Dorsey Wright's Derosier on U.S. Stocks (Transcript) 2003-02-21 14:54 (New York)
Richmond, Virginia, Feb. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Tammy Derosier, vice president and technical analyst with Dorsey Wright & Associates, talks with Bloomberg's Christopher Graja via telephone about the firm's technical analysis of the U.S. stock market, her investment advice and the use of hedged income portfolios.
(This is not a legal transcript. Bloomberg LP cannot guarantee its accuracy.)
GRAJA: Welcome to the Bloomberg Forum. I'm Chris Graja. My guest today is Tammy Derosier, vice president and technical analyst at Dorsey Wright and Associates in Richmond, Virginia.
Tammy, welcome back to the Forum.
DEROSIER: Well, thank you, Chris. Good morning.
GRAJA: Your firm's main technical indicator, your coach, as you call it, is the New York Stock Exchange bullish percent. And forgive me for trying to give a simple explanation to listeners, but you do point and figure analysis, basically rising actions pointed is charted as X's, falling actions pointed in O's. Right so far?
DEROSIER: That's exactly right.
GRAJA: And then you take, for the whole New York Stock Exchange, the percent that are on bullish patterns, the percent that are on bearish patterns, and use that as your coach for stock recommendations. And why don't you take it from there?
DEROSIER: Sure, Chris. That's a great explanation. You know, we look at the market kind of like a football game. If you think about your favorite football team for a second, there is a time to play offense and there's a time to play defense. If they played offense 100 percent of the time, they are going to be marginal at best.
And the same thing happens in the stock market. There are times that we want to be on offense, which is when we focus on wealth accumulation strategies, and then there are times that we want to play defense, when we focus on wealth preservation strategies. And certainly since the beginning of the year 2000, when we entered a structural fair market, those times of playing wealth preservation have become much more important to us. Because if you allow your portfolio, you know, to get hit for 25, 30 percent, you know, you've got to have your portfolio rally 40-some percent to get back just to even. So those times of playing defense become very important.
And we have just moved into one of those times of playing defense. Our indicators began to reverse down in December, told us that risk was getting high, so you begin to pull some chips off the table. And then in January, the bullish percent reversed down into O's and told us to full- fledge bring the defensive team on the field, we're going to focus on wealth preservation strategies here, rather than wealth accumulation strategies.
GRAJA: Let's backtrack for a second. You said structural fair market, not bear market. Tell us what that means.
DEROSIER: Well, you know, I like to look at it as a structural fair market. And the reason I say that is because there's something out there for the people who like to go long and there's something out there for the people who like to go short. So it's going to be a market in which you're going to be able to play both sides.
It's going to be probably a range-down market. I think you'll see that we'll continue usually to make lower tops and lower lows, in other words, on each rally, just like we've recently had from the October lows up until January. We did not get back above our April 2002 high. And so on corrections, we generally make lower lows. In other words, in October of 2002, we made a lower bottom than what we did on the previous correction of September 2001. So I think that trend's going to continue.
And, you know, so the person who is willing to play both the long side and the short side is going to have the best opportunity. So it's a very fair market out there.
GRAJA: What are some of the sectors you like on the long side right now?
DEROSIER: Sure. On the long side right now, one sector that we're watching that has done very well. a broad macro sector, is the raw material type of stock. I'm talking about like precious metals, oil-type related stock, your food-type stocks, and not like your Philip Morris names or Kraft. Those stocks actually look right vulnerable right now. But I'm talking about, like the ConAgra's of the world, your raw producers, your chemicals, like the Georgia Gulf, stocks. Those look very good.
If you look at a chart of the Oppenheimer Real Asset Fund, symbol QRAAX, that chart has a very positive pattern. So precious metals certainly one way to play that. I think that you're going to be able catch some of those stocks on a bit of a pullback.
Another group that we're watching in general would be technology, believe it or not. That group, for the first time in years, is beginning to show some positive relative strength readings. For instance, the Internet sector is back to what we call a favored status for the first time since March of 2000.
