Posts Tagged ‘2010 Stockmarket Forcast’

What will 2012 bring?

Friday, January 13th, 2012

2011 was a year where not much happened all round – the NZ stockmarket (main index), housing market, and currency were virtually flat year-on-year. We have entered the age of deleveraging and also a huge population bulge will be retiring which will start to have a drag on house prices and perhaps even stocks in the coming years. There are huge opposing forces and uncertainties in the global enivornment, especially surrouding the Euro area. With the developed nations mired in debt, it is going to be years before things return to the ‘good old days’ of ever rising asset prices.

OK, so the new year is a time where everyone loves to make predictions about the coming year, if anything it’s fun to look back on a year later. This is my assessment of the most likely outcomes in 2012.

The New Zealand dollar

The US economy is making a comeback so the NZD/USD should remain relatively unchanged for 2012, or at least within the normal range of volatility. I expect a trading range of 75c to 85c. Against the Euro the Kiwi dollar should do very well this year, provided that there is not some catastrophic event which causes a flight to risk (and therefore risk assets such as the Kiwi dollar to be sold off). As I write this the NZD/EUR has hit a new high of over 62c. I expect a trading range of 58c – 70c for the NZD/EUR with the bias to the upside. For the NZD/GBP I can see the Kiwi outperforming, but not as much as against the Euro, I can see a trading range of 49p to 55p for the NZD/GBP.

New Zealand House Prices

I expect there to be a continuation of the slow growth of house prices in Auckland, in the order of 3 or 4% in popular suburbs (in line with the general inflation level). For the rest of New Zealand I can see there being more modest growth, and even falls in some coastal or rural towns. The housing market is underpinned by very low interest rates, and relatively easy credit conditions, combined with low unemployment levels meaning fewer forced sales. What is stopping the market from running away is low or negative net migration, and a shift in consumer behaviour towards deleveraging. Also – the baby boomer’s are reaching retirement age so we are going to start seeing demographic headwinds turn against the NZ housing market over the next 10-20 years.

A huge swathe of the population will be retiring and that will mean people will downsize, or sell holiday houses as they elect to use the cash tied up in their houses for world travel or to help pay for medical expenses during their retirement. This will mean continued downwards pressure on the housing market for years to come. Overall there are opposing forces at work – i.e. easy credit vs demographic headwinds. It takes a number of factors to come together to produce a property price boom and I do not see any of these factors coninciding for many years to come. The property ‘gravy train’ is over for the forseeable future at least.

The stockmarket

Again I believe we are in a tradtional pattern of trading, which means buy in fall (Northern Hemisphere fall that is) and “go away in May”. So I would say the stockmarket will have a modest uptrend until about April or May, and then a correction for June, July August, with a rally from September or October onwards. I would be very surprised if the stockmarket ends the year significantly up or down on where it started. After last year’s modest year-on-year decline, I am predicting this year will see the stockmarket gain about 3% from where it began on the 1st January. There are simply too many global headwinds in terms of high debt levels in the developed world to allow any sort of major recovery to get underway.

Strategies

The safest strategy in this enviornment is to pay down debt and find ways to save money, by reducing expenditure on unneccessary items. I have a few stocks with good dividends, but I would be a very cautious buyer of stocks, only have a handful and nothing you cannot afford to lose!

What 2010 will bring for the markets…

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

2009 – The Year in hindsight

2009 was quite a year for the markets. A 60% stockmarket rally off the S&P500 March lows, and a similar rally (50%) in the New Zealand dollar of the March lows against the US dollar. Staggering changes, in hindsight we could all be saying “if only I’d bought in March I’d be ‘rich’ by now”, but then we will probably all look back at the end of 2010 and say the same thing, although it could be about something entirely different.

The question for both these markets, is, having come so far so fast.. can they go much higher? With so much government manipulation through quantitative easing it’s very hard to say as the markets are not acting in any ‘rational’ fashion, although some would say that the markets are made up of human beings so therefore rationality can hardly be expected. It is more the herd mentality that takes over and drives the markets to extremes in both directions.

2010 – What to expect?

The markets in the last few months have been very highly un-volatile. So by that token by the law of averages we can expect that we will be in for higher volatility going forward, simply as it cannot go much lower (in terms of volatility).

I’m going to stick my neck out and make some predictions – these are based on my beliefs which are based on the analysis I have done myself, I don’t have enough time to go into the analysis in details but here are my predictions for 2010!

