Friday, May 28, 2010

May, May, Please Go Away

Winter: Cold Then Hot
The story begins January 20th when morning headlines read
‘Greece to Crack Down on Tax Evasion’. From that day forward, the market (the S&P 500) would fall 9.2% through February 9th. By that date, chatter of the PIGS (Portugal Ireland Greece and Spain) was gaining momentum. But the mood changed and positive news of an economy on the mend took the market 16.7% in other direction until April 26th peak. Quietly, the Euro had shed 7% since mid January.

Spring: Cold
On April 27th, the headlines read
Greek Debt Rating Cut to ‘Junk’ Status. Two days later I wrote an email to a client for whom I had promised a trading proposal: “I have been a little hesitant to make any suggestions. The market had essentially made no moves greater than 1% in the last 2.5 months, and it has moved over 2% in both directions in the last 4 trading days. I have been trying to get a feeling for how it might break.”

Now we know. The euro would fall another 8% over the next 4 weeks and the U.S. stock market would fall 14.6% peak-to-trough through early Tuesday morning May 25th. A headline that morning from a budget conscious NYT travel writer was
‘Greece - Why Now’. The last time we had such volatility was late February / early March 2009, the final capitulation phase of the 2008/2009 bear market.

Greenback: Warming
I have heard from TV pundits that
Obamanomics is creating mountains of public debt, its regulatory zeal is spooking corporations, and his tax policies are forcing business owners to tighten their wallets undermining job creation. The combination of all this is a hostile investment environment for the greenback and at any time China might pull the plug. Despite the hostile environment, big budget deficits and the $13 trillion mountain of debt, the dollar is on the rise and the real bottom started in March of 2008, long before Lehman and Obamanomics.

Money Flow: Climate Change
On the surface, it would appear the dollar is doomed. But understanding the nature of money in our global system may help investors understand why the dollar has been on the rise for nearly two years despite dim prospects for the
Land of Liberty. Expensive Euros will buy lots of cheap greenbacks, or U.S. dollar denominated assets. Just as air will move from areas of high to low pressure, money will flow from expensive assets to cheap assets until they are no longer cheap. Until 4 months ago, €1 would buy a $1.50. 10 years ago the Euro would only buy 85 cents USD. Those are likely two extreme levels. The right level is probably somewhere in between. But many investors have been positioned for a weak dollar / strong euro environment which has been the proper posture for the last decade.

Weather Front
The weak dollar / strong euro era has probably come to a close with the accelerated drop in the Euro in recent weeks. Many private investors, hedge funds, governments, corporations, pensions and endowments are realizing they are on the wrong side of that trade. When air moves from areas of high to low pressure it is preceded by bursts of warm or cold air followed by weather. Atmospheric change is a seemingly chaotic event that can result in wind, rain, sleet, hail or snow, all swirling about. But as pressure finds new equilibriums, the sky begins to mellow out and the disturbance eventually disappears. The end of weak dollar / strong euro has upset the global equilibrium and money is flowing from one place to another find a new equilibrium. This process increases uncertainty and volatility.

Nasty Squall
On April 22, a deep-water drilling rig off the coast of Louisiana exploded and sank to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico with 11 people aboard. By April 27th, news reports were suggesting it would be a serious oil spill. That same day, selling began in earnest when news hit the wires that Greek debt was now junk. The next 5 trading days were volatile with the market moving over 2% in each direction. On May 5th, 100,000 people took to the Greek streets in protest of government austerity measures. On May 7, the stock market fell roughly 9% in course of about 10 minutes (the so-called unexplainable
Flash Crash) leaving most market participants with a knots in their stomachs. Though the stock market recovered 6% of those losses by the close that day, shockwaves hit debt markets and ancillary markets like preferred stocks.

Over the next few days the market rallied and made a full
Flash Crash recovery, but violence in Bangkok reached new crescendos that lasted for the next week. Sellers returned, driving stocks down for the next 9 sessions. On top of all this, the House and Senate spent these days debating financial reform legislation. This issue, like the health care debate, is fraught with divisive prescriptions and remedies. Now in reconciliation, the uncertainty of the outcome and the potential unintended consequences of a major piece of legislation have all parties on pins and needles.