You know, stocks like Yahoo! have a great looking chart pattern. They're holding up very well in here. Again, we're kind of dealing in a situation where these stocks look good, but right now it's kind of like a cartoon. You know, the character is walking along and the dark cloud, the rain cloud, follows them wherever they go. So even though these groups are positive, they're going to be - you want to put them in your list of things to do once the overall indicators reverse back up.
Telecommunications is another one. You know, a stock like Nextel, NXTL, great looking chart pattern, nice strong relative strength reading. So some of these groups that have been out of favor, you know, that you couldn't even think about getting people to buy, you know, that's generally when you want to buy them.
GRAJA: So, backtracking again a little bit. So, would you buy them now or is there a dip-your-toe strategy until the main indicators turn positive?
DEROSIER: That's a great question, Chris, and, you know, right now we have seen some correction since the beginning of December. The rubber band's getting a little stretched here towards the left-hand side, or oversold side. So we could see some bounces back. And I think you're going to see companies like the Nextel, some of these telecommunications, some of the Yahoo, the Amazon, those are going to probably be some of the ones that begin to bounce off the bottom first.
So, you know, maybe if I had 1000 shares that I wanted to buy of Yahoo, what I might do is I might put two or 300 on today, and then if both of the short-term indicators that we follow, the percent of stocks above their 10-week moving average, and the high-low reverse up, I might put another two to 300 on, and then wait until the bullish percent reverses up to put the last portion of my position on the - of that on and complete my whole complement of the stock.
GRAJA: Let's talk about the other idea you introduced in your introduction, and that is risk management. What are some strategies that folks who are, you know, probably inclined to remain fully invested, or have to remain fully invested, might want to look at to reduce the risk of their holdings?
DEROSIER: Sure, there's - you know, the markets changed in the year 2000, and we have to change with them, and that means using different types of strategies, pulling some strategies out of the drawer that we hadn't used for a while. And one of those strategies is the covered write. And I can tell you personally the covered write has been extremely helpful in my portfolios, and one particular strategy being the in-the-money covered write, OK, which is buying a stock and then selling the call that's slightly in the money.
And the reason I like doing that is because premiums have expanded a bit here. You look at the CBOE volatility index. We've moved up from 27 to about 38 yesterday. So you're seeing option premiums expand, so you can take advantage of that. But it also gives me a lot of downside protection. And one thing that you could do right now, in this market, I think, is put on the five dogs of the Dow stocks and do an in-the-money covered write.
In other words, the five dogs of the Dow are the five lowest-priced of the 10 highest-yielding stocks. One of those would be J.P. Morgan. So J.P. Morgan is priced around $22 as we're speaking, and what I would do is I would buy J.P. Morgan and then sell the January, 2004 20 calls against the position, OK.
I'm going to - if the stock gets called away, I'm going to reap about an 18 percent return, including the dividend that I'm going to collect in J.P. Morgan. But at the same time, I'm going to get about a 21 percent downside protection. So, and that's about the average for the whole portfolio if you do those dogs of the Dow. The average is about 15 percent return if you get called away out of the five stocks. And you're going to get about a 22, 23 percent downside protection. So that's equivalent to the Dow Jones falling to about $6300, or about 6300, and you're going to be basically flat, back at break even.
That gives me a lot of comfort level in this market, and that's what I'm looking for in terms of hedge strategies.
GRAJA: Right, and the downside of course is that you don't get a whole lot of upside.
DEROSIER: That's right. The downside is, if J.P. Morgan rallies from $22 to 50, you know, I'm not participating that. But, you know, as long as it stays above $20, I'm getting a nice 18 percent return. And when you look back over the last couple of years, and you say, if I could get, you know, an average of 15 percent return, most people should be elated with that, in a low risk type of strategy.
So, I think a piece of your portfolio, you know, maybe you take a block of 20 percent and do that strategy, and you sit back and you wait until January. I think it's a great strategy.