  1. The Stockmarket is overbought, and due a correction of 10-20%. I’d say it has about another 15% of upside potential from its current levels but no more than that – based on the unusually high P/E ratio of the market in general, and the fact that it has come so far so fast (the rubber band effect).
  2. The NZD/USD will struggle to extend past 75c, and if there is a stockmarket correction, will test the 60c level. It is highly unlikely to extend more than 80c (against the USD), unless there is some major meltdown of the USD which I highly doubt, despite all the doomsday theorists’ predictions of a USD collapse.

In the meantime – I am going to ride the prevailing trend in either direction until I see meaningful signs of a change in the wind. If 2009 taught me anything – it’s that the markets can rally or fall much further than one would think despite any ‘rational’ reason why they shouldn’t do so. In either case it’s better to be on the side of the prevailing trend, even if the reasons why are not obvious at the time.

Let’s see what 2010 brings! And good luck!

Peter Waring

Rally on its last legs….

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

I couldn’t have said this better myself. I have been following ElliotWave’s calls for a while now – they tend to be pretty accurate on getting the big calls right. Rob Pretcher explains how the markets are currently all synchronized, and we are on the verge of a major US dollar rally, which will conincide with a sell-off in commodities and stocks.

Very interesting food for thought.

3 reasons to be very afraid….

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Green Shoots? Or day of the Triffods?

Unemployment is rising, companies are dropping like flies, pensioners are being forced back into the work force, and yet the stockmarket and housing markets are rallying. Something does not make sense? Or perhaps our model of looking at finance needs changing. If there was ever evidence that market participants follow the unconcious herding instinct and do not follow ‘logic’ then that time is right now. As Rob Pretcher from The Elliot Wave Principle says – the markets are a reflection of endgenous behaviour (coming from within the market itself) not exogeneous behaviour (caused by reactions to external events). On any given day the press will find some ‘good’ or ‘bad’ news to fit what the markets did.

As the market rally wears on, one by one bears are leaving the bear camp and joining the bulls. Once they have all but left … then the market will be ready for the next leg down. As a friend of mine who is a hedge fund manager says “its very hard for a market to go up when everyone is long”. The same applies in reverse. It is hard for the markets to go down if everyone is in doubt, and therefore shorting the market.

In the meantime here are 3 reasons to rethink the “Green Shoots” theorems – perhaps things are not as rosy as they seem?

Reason 1: World Industrial output tracking the Gt Depression nicely

World Industrial Output since crsis vs the Gt Depression

World Industrial Output since start of the crisis vs the Gt Depression

Reason 2: World Stockmarkets – making the Gt Depression seem like  a joke in comparison

World Stockmarkets

World Stockmarkets

Reason 3: Volume of World Trade declining faster than the Gt Depression

Volume of World Trade since start of crisis vs Gt Depression

Volume of World Trade since start of crisis vs Gt Depression

Conclusions:

The pictures above speak a thousand words. If we concentrate on the Stockmarket for a moment, it is obvious that World Stockmarkets on the whole have fallen much faster since the start of the Credit Crisis than they did in the Gt Depression of 1929-1932. If they fell faster then they were due a bounce – and this is exactly what we are getting now. As I pointed out in my post Dead Cats can bounce pretty high especially if they were thrown from a great height – things were looking pretty oversold in March and we are getting the classic relief or “suckers” rally. Of course I could be wrong about this, but I for one am not ready to leave the bear camp just yet. Show me P/E ratios of the major indices in single digits, and then we’ll start talking :-)

Dead cats can bounce pretty high, especially if they are thrown from a great height

Monday, March 30th, 2009

What to make of the current rally?

Before the animal rights activists get all up in arms, I am talking about the Stockmarket here, when I talk about a ‘dead cat’ bounce. How many times over the past year have we seen a bear-market rally trumpeted as the bottom of the market, only for enthusiasm to wane and Stockmarkets to fall even further than ever before? The pattern seems very familiar, stocks rally on some “good” economic news, a couple of “famous” hedge fund managers (of long-only funds) proclaim that the bottom of the market is in place, everyone gets excited and jumps back on board, only to watch the market take a sickening U-turn and fall further again.

But how do we know that the bulls are not right? How do we really know that the latest turning point is not the bottom of the market? Of course, nobody knows that, as nobody has a crystal ball, not even George Soros, Warren Buffet, or any other legendary investor can tell you exactly what is going to happen. We are living through an event that has unprecedented characteristics, and therefore the outcome is unknowable. Who really knows what if anything is going to come out of the G20 summit for example?

