Zeev:
Dom Hays remains very bullish. Below are his market comments this morning. Would appreciate any thoughts you might have. He still is touting that 1.3 10-day Arms.
No Heroes On Wall Street The Eternal Search For Clues
Good morning everyone. It is absolutely beautiful in Nashville Tennessee this morning. As I begin this commentary, around 7:00 o’clock edt, it comes after about 2 * hours of early-morning searching. My job is fantastic, a big game every day, every week, every month. It is me against the herd. Sometimes I win, and sometimes the market fools me and makes me look pretty dumb. Hopefully, my longevity is saying that I have won a few times more than I’ve lost. Maybe it just means I’m so stubborn that I refuse to give up, but there are a lot of ways to keep score, and looking at all those, in my own humble admiration, I believe I’m way ahead. But I am never over-confident. I have been humbled too many times. And I know this is not a game you can play one day a month. It’s almost like you have to maintain the life-line to get the message. And the Stock Market is always smarter than I am, so I have to use every clue I can garner. No one clue is absolutely trustworthy. In fact, one clue by itself can be a huge decoy, and if you don’t take them in context with everything else that you can find you will be whipsawed to death. For instance, I am a big believer in charts. But, I also believe that charts mess up more investors than they help. A pure chartist will tell you that a chart tells all, and that is all you need. I have found over many years that at major (or even minor) buy spots, a chart breakdown is the final camouflage that happens before the stock or market turns back up. The advance/decline line almost always looks the worst on the bottom day, and on and on and on. So effective investment strategy comes from a person who is able to completely divorce themselves from the news of today, and has developed a technique to determine the headlines of tomorrow. The stock market, in other words, is the best indicator to measure the future headlines. So rather than me trying to guess what the economy is going to do in the next 6-12 months (I know no-one who is really good at this—certainly not your friend and mine Alan Greenspan,) and then trying to fit a stock market scenario on this very nebulous economic projection, I believe that almost all Strategists get the cart before the horse. I believe the ONLY way to effectively determine future stock market action is by looking at the three parameters, psychology, monetary, and valuation. I believe that NOTHING else works, chart-reading, star-gazing, or analyst’s projections. So the barbs that are being thrown at analysts in today’s current sensitized world is not their fault, it is those who have been led down the primrose path. Of course the Analysts have also been led down that same primrose path. Their business schools have convinced them that they can develop that ability. Okay, if that is the case Dr. Professor, show me one that has done this cycle after cycle after cycle. So let’s get off that horse, and stay committed to getting up every morning, extra early, and searching, searching, searching and more searching for some hidden clue to give some anti-herd message that the market is trying to propagate. You have to stay in rhythm. In other words, if you take one step, swing your hip in one direction, and then all of a sudden you are being led by some other person’s rhythm, and they are constantly changing the step on you, you become so disjointed and out of step that you feel whip-lashed. Sometimes, I do get out of rhythm, but when I do, rather than trying to quickly shuffle my feet or opinion to meet every critic’s direction, I wait until I can slowly catch up to the tune. I’m very slow to adopt a new step, or a new indicator, or one other person’s “reading of the galaxy.” In other words, I’m an old fogy, and it is very hard to teach us old fogies new tricks. I am saying all this to illustrate yesterday’s action. If you are a chart reader, you were washed out yesterday on most of your technology stocks. The indices themselves, interday fell to a lower low. Take a look at the S&P 500, the NASDAQ 100, and even the Wilshire 5000. I’m telling you, this interday lower-low was disconcerting, even to me. But I have so many other benchmarks that are so dependable that were telling me that this is a temporary deception. As I say, I do avidly look at the charts, but that downward penetration of the previous lows in those indices that are so heavily weighted in the “new era” technology stocks, was exactly what the doctor ordered. About one month ago, when the equity put/call ratio experienced a couple of days at a very low 39%, I had advised you in these letters that it wasn’t a bull-killing signal, but was a signal that the “wall of worry” had developed a few worrisome cracks that needed to be repaired. So we pruned our portfolio’s every so slightly, pruning back partial positions from a stock or two that had