasingly true as markets move closer to the top of a major phase. Thus, extreme confidence, while generally reassuring, is a warning sign of a nearby top. 

Each week I examine lots of data and articles in the media looking for concrete answers, or at least a guide as to direction. This week I came up with some interesting questions, without any good answers. As many subscribers are professional or insightful individual investors, I will serve up the questions with elements of my indecisive views. I am hopeful some will provide answers as a Christmas present and communicate them to me, either for my personal use or to share.


Are Smarter Investors Calling a Turn?

For some time, I have suggested large investors in the NASDAQ stock market are on average brighter than those invested exclusively or mostly on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). This is based on the performance of various small-company mutual fund portfolios trading on the NASDAQ since the March 23, 2020 trough. On average this has been the best performing group based on market capitalization (The other groups are large-caps, multi-caps, and mid-caps.) However, year-to-date smaller caps are running in fourth place. There was possibly a change on Friday with its high volume? The NYSE volume was 5 million shares, split roughly 2 million on the upside and 3 million on the downside. On the NASDAQ, total volume was close to 8 million shares, split 4.6 million shares on the upside and 3.2 million on the downside. The NASDAQ Composite has declined 5.53% from its 2021 peak, the most of the three popular indices and roughly halfway through a classic 10% correction.

Does Friday's market action suggest savvy players picking up bargains at low prices?


Commodity Funds Rising Earlier than Expected

Numerous individual commodities are rising due to shortages. The median commodity fund is up +28.79%, while the weighted average fund is only up +3.92%. The reason for this difference is the extreme performance of Energy funds +71.98% and Precious Metals funds -10.41%. Commodity price cycles typically extend to one or more decades, for example from 1996 to 2016. Professional commodity investors did not expect a general commodity rise for at least another five years, after several new mines became operational. The switch to electric vehicles from internal combustion engine vehicles has accelerated demand for some metals, while the interest in currency coins has simultaneously impacted the demand for numerous commodities.

Are these speculative trends going to continue and cause actual mine and mill openings to accelerate? 


Investors Are Finding Other Markets Attractive 

While the US equity market has gained about 25% year-to-date, three other markets are also up over 20%:  India +22.3%, Taiwan +22.0%, and Canada +21.5%. Many investors now see international diversification as prudent, with political turmoil making US investing difficult for at least the next three years. As the economy recovers from various pandemics and tax/trade uncertainties, declining percentage gains in rising earnings will hurt. 


The Fed is Not Helping 

The Fed is basically defining its role as affirming the current situation by looking forward from its present position.


Critical Question: Do you think you will change your investment strategy materially before the next top?




Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/12/two-contrarian-questions-next-recession.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/12/selections-weekly-blog-710.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/11/investors-be-alert-to-novembers-risk.html Mike Lipper's Blog: 




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Sunday, November 1, 2009

Random Thoughts on November 1st

One of the pleasures and pains of writing a weekly financial blog is determining what to say. This weekend I have a number of incomplete thoughts from various stimuli I received over the weekend. Any of these ideas could be developed into blog in and of itself. However, by focusing on a single subject, one would not see a number of the cross-currents that are washing over my mental boat in rough seas. In no particular order, my thoughts include the following ideas:

  1. Peggy Noonan writes in The Wall Street Journal that many people either believe our various structural problems will not get better and we have to live with the current imbalances, or that they have a sense of optimism without any focus on innovation. I believe that both views are wrong. Some of the structural imbalances are cyclical, made worse by government intervention which prolongs the period of healing. Other imbalances will get worse, such as structural unemployment; we have produced a labor force that does not know how to labor in today’s world. I am afraid this is a multi- generational problem of education in the home. On the optimistic side, I believe that technology will create new products and services that will make much of our existing ones obsolete to a point that we will replace the old with the new, even before the old wears out. My optimism, particularly in technology, leads me to favor funds that have significant technology holdings, often found under healthcare and energy classifications, as well as those that have a separate technology classification.


  2. Alan Abelson in Barron’s quoted John Williams of Shadow Government Statistics, stating that 92% of the 3.5% gain announced for the 3rd quarter 2009 GDP was essentially contributed by “one-off” items, i.e. “Cash for Clunkers,” and expiring first-time home owner mortgage credits. Abelson’s comments reinforce my concern on the reliance on government numbers. One might add to the list, the President’s claim of 1 million jobs created or saved by the stimulus. As primarily equity investors, our focus should be on the revenue production of companies and the bottlenecks they are discovering in their sales and delivery processes. Commodity prices and transportation data are much more reliable indicators.


  3. Little mention is being made in the financial press, and none in the stock market comments of the general press, about the fact that Mutual Funds operate on an October tax year. Most of the equity funds have large realized losses created in 2007 and 2008, as well as earlier this year. I suspect that in October, a number of portfolio managers sold some of their positions that had gains, without incurring any additional tax liability for their shareholders. They may share my point of view that it is unlikely that any significant news will break in the next thirty days, suggesting at best, a flat market for a month. This hiatus in the market recovery will allow them to reallocate their portfolios or return to their prior positions, (we will never know for sure, as the funds that report on a calendar quarterly or semiannually do not have to report on intra-quarter activity). In my mind, I believe this factor is a possible additional explanation why the month of October was flat. If I am correct, the stock price weakness shown in the last week is not a canary in the mine giving us a signal to get out of the stock market.


  4. Another market phenomenon is that in the last week Berkshire Hathaway disposed of another major portion of their holdings in Moody’s, at current prices. The credit rating company is regularly under attack in the press, the regulators and some well known short sellers. What I find significant is that the stock absorbed this selling without further declines. As the company is not currently buying back its shares, the other side of the trades may represent one or more substantial buyers, as the public does not appear to have any interest in this stock. Often I find when a stock does not decline much in the face of a strong, well-known seller, there is a “story” in the unidentified buyer. Perhaps these thoughts are wishful thinking in that Moody’s is a long-standing position in our Financial Services Hedge Fund.


  5. Now for a non-market thought: Saturday night’s, or more accurately Sunday morning’s, victory by the New York Yankees in the third game of the 2009 World Series is something of a cultural identity. People have a visceral reaction to the New York Yankees; they either like them or hate them. Friends of mine from all over believe that everyone who currently works or lives in New York, or ever did, is a Yankee fan. Never mind that many of these people are not baseball fans, and like me, have difficulty in naming the starting team, but the Yankees represent something. I would suggest they represent a culture of winning. (The image is greater than the statistical history. Nevertheless they have won more pennants and World Series than any other team, although in any many years they are not the best team). To many others, the Yankees represent a swagger or arrogance. This is one of the deep root causes for the current Administration’s and Congress’ desire to “reform,” or some may say punish, Wall Street. During the rain-delayed game I saw the Vice President of the United States in the front box seats. As a kid growing up in Pennsylvania, and a long-time Senator from the neighboring state of Delaware, one can easily understand his affection for the Philadelphia Phillies. Parenthetically, I find it interesting that his brother and son are involved with a hedge fund.


We should not expect any solace from the vice president, his administration or Congress for New York. One of the critical issues recognized by the current CEO of the New York Stock Exchange is that its future is dependent upon on what Washington pitches at New York. In the long-run, those of us who are spiritual New Yorkers have to find ways to become more loveable to the rest of the country. This tension is not new, as Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson, as well as Theodore Roosevelt and JP Morgan somewhat successfully worked on creating conditions from which all benefited. That is our job today. Go Yankees. .