The bottom came on May 25th as investors awoke to headlines that Kim Jong-il, Supreme Leader of North Korea, was mobilizing his army for war with South Korea. The market fell 3% at the open, but buyers came in accumulating stocks all day with the session ending at nearly the highest print. Nothing like the potential for a nuclear war to bring buyers into U.S. stocks. On May 29th, after a few good days, Fitch downgraded Spain from AAA to AA+ in the middle of Friday’s trading session before the Memorial Day weekend. All this begs the question –
‘Was this just the squall before the hurricane?’

Weather Cycle
One way to think about financial markets is think about the annual
weather cycle. If we are truly at the beginning of a new economic expansion, early cycle, then we are probably in spring. With spring come some nice days, but also a lot of cold, rainy days. As spring progresses, the weather improves. From time to time, you may have a thunderstorm, or a tornado, if you live in such a place. When summer comes, the weather is generally nice. This period is called mid-cycle for economic expansion. You are past peak tornado season and before hurricane season. It is the longest phase of the economic cycle and the stock market cycle.

The
fall could be considered late cycle, the point in the economic cycle where inflation pressures are building up and the prices of things are reaching extremes. During this time, bank coffers are full and lenders want to find places for their depositors’ money. Early contraction begins in the late fall and is marked by mostly cold October and November days. The rain and sleet return, maybe even an early blizzard. When there are no more warm days, this is the end of expansion. Full contraction is winter. Day upon day of gray skies, cold and snow turned to ice that won’t melt. The economic cycle is generally 4 years, but it has gotten longer since WWII. The 1980’s and 1990s had very long expansions that made some observers think we had licked the business cycle. But this last recession has brought people back down to Earth.

Spring
When I look at the market action of recent weeks, I have to raise my level of apprehension as the Euro area debt problem, or even the U.S. debt problem may derail this economic cycle. I have to ask myself –
“Have we entered a major cooling period like the ice ages where great expanses of the economy become frozen and the last 3 quarters of economic growth will be snuffed out by a this super cycle looming just over the horizon. Or are the events of May just a squall and summer is just around the corner.’

My gut tells me that the economy will be better off 6 or 12 months down the road. While European
bond vigilantes give me worry, I think the EMU is on the right track to stave of global cooling. With $1 trillion just off the presses to buy debt of the PIGS, snowplows are on the streets clearing this late spring blizzard. Deflation is a symptom of excessive debt and inflation is exactly what central bankers are using to fight it. I am generally not one to fight the Fed.

Just Another Storm?
It has been my observation that these kinds of storms eventually pass. In 1994, in order to bring soaring budget deficits and debt under control, President Clinton abandoned his campaign promise of tax cuts. This was the result of advice from his Treasury Secretary, Robert Rubin, former co-Chairman of Goldman Sachs. U.S. government debt was under significant selling pressure as so-called bond vigilantes shunned treasuries. James Carville, Clinton’s top political adviser, said,

“I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would like to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody."

In 1995, Newt Gingrich would lead a Republican charge that shutdown the Federal government for several weeks. Through bi-partisan efforts and austerity, the deficit would fall and surpluses would come from 1997 – 2001. (Source: www.whitehouse.gov/omb)

Severe Weather Watch
Deflation is still the problem and inflation will have to wait its turn. Inflation is a symptom of excessive money supply and is a late cycle phenomena. We have a few more seasons that must pass before we get there. But do not get me wrong. If I sense that a much nastier storm is coming, we may have to b
atten down the hatches.

It rained again all day. The high was 52 degrees. It will be June in four days and the
summer solstice is June 21.

Jason McMillen, Chief Investment Strategist, PPWM


This is the DISCLAIMER: Information, data and attachments contained on this website are from sources considered reliable but their accuracy and completeness is not guaranteed. Investing entails risks, including possible risk of principal. An investment in any equity, bond, fund or other financial instrument may be speculative and involve significant risks. We do not offer tax advice. Individuals should consult their personal tax advisor before making any tax-related investment decisions. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

Securities offered with and through First Allied Securities, Inc., a Registered Broker Dealer, Member FINRA/SIPC. First Allied Securities, Inc., is not affiliated nor endorses Portland Private Wealth Management or any other affiliated firms.