Beware of the bull

For now, beware of anyone telling you that now is the time to jump in with two feet. There are several reasons to be skeptical of the current rally being the bottom of the market. Since the NZ market follows the US market lets looks at the big picture on the US markets:

1) The 12 month trailing P/E ratio of the S&P500 is 98 for the quarter ended March 2009 and the estimates for the 2nd Quarter of 2009 have the P/E ratio coming in at 194! To say that stocks are expensive given these figures, would be the understatement of the century.

2) The reported rise in housing sales in the US for February of 4.7% has a margin of error of 18.3%! So in fact sales could have risen by 23% or dropped by 13%! These figures are just estimates. Sales are still 47% down from a year ago. Yet the market rallied on this news. Once month’s data is simply a blip on the horizon and everything needs to be put into context. The media on the other hand love to publish headlines heralding any signs of “recovery”.

3) The fundamentals of the world economy remain unchanged – for example Japan’s exports are down 47% on a year ago! A Stockmarket bottom now would imply an economic recovery in September of this year. Even the most bullish of economists would have to be skeptical about that one given the severity of the global credit crisis.

Market psychology

Ask a room full of people if they are above or below-average drivers, and studies have shown that over 80% will say they are above average drivers! As human beings we have an inherent bias to be optimistic, which is a trait our ancestors developed in order to maximize chances of survival. However, over-optimism in the markets can be fatal to a portfolio’s performance.

The current rally has been due simply because market sentiment had turned to bearish extremes. Look at the AAII investor confidence survey at the latest market bottom on the 6th March and you will see what I mean. There doesn’t appear to be any real fundamental grounding for the latest rally, it has been entirely based on a shift in sentiment. The rally has largely been driven by beaten-down sectors such as the Financials which were looking oversold.

Its a traders market

All is not lost and even if this does turn out to be a dead cat bounce, we must be mindful that bear market rallies can last a long time. In the meantime then, there is no reason to not participate in the market, if you firmly believe you have found a great stock with solid fundamentals and good price and volume action. There are plenty of stocks, especially in the US market, which have outperformed the market by 40% or more over the last year, although finding these types of stocks is the real challenge.

So essentially this is a traders market, its a market in which we must be watchful and ready to take our profits and run if the bear returns with a vengeance. However buy-and-hope may be a thing of the past, until there are clearer signs of a fresh bull market with solid leadership, and that is looking far far away on the distant horizon at this point.

Happy trading!

Stocks at these levels are by no means “cheap”

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

The sucker rally

The US S&P500 stockmarket index closed on Friday at 890 – 20% higher than it’s low set on 21st November ’08, and the current rally has been a cause for great optimism amongst some investors. ‘The worst is over’ or ‘stocks are cheap, get in now!’ is what some people may have you believe. Since the US is the engine of growth that drives the world, if they start to do well, then so will NZ and the rest of the world will surely follow. The NZX50 closed on Friday at 2757 – a mere 7% off the Nov 21 ’08 low of 2568, the rally in NZ has not been as pronounced. The NZX50 at it’s lowest point last November was some 40% off it’s 2007 highs, a staggering fall in little over a year.

How do we measure “cheapness”?

After such staggering falls in the stockmarket many people have started wondering that if stocks are so cheap, is now the time to buy? Well that all depends on how you value a stock, and one could also argue that stocks were previously overpriced, and they are just correcting back to more “normal” levels. In the stockmarket, the most common way of valuing how expensive a stock is – is through it’s price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio. The average P/E ratio for the S&P500 over all time is 15 – anything above this value and stocks are more expensive on a historical basis, anything below 15, and stocks are historically “cheap”. The P/E ratio has varied hugely over time, from it’s highs at the peak of the dot-com mania in the year 2000 of 40, to lows below 10 at the end of the worst bear markets in history in 1921, 1932, 1949 and 1982 – and we are currently in one of the worst bear markets in history.

So are stocks really cheap right now?

Focusing on the US markets for now, the closing price on Friday for the S&P500 was 890, and the Earnings Per Share for 2008 was $48 which gives us a P/E ratio of 18.5 as the market currently stands. Not by any measure is that cheap, in fact it is well above the long-run average of 15. What has happened is that although the stockmarket has fallen, corporate earnings have fallen significantly also, so the P/E ratio has not come down as quickly as might be expected. We are in a secular bear market that began with the popping of the dot-com bubble in 2000 – and secular bear markets have historically ended with a P/E ratio below 10. That would mean that if corporate earnings stayed constant in 2009, the S&P500 would have to fall to 468 – a further 47% from today’s levels to give us a P/E ratio of 10. What is most likely to happen however, given the global recession, is that corporate earnings will fall again in 2009, which is rather scary given that this would mean that the market would need to fall even further to achieve the P/E ratio of 10 that we are talking about. The bottom line is that what looks cheap now could potentially get a lot cheaper!