GRAJA: Another strategy you talked about that a lot of people may not understand is a hedged income portfolio. Why don't you talk about how you're setting those portfolios up?
DEROSIER: OK, that's a great question, too. You know, there are a lot of different great new vehicles out there that we can use in this type of market, and one of those things is the inverse fund by some of the mutual fund companies out there, like Rydex, for instance.
And they have not only - what an inverse fund does, basically, is as the market falls, your fund price will move higher. And they have what they call a one-to-one, so in other words, if the S&P drops 5 percent, this fund theoretically goes up 5 percent.
They also have what they call a double-beta fund, OK? So, in other words, if the S&P drops 5 percent, the fund would go up 10 percent. Now, these funds are not supposed to be gun-slinging types of things, but what that double- beta allows you to do is hedge twice as much of the portfolio with less money.
So, in other words, if I wanted to hedge $100,000, I would only have to buy $50,000 worth of the double-beta fund and I could leave $50,000 in cash and now I've created myself a market-neutral portfolio. So those are very interesting products. And now, one thing that you can do, many of these stocks have come down more than 50 percent from their highs. That means yields are rising, OK?
GRAJA: Dividend yields?
DEROSIER: That's right. Dividend yields are rising. You know, so if you want to put a positive spin on the market, you can say yields are rising here. That means prices have been falling. For instance, J.P. Morgan is yielding about 6 percent. You've got GE yielding 3.5 percent, almost, here. So some good quality companies that are making high yields.
But maybe you don't want to take the risk of owning equities right now. Well, what you can do is take 20, 25 large-cap names within the S&P 500, do a diverse group of cross-sectors. And let's say I have a $300,000 in my portfolio. I would put $200,000 in these 20, 25 stocks, high-yielding S&P 500 companies. And then I would put $100,000 in the Rydex inverse fund, it's called the Tempest Fund, OK.
So, now what I've essentially done is marked.
GRAJA: So that's inverse on the S&P?
DEROSIER: That's right. Inverse on the S&P 500, that's right. And so what I've done is I've created myself a market-neutral portfolio. In other words, if my stocks drop in price, my inverse fund is going to rise twice as much. So I'm staying flat the whole year across the way, OK? And so I'm not - you know, my principal is not at risk. There is a little bit of fluctuation in there, but to give you an idea, last year, in the year 2002, you put together a portfolio that we did, a model portfolio, and it fluctuated on $300,000 from about 298 to about 304. And you think, last year was a pretty wild ride in the market, you know, a lot of ups and a lot of downs, but your equity stayed the same.
So why would you want to do this? Well, you're going to collect the dividend flow from these stocks, OK? So that's going to probably get you about 3, 3.5 percent, risk- free, almost, OK. Then you can sell options against your positions and increase your yield to about 5.5 percent.
GRAJA: I suppose the only risk is that if, you know, one of the stocks does substantially worse than the index, then you're unhedged on that, but.
DEROSIER: Right. So your risk is exactly that. You've got - maybe the fund doesn't move exactly as the S&P 500. That's why I say you want to do a diverse group. You wouldn't want to put all REITs in there. That wouldn't make sense. But you could put one REIT, and then, you know, have one utility, and then a GE and a J.P. Morgan. You know, you want to kind of look like the S&P 500. Another risk is that the stock stops paying a dividend, so you could replace it with something else. But I think it's a good strategy to where you've got very low risk.
And, you know, you think about where can I go right now to get 5, 5.5 percent yield. Well, I could go, I guess, to bonds, but, you know, let's think about how far bonds have come here. You know, that's a pretty risky area to be initiating new positions in right now. What am I going to do, buy CDs? I mean, you know, you can't even barely get a 5-year CD right now for 5 percent. You know, but here's a very low-risk way that I can generate income for myself.
GRAJA: Tammy, thanks a lot.
DEROSIER: Thank you, Chris, enjoyed it.
GRAJA: For the Bloomberg Forum, I'm Chris Graja, and my guest has been Tammy Derosier of Dorsey Wright and Associates.
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