If you would like to contact us feel free to email as at jason@portlandprivatewm.com or we can be reached at 503-703-4067.

Thank you.

© 2010 All Rights Reserved Portland Private Wealth Management Group.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Prognosticating

Fall 2009 was the last time I brought you Prognosticating. Spring is here and perhaps it is a good time do it again. Previously, I mentioned that forecasting is potentially a futile exercise, but it is kind of fun. At the end of last year, I wrote a 3-piece blog essay titled Unprecedented that may shed some light on why I think ‘future tripping’ is often pointless. Basically, we have been talking about the end of the American empire since the empire started.

Below are some topics that often come up with clients. I have included comments from the Fall so you can see how these thoughts have progressed over time. Please take them with a grain of salt as the following disclaimer warns:

All estimates, opinions and views expressed are our own and constitute our best judgments as of the date of this podcast or email and may be subject to change at any time without notice. These opinions and views are made under conditions of great uncertainty and there is a good possibility that our judgments could be completely wrong. However, we hope for your sake and ours that we are more right than wrong of which there is no guarantee.


The PPWM Outlook Spring 2010


Economy

Fall 2009 The global economy is nearing a trough in the business cycle marked by the early phase of a cyclical bull market in financial markets.

Spring 2010 The global economy turned the corner. Economic growth returned in the middle of 2009 and has been stronger than expected. The U.S. is expected to grow in foreseeable future, but the rate of growth will be below 3%, which does not bode well for job growth. (Source: IMF WEO April 2010) The Depression sale is over in financial markets and with moderate economic growth we should expect moderate rates of return.


Stimulus

Fall 2009 Coordinated global fiscal and monetary stimulus provides a positive environment for investors.

Spring 2010 Fiscal stimulus will fade in 2010, but monetary accommodation is alive and well. While the Fed has stopped purchasing mortgages, interest rates are at historic lows. European central banks recently pumped more money into the EMU by purchasing debt of troubled governments. This a positive backstop for investors.


Rates

Fall 2009 Global interest rates will remain low for a significant period of time as central bankers work aggressively to stimulate risk taking behavior and economic activity.

Spring 2010 One year ago, the yield on a 10-year treasury note was 3.89%. Today, that same rate is 3.76%. (5/18/2010) Real estate has a long way to go to get banks out of the ditch. Unemployment is high. I don't see rates going anywhere for a while.


Commodities

Fall 2009 We are in a long-term bull market for commodities, driven by new demand from emerging markets.

Spring 2010 Asia is expected to grow at a rate of 7% for the next two years. Latin America, Emerging Europe, Middle East and North Africa are looking at 4%+ growth rates. This kind of growth underpins global demand for commodities. (Source: IMF WEO April 2010)


Moderate Growth

Fall 2009 The developed economies will grow slower than emerging economies.

Spring 2010 The U.S. is forecasted to grow at less than 3% over the next couple of years. Europe is expected to grow at a rate less than 1% and that may be optimistic. (Source: IMF WEO April 2010) Such growth rates are below the long-term averages.


Emerging Markets

Fall 2009 Companies in the developed world that can sell products into the developing world are attractive.

Spring 2010 The rapid economic growth in emerging economies provides opportunity for all sorts of companies -- heavy equipment, high tech machinery for manufacturing, energy infrastructure, consumer electronics, trendy global brands, entertainment, etc. The rise of the third world takes pressure off the Core to always be consumer of last resort.


Global Linkages

Fall 2009 The rest of the world is geared toward selling consumer products to the U.S. consumer. They have a huge stake in the revival of U.S. consumption.

Spring 2010 Understanding the global flows of money, goods and services is critical to understanding why countries like China would buy trillions of dollars of U.S. government and corporate debt despite our apparent mismanagement of those funds.


Consumer

Fall 2009 The U.S. economy and the consumer are resilient and will be highly adaptive to the headwinds they face, despite opinions to the contrary.