Is it all doom and gloom?

The world will not end and corporate earnings along with the stockmarket and economy in general will eventually recover. When this will happen in unknowable and we can only look to the past to give us some benchmark, but bearing in mind that the past is only a guide to the future, nobody has a perfect crystal ball, not even George Soros or Warren Buffet. But in the meantime, just be wary of anyone trying to tell you that “stocks are cheap”. There are going to be plenty of tradeable rallies in this bear market before it ends. There is no reason to not participate in the rallies, just be wary that volatility will be high, and it is probably wise to avoid leveraging. Watch your positions so that if the market turns sour, you are ready move into cash.

Good luck and happy trading for 2009!

Where is the bull market now…?

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

Where is the bull hiding?

Stocks are in a bear market, commodities are falling like a stone, interest rates on bank deposits are down, bond prices are dropping, and house prices are down. It does not seem like a pretty picture, yet I am reminded of the old adage “there is always a bull market somewhere“. Somewhere, but where? Surely not every single asset class can be in a bear market at the same time? I pondered over this last weekend and then it came to me – and the answer was so obvious that I simply could not believe I had not seen it earlier.

“C” is for……?


Currencies! Yes… you may have noticed there was an asset class that was obviously missing from the list above. Currency trading is the single largest market in the world, with over 3 trillion dollars changing hands on a daily basis. Since mid-2008, there has been a huge bull market underway in both the Japanese Yen, and the US dollar. The strongest of these pairs has been the Japanese Yen, followed by the US dollar and then the Swiss Franc. These currencies have been in a firm uptrend since June which has yet to show any signs of abating. This has been a sharp trend reversal because up until this year, the high-yielding currencies such as the New Zealand Dollar (NZD), Brazilian Real (BRL), Australian Dollar (AUS) and British Pound (GBP) had been in favor. The market seems to now be favoring the lower-yielding “safer” currencies.

Comparing apples with apples.

Gold has long been used as a store of value over the centuries and provides us with a suitable means by which to compare currencies, against a common benchmark. In order to smooth out any noise from daily fluctuations, I have used the monthly averages. Let’s take a look at what the results show:


Since Jan ’08            Since Jun ’08
USD 7.54%                        19.42%
JPY
31.09%                      35.03%
NZD
-26.68%                    -19.3%

When plotted on a chart the results show even more dramatically that the USD staged a sharp reversal from it’s downwards trend in June this year, and has been gaining strength ever since. The New Zealand dollar, measured in Gold ounces, has been sliding since the start of the year. The Japanese Yen has been the strongest performer, and has been showing considerable strength throughout all of 2008. The results show that a simple trend-following trade since June this year on the JPY and USD would have done very nicely, although of course there is plenty of ‘hindsight bias’ in this statement!

So where to from here?

In Richard Farleigh’s book “Taming the Lion” there were two very important observations that he made about the markets, based on a lifetime of his experience:

1) A trend, once in motion, tends to stay in motion
2) Markets tend to under-react in the short term, but then they always go further than expected

It is my belief that the current trends we are seeing in the stronger JPY and USD are going to continue for some time, for several technical, and fundamental reasons. Of course nothing in the world of investing is ever certain, but these are my beliefs! In my next blog, I’ll be talking about some of the fundamentals underpinning the USD and the JPY, and the reason behind NZD weakness. Until then, happy trading!

US markets rally nothing but a dead cat bounce

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Was the rally in the US markets last week the beginning of a new trend upwards or just a temporary “dead cat bounce“? Let’s take a look at the facts.

In the past week the S&P500 index rallied up a staggering 20% from it’s low of 741 set on the 21st November. In my last post I wrote about the extreme levels of Volatilility we were seeing – with the CBOE VIX at at record high of 80, and how sometimes this marked a short or long term low in the market. Well it seems now that we did indeed get a bounce, and the market closed on Friday at 896, after one of the biggest ever up-weeks in history. Volatility is still very high and as such we are seeing a lot of records being set at present.

However the market still remains in a clear down-trend and well below the 50-day moving average line. The last time the market rallied was around the US election time, where it rose from it’s low of 825 to 1007 (a 19% gain over the course of one week) before resuming it’s downward slide. The “Obama bounce” is it was dubbed was attributed to the euphoria and optimism that is normally seen around US elections and especially with a new President being elected. After it had all died down, reality set in and the market resumed it’s downward plunge.

