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Market Update 03-24-10

Last week, India became the latest Asian country to raise interest rates as recovery continued to take hold. The Indian central bank raised rates for the first time in two years—raising both its benchmark repurchase and reverse repurchase rates by 25 basis points—as inflation starts to gather steam in the fast growing Asian nation. India’s industrial production grew 16.7 percent in January on a year-on-year basis after a 17.6 percent increase the month before. Wholesale prices also rose, at the rate of nearly 10 percent in February compared to the year-earlier period.
 
Foreign investment in India has greatly increased in recent months as overseas investors take note of the rising yields of Indian assets as the Indian economic engine churns along. Foreign ownership of Indian debt and equity both rose to record highs earlier this month. With strong economic growth and further upward price pressures in India expected later this year, more interest rate hikes are in the cards, likely giving the Indian rupee an extra boost. Much like in China, the proactive monetary tightening for India reduces the risk of runaway inflation and is actually a good sign for the long-term stability of the economy.
 
Brazilian stocks in the last couple of days received a nice jolt from commodity producers.
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Buy this oil industry leader now 02-22-10

Short-Term Key: Negative Long-Term Key: -93 (Neutral to Negative)

The two most important developments that came to light this past weekend both occurred within the energy sector, a sector which is also a key indicator of economic health.

On the global level, we had a report that oil consumption in the U.S. fell in January to its lowest level since 1998. We can interpret this drop in several ways.

Most of the recent decline came in the demand for distillates, including diesel fuel. Diesel fuel, which is used in trucking, railways, and other forms of mass transit, is particularly sensitive to economic activity. The more goods we produce, the more transportation fuel gets consumed and vice versa. In fact, UCLA has recently created a Pulse of Commerce Index based on real-time diesel consumption by the American trucking industry.

Diesel consumption has a very good record as an indicator of industrial production. Unfortunately, this means the drop in January's consumption figures suggests that industrial output is slowing as well.

To be fair, the 3-month moving average for this index is considered more reliable than the monthly data, and the 3-month MA is up. December saw a big increase in consumption, so perhaps January's dip is really just a brief correction. Nonetheless, another drop in February would call the U.S. economic recovery into question.Read more...

Market Update 02-22-10

Short-Term Key: Negative Long-Term Key: -93 (Neutral to Negative)

The two most important developments that came to light this past weekend both occurred within the energy sector, a sector which is also a key indicator of economic health.

On the global level, we had a report that oil consumption in the U.S. fell in January to its lowest level since 1998. We can interpret this drop in several ways.

Most of the recent decline came in the demand for distillates, including diesel fuel. Diesel fuel, which is used in trucking, railways, and other forms of mass transit, is particularly sensitive to economic activity. The more goods we produce, the more transportation fuel gets consumed and vice versa. In fact, UCLA has recently created a Pulse of Commerce Index based on real-time diesel consumption by the American trucking industry.

Diesel consumption has a very good record as an indicator of industrial production. Unfortunately, this means the drop in January's consumption figures suggests that industrial output is slowing as well.

To be fair, the 3-month moving average for this index is considered more reliable than the monthly data, and the 3-month MA is up. December saw a big increase in consumption, so perhaps January's dip is really just a brief correction. Nonetheless, another drop in February would call the U.S. economic recovery into question.Read more...

Market Update 01-20-10

In trading today, the two major Chinese stock indices both declined in response to an official media outlet’s report that some banks have been ordered by authorities to cease lending for the rest of January. This claim was denied by China’s top bank regulator, Liu Minkang. He did say today at the Asia Financial Forum held in Hong Kong that the country's overall credit growth would be restricted to 7.5 trillion yuan in 2010 (compared to last year's record 9.59 trillion yuan) – confirming concerns about lending restrictions on the banks. A separate media report said interest rates will be raised on Friday. China’s central bank had already raised banks’ reserve ratio by 0.5 percentage points last week, and investors fear that all these moves will put the brakes on the country’s growth momentum.
 