Spring 2010 When U.S. companies can shed millions of jobs to maintain profitability, governments can provide an effective safety net in the form of unemployment insurance to keep families in their homes, paying rents, and shopping at the corner store, it is no surprise that our economic system can take the blow it did, get back up and keep playing. This is why they call it mixed capitalism, and not capitalism. We have an enviable social safety net which makes are system more resilient shocks. Developing economies like China are emulating our system by building out a social safety net that will make them more stable, not less.


Inflation

Fall 2009 When (assuming) the global economy starts growing robustly again, inflation will come back quickly.

Spring 2010 Inflation is the symptom of excess money printing. Deflation is the result of excessive debt. Once markets have cleared and deleveraging has run its course, the forces of inflation will have their time in the limelight.


Unemployment

Fall 2009 U.S. unemployment rates may not come back down in the near-term as the U.S. economy must make a tectonic shift from the hyper-activity of building automobiles, houses, condos, strip malls and office buildings – to doing something else – at least for the next 5 to 10 years.

Spring 2010 Unemployment will be a nagging problem for years to come. When politicians tell you that they can make jobs, or that the one's policies are not making enough jobs, just nod and smile with skepticism. All the data of past experience suggests that unemployment in the U.S. will get back under 6% in no less than 5 years time. (Source: IMF WEO April 2010)


Deficits

Fall 2009 The fiscal deficits of the U.S. government are unsustainable and highly problematic without serious sacrifices.

Spring 2010 Greece is the canary in the coalmine, so they say. The drop in tax revenues due to the global financial crisis has exposed governments around the world. The resulting deficits raise the specter that bondholders, the lenders to governments, may not be paid back in full.


Austerity

Fall 2009 Industrialized governments have made significant promises to their retirees that are significantly underfunded.

Spring 2010 Austerity is perhaps the new buzzword for the media, pensioners and governments alike will need to face the reality that there is not enough money to fulfill all their dreams and promises.

What’s new? We have been talking about reforming social security since the Advisory Council Report on Social Security in March 1975. Unions have been facing austerity for 30 years, but the economy seems to find ways to grow. Spain has defaulted 13 times since 1800. Greece has defaulted 5 times. (Source: Reinhard and Rogoff) Why is this time so calamitous?


Taxes

Fall 2009 Higher taxes are on the horizon.

Spring 2010 While not the only answer to global deficits and debt, higher taxes will play a role to reducing deficits and paying off the government debt bubble incurred over the last 20 to 30 years. During the 1990s, a bipartisan commitment to deficit and debt reduction provided a foundation for a vibrant economy. Pray that factious politicians can find common ground again.

Let us be real – slower economic growth is the result of excessive debts built over a generation. Not because of lack entrepreneurial ingenuity. We will muddle through as history can attest, but we have now entered a time to pay the piper.


Real Estate

Fall 2009 Financial markets still have significant negative exposure to commercial real estate assets that could be disruptive to economic expansion.

Spring 2010 Commercial real estate prices may have stabilized taking the pressure off bank balance sheets and lowering the probability of a systemic risk event related to these debts. Residential markets, while seemingly on the mend, are stymied by shadow inventory, those bank repos not on the market, which means years, not months before the market can clear.


Bailouts

Fall 2009 The government may to have to make additional capital injections into financial institutions in order to absorb future losses due to write-downs associated with commercial real estate (which have not yet been taken). Such injections may destabilize financial markets once again.

Spring 2010 Something that will no doubt be studied by academics, the Private Public Investment Partnership (PPIP), Geithner's silver bullet to remove toxic assets from the banks balance sheets, never left the bullet chamber. Upon the government's announcement of the program, the so-called toxic assets rallied so much that the financial elite like PIMCO took a pass on the program. Originally slated for up to $1 trillion, the mere creation of the program deemed it nearly unnecessary. Where are those toxic assets now? Still at the banks but not as toxic.


Secular Bear

Fall 2009 A multi-year bull market may take stock market indices back to old highs, but a return to the good old days like the 1980s and 1990s where indices rose 15-fold is probably not in the cards until the ‘structural headwinds’ mentioned above have been addressed. This may mean another decade of volatile markets similar to the 1960s and 1970s.