In the past week there has been some “good” news come out. The US government has bailed out Citigroup to the tune of $306 billion. There was the unveiling of Obama’s economic team of super-stars, and an $800 billion plan for getting credit flowing again in the financial markets. The bottom line is that the US government is throwing everything they have at the markets, by continually pumping cash into the system and bailing out “too big to fail” institutions. But it’s prudent to remember, that they have been doing this since early this year, beginning with Bear Sterns, and yet that has not been enough to stem the downward slide in the equities markets. When will enough be enough, remains to be seen.

Alongside the good news there was plenty of bad news as well. The fundamentals of the US economy still look dire, Q3 GDP revised downwards to -0.5% from -0.3%, durable orders down 6.2%, existing home sales down 3.1%, new home sales dropped 5.3% and consumer personal spending down 1.0%. Not to mention the London based BlueBay hedge fund’s closure of it’s emerging markets fund after it lost 53% of it’s value since September, and the NY based Satellite Asset Management stopped client withdrawals from it’s 3 largest funds. The interesting point to note here, is that a rallying market will tend to ignore bad news and focus only on good news.

From a technical point of view it was interesting to note that the volume was very much down last week, which calls the strength of the rally into question. Usually when a strong rally takes hold, it does so on increasing rather than declining volume. It is my belief that this rally is simply a “dead cat bounce“. The fundamentals of the ecomomy paint the true picture – the US economy is shrinking, and in an environment where GDP is shrinking one would expect that corporate profits are going to also shrink. If corporate profits shrink then prices of equities must fall to maintain a constant P/E ratio (that is assuming that investors do not all of a sudden decide to accept a higher risk premium).

The only wild card is what is known as the “Santa Claus” rally effect where fund managers try to bolster stock prices at year-end to make their yearly funds’ performances look rosier. I expect the market to start selling off again in the new year and to remain in a downtrend until some uptick in consumer prices and corporate profits shows up. In the meantime, expect Volatility, and lots of it!

Fear Gage extreme as stock-markets break 2002 lows

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

It has been done…… the markets made history yesterday as the S&P500 broke the September 2002 lows of the tech-wreck bear market. If anyone wanted any hard evidence that this bear market is going to be the far worse than the last one, and far worse than anything we’ve seen in our lifetimes, yesterday provided the hard cold evidence. The market is now 50% down from it’s peak in October 2007.

The CBOE VIX (Volatility Index) which is a measure of investors’ fear (known as the “Fear Gage”), made a record yesterday as it hit an all-time high of 80 – to put this into perspective, since the start of the index, the highest it had ever reached before was in August 1998 (the Asian Financial crisis) where it hit 44.28 and then again in September 2002 at the bottom of the bear market it reached a high of 39.69.

The VIX is a measure of volatility and a measure of the risk premium that option contracts writers’ demand – the higher the premiums, the higher the level of risk that is perceived by the market. So not only are we making records, we are completely smashing them. It is interesting to note that in the past these highs in the VIX have marked the bottom of the market, it remains to be seen whether we are at the bottom, or is the VIX simply going to keep spiking higher and higher as the market plunges to fresh low after fresh low? Obviously since nobody has a crystal ball no-one can give that answer.

The S&P500 yesterday finished at 752. To put that into perspective, a level below 780 puts the market into the lowest 20% of all historical valuations. The 700 level on the S&P500 puts the market in the lowest 10% of historical valuations, and a further decline to 625 would be the lowest 5% of valuations. Anything below 600 puts the market in the lowest 1% of all valuations.

It is my belief that since this crisis is unlike anything that we have seen in our lifetimes, and argualbly we are in much worse shape than 2000-2002 dot-com bust and the 1970s inflationary recession, we could very likely see the market make lows that put it into the top 5% or top 1% of (lowest) valuations. This means that the S&P500 will get below 700 and test 600 in the coming year. There are just so many records being set and that have already been set, the highest number of hedge-funds ever, the highest ever house-price-to-earnings ratios, the greatest levels of debt per household ever in the Western world. All this debt and leverage needs to be unwound, and that is what we are witnessing, the greatest unwinding in history.

There has to be a lot of investors at present sitting on the sidelines and thinking, gee, stocks are looking really cheap. At some stage this will result in a bear market rally (as these investors pile in), but it remains to be seen when, and if it happens, if it can stick. In the meantime I intend to keep watching the market action closely, because we are on the verge of the greatest investment opportunity of our lifetimes. We are unlikely to see a period of time again in the next 20-30 years when valuations of stocks will be so low. Interesting times!