spiked up by over 50% in the last few months. In addition, that juncture was used to prune another few stocks that had totally failed to live up to our expectations. But by May 31, those cracks had been at least partially repaired, and we chose the weakness of that time to replant those seeds that we had pruned back then. Of course, the stock market wasn’t through with us yet. It moved up almost immediately, but then had to experience one more bout in the torture chamber. It had to shake the tree one more time to see how tight we really were holding on in our bullish conviction. Now look at the indicators. In the last two weeks, something happened that I would have never expected. In the last two weeks, the Arms index has exploded once again. No, it didn’t go back above 1.50, but the 10-day average did move above 1.38, and that was a testimonial to the intense panic selling that was being done. I interpret this clue as this. Those tech bulls had refused to accept the warnings from the reliable tech managements who have a history of telling it like it really is. No, I’m not talking about Intel or I.B.M., but those like the management of Sun Microsystems and Texas Instruments. They had been saying for the last six months that their business had hit a wall. But the “hope” was still prevalent by the tech bulls that it would come back “in the second half.” Those dismal projections had continued three months ago, but still the “tech bulls” refused to believe. And then when the market took off in April, and the tech stocks did bounce pretty good from those extreme low levels, their hope skyrocketed. After all, Europe was going to do better, and was insulated from the U.S. woes (yeah, right.) But the last two weeks evidently burst their balloon. When the 10-day Arms index moves up above 1.30, it is measuring an unusual amount of panic. I don’t really use the daily Arms index as a reliable measure, unless it experiences a couple of days above 2.0, but I did note yesterday that at one point it was above 2.50, and that was in the midst of the real damage yesterday morning. In my opinion, the move above 1.30, in this instance was an extremely bullish confirmation that a significant buying juncture was at hand. But of course, the stock market wouldn’t make it so easy, so it has continued to try to shake us out of our bullish conviction. Surely, you now believe in the Smart Money Index by now. I know; it is exasperating sometimes since it leads the market by so many days. It’s prediction of a new bear market tends to be 70-85 trading days early, and when the “dumb” money takes over in those last 70-85 days, it often blast the Dow Jones Industrial Average (and the NASDAQ in today’s world) straight up. Dumb money buys aggressively with wild abandon, and chases the market up as the Smart Money persistently bails out. On the other side of this story, at the most recent bottom, the Smart Money Index started turning up the same exact time that our Asset Allocation model started turning bullish in late December of last year as short-term interest rates began to plunge. In truth, that was a bottom juncture for most stocks as the study of percentage of stocks above their 200-day moving average will confirm. But the camouflage was not quite ready to completely lift, and the panic sell-off in February and March of this year, really threw the “new era” boys and girls for a loop. ; Even with our very minimal technology weighting, and zero telecommunication weighting, we all saw our portfolio’s hit in that panic. But as that panic pushed the indices down, lo and behold, the Smart Money Index was moving up. For the first time since the fall of 1999, it was making persistent and dramatic higher highs. Yes, it has done it again. Yesterday, did you notice? The market panicked in the first one hour (dumb emotional money, ala the “Maria” effect.) But then the last one hour (the least emotional time of the trading day) it made back most of the damage as the smart money moved in. Those “lower-low” stop losses had already been executed. Yesterday, 12 of the most active 15 stocks were down—a result of the panic selling. I could go on and on. But I still feel very much in rhythm with this market, as the repaired psychological composite is looking much more able to withstand the next bullish leg. For instance, the equity put/call ratio moved up to 71%, and the overall put/call ratio moved to 87%. This is not an iron-clad guarantee that the “tree” won’t be shook a few more times in this pre-announcement period, but the odds are heavily, in my opinion, on the sides of the short-term (and long-term) bulls. There are so many excellent topics to cover this morning, but I’ve run out of time. But suffice it to say to look at the weakening commodity prices, the t-bill rate making a lower low yesterday. It feels good, because the news is still pretty dismal. Remember, this is a bull market based on hope, and that hope will be a function of hoping that Greenspan can work his magic of manipulation once again. |