However, rather than stopping growth cold in its tracks, these tightening measures are meant to tamper growth to prevent overheating. It is also a good sign of robust Chinese economic strength and shows the Chinese government is proactive. If regulators sat on their hands while liquidity continued to increase unchecked, China could very well develop the massive bubbles some analysts had called for.
 
In a government conference this week, Premier Wen Jiabao confirmed China’s stance to enhance governmental macro-economic control to balance stable growth with contained inflation.
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Why the Chinese bubble is a mirage 11-23-09

Some of today's brightest investors have decided the world has gone crazy. To them, it makes no sense that commodity prices are rising so sharply while economic growth remains sluggish. Something is not as it appears, and they've decided the impostor is China. Read more...

Weekly Update 11-23-09

Some of today's brightest investors have decided the world has gone crazy. To them, it makes no sense that commodity prices are rising so sharply while economic growth remains sluggish. Something is not as it appears, and they've decided the impostor is China.Read more...

Mid-Week Update 11-04-09

Yesterday, Warren Buffett stormed back into the headlines with the largest deal in his 44-year career at the helm of Berkshire Hathaway. The “Oracle of Omaha” announced that he was buying the 77.4 percent of Burlington Northern Santa Fe that he didn’t already own – paying $26 billion or $100 per share of the railroad (a 30 percent premium over the previous day’s closing price), and assuming roughly $10 billion in Burlington debt. Including his previous holding in Burlington, this is a $44 billion investment for Mr. Buffett, and is quite a bet for the investment icon.  Read more...

The Street Gets It Wrong Again

Energy stocks are valued as if oil and gas prices will nosedive. Guess what—they won’t

 
The great 20th century philosopher Bertrand Russell once quipped to a friend: “grant me one false assumption and I can prove anything.” To which his friend replied: “one plus one equals one, now prove you are the Pope.” Russell quickly responded: “I am one, the Pope is one, one equals one, therefore I am the Pope.” Case proven.
 
Frequently, Wall Street analysis seems very logical—until you notice the one false premise on which it is based. This was true in the late 1990’s, when analysts pushed highly overvalued tech stocks based on the false premise that the explosive demand for tech guaranteed outsized growth for all tech companies.
 
And it’s equally true today with respect to energy stocks.
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The Wilder Side of Fund Investing

Sector funds let you benefit from constantly changing market leadership.

 
Last issue we focused on “core” funds. The basic idea: aim to build your mutual fund portfolio around diversified, relatively stable, primarily larger-cap funds, whether growth- or income-oriented. That way you’ll keep volatility low and avoid nasty surprises.
 
But as we also noted, even if core funds make up 60 percent or so of your fund holdings, that still leaves plenty of room to venture out into narrower but potentially more profitable sector funds. These add color and depth to your portfolio and give you a way to benefit from constantly changing market leadership. Just consider that in the first eight months of 2003, the best-performing sector, Information Technology, was up 32 percent, while the worst-performing sector, Consumer Staples, gained only 1.5 percent. That’s a dramatic difference of more than 30 percentage points. Latching on to the sectors poised to become the new market leaders can ratchet up your profits in a hurry.
 
There are lots of ways to bet on a particular sector.
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The tale of the tape…: 06-19-08

It has been a market of stocks rather than a stock market of late. Okay, so that phrase is a bit shopworn, but the tale of the tape shows the market has had somewhat of a split personality for much of the year.

 

Blue chips have struggled recently, surrendering much of their gains from the March lows. The more economically sensitive small caps, too, have retreated, but they rose much more off of their bottom and they’re much closer to their former highs. Of the two groups, the small caps have the better track record as a bellwether of what we can expect going forward.

 

Among the market’s various sectors, by far the worst performing have been financials. The broker/dealers had been headline grabbers, with Lehman Brothers stock tanking, even after the company was forced to return to the capital market to bolster their balance sheet.

 

Now the regional banks have been put under the microscope. And the feeling is we’ll see plenty more losses when the quarterly numbers come out. If so, that means there will be additional capital raising to follow.Read more...