Spring 2010 A term thrown around by market historians, secular bear markets are periods where returns for investors fall well below the average returns like the late 1960s and 1970s. Secular bull markets are periods when market returns are well above average, like the 1980s and 1990s. The Dow Jones rose 10-fold from 1982 to 2000. Today, it is still below the peak set in 2000. From 2003 to 2007 to Dow Jones nearly doubled, only to give back all those gains. Buy and hold? I don't think that is the best strategy right now.


Euro

Spring 2010 The euro has been under significant pressure recently as the aftermath of the global financial crisis left the Greeks unable to make debt payments that came due. The EMU and IMF came to the rescue but not before the markets let us imagine a cascade of European defaults, the seizing up of global financial markets, the return of the Deutschemark and German nationalism, and the end of the Pax Europa. The media loves all the innuendoes with minute-by-minute coverage of disgruntled hoi polloi and Molotov cocktails, stoking the pandemonium.

Despite the scary sound bites, the probable outcome is EMU will tighten its fiscal belts, impose austerity despite the political costs and emerge leaner and meaner at the end of the decade. Watch the prequel called the Asian Financial Crisis from 1998 when it looked like Korea and several others would default.


Wealth Destruction

Spring 2010 At the end of WW II, much of Germany and Japan were destroyed, two of the biggest of the economies in the world at that time. (For further reading see Wikipedia Strategic Bombing WWII or the The Fog of War documentary film with Robert McNamara.) It is estimated some 60 million people died from combat, disease, starvation or genocide. The direct costs of the war, widely debated, are estimated at anywhere from $1.5 to $3 trillion in current U.S. dollars. Somehow, the global economy was back on track by 1948 even with U.S. debt at 120% of GDP, Britain’s at 260%, Germany’s at 217%, and Japan’s at 200%. (Source: Wikipedia, www.whitehouse.gov/omb, Ritsch 1996, Kudo 2006).

Is wealth destruction a lower valuation on your real property at a point in time or the literal destruction of that real property? It is important to have the proper perspective on things to make good investment decisions. One-way to think about wealth is that is not destroyed except by natural disaster or war, it merely changes hands.

Last year, Paul Krugman, a Nobel Prize winning economist, wrote a blog called 1945 where he made the point that the U.S. has been in a tough spot before and dealt with it. In response to criticism to his blog, he made another interesting point that people have ways of making analyses in hindsight that suggests the wind was always at the back of that Great Generation, so it was natural they would escape their predicaments.

Today, has the wind stopped blowing, or is it always a headwind? I guess it is just how you look at things. I really doubt we are at the end of progress and wealth creation, or on the precipice of the new economic Dark Ages.

Investment Implications

As we have said before, we believe investors may need to be more proactive and nimble than they have been in the past. This may require considering new investments ideas, timing strategies and examining yield as an important slice of total return. We will continue to make investments in companies with exposure to basic materials (commodities) and emerging markets, either through the purchase of fixed income or equity instruments. In addition, we want exposure to investments that benefit from an improving global economy or can benefit from an inflationary environment. If you want specifics, we encourage you to contact us. These are our prognostications -- for now.

Jason McMillen, Chief Investment Strategist, PPWM

This is the DISCLAIMER: Information, data and attachments contained on this website are from sources considered reliable but their accuracy and completeness is not guaranteed. Investing entails risks, including possible risk of principal. An investment in any equity, bond, fund or other financial instrument may be speculative and involve significant risks. We do not offer tax advice. Individuals should consult their personal tax advisor before making any tax-related investment decisions. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

Securities offered with and through First Allied Securities, Inc., a Registered Broker Dealer, Member FINRA/SIPC. First Allied Securities, Inc., is not affiliated nor endorses Portland Private Wealth Management or any other affiliated firms.

If you would like to contact us feel free to email as at jason@portlandprivatewm.com or we can be reached at 503-595-1059.

Thank you.

© 2010 All Rights Reserved Portland Private Wealth Management Group