This is one of my favorite things to do: Forget everything that happened this quarter and this year and start from scratch. It doesn't matter what we did or how we felt in 2018. It's irrelevant. We're moving forward. This is my Q1 2019 Playbook.
From a public markets perspective the Marijuana Industry is small, so small that it could go to zero tomorrow and nobody would notice. In late August we started covering the space after receiving a lot of reader requests, so as we close out 2018 I wanted to share one chart that perfectly summarizes the boom and bust it's witnessed over the last two quarters.
In this post I want to share two charts from the weekend update of our Market Internals workbook, both of which confirm the continued deterioration in breadth as US Stocks make new lows.
Yesterday after the bell we sent out our Year End '18 ETF Risk Update to our Institutional Clients, covering 100+ of the most actionable and informative charts. To put this report together we examined over 500 inter-market and cross-asset relationships across weekly & daily time-frames to identify trend direction, momentum, risk-management levels, and prices targets.
In this premium post I want to highlight a few charts from each of our five sections: Factors, International, Domestic, Fixed-Income, and Thematic/Niche. If you like what you see and want the full report, you can fill out our Institutional Client Application or contact our Head of Institutional Sales, Jonathan Bloom, for access.
Having Trading Psychologist Dr. Brett Steenbarger on the podcast was a huge treat for me. He works with the best traders on planet earth on a daily basis. Needless to say, when Dr. Brett is telling me something, I want to listen. In this episode, he let me ask him all the questions I was curious about and he happily answered them all with solid advice and relevant anecdotes. We make a lot of mistakes as investors because of our many flaws as humans. When our stress levels are elevated we start acting emotionally, instead of rationally. Taking losses is a difficult task for us, even though we all know that losses are part of the deal. I really enjoyed this conversation and it could have gone on forever if I didn't end it. I hope you get as much value from this chat as I did.
Bonds Funds are breaking out to new 3-month highs. This comes after consensus this September was for higher US rates, and therefore, lower prices for bonds. When the market is leaning too much in any one direction, the unwind of that extreme positioning can be intense. That's what I believe has been happening throughout the 4th quarter.
Here are two charts that show rates could continue lower for some time. The first is a long-term chart of the US 10-year Yield failing to break out above the downtrend in place since 1981:
Some stocks are going up and most stocks are going down. That's been the trend over the past 10 weeks or so. There is nothing out of the ordinary about that and cash heavy positions have helped us tremendously during this period.
As far as the indexes themselves are concerned, I think it's obvious that they're a mess. You've heard me say it a thousand times, "If you trade the averages you'll get average returns". It's something I learned the hard way a long time ago. Focusing on individual stocks, both long and short in this environment continues to make the most sense based on the weight-of-the-evidence.
First we'll look at the stocks that remain weak. We want to keep selling those if they're below key levels. From the long side, it's hard to ignore some of the relative strength out there. If the market catches a bid, those are likely to be the ones that lead us higher.
Two weeks ago we wrote that the weight of the evidence was suggesting the major indexes in India were getting ready to resume lower. While we were a few days early, most have resolved their consolidations lower. So the question now is, will they continue lower or will they be able to base and head higher? That's the question we're looking to answer in this post.
First let's start with the weakest area of the market, small-caps. Prices were consolidating for about a month in a super tight range, but are now resolving to the downside to continue their long-term downtrend.
Click on chart to enlarge view.
Mid-caps look equally as bad. Nothing in this chart suggests higher prices are ahead, quite the opposite actually.
Large-caps continue to out-perform, but on an absolute basis are range-bound at...
A conversation with Arun Chopra is one that makes you smarter. That's how I see it. Arun has formal training as both a CFA Charterholder and a CMT. He has helped produce award winning films at the Sundance Film Festival and he's on the same journey as us: to make money in the market. He uses a combination of global macro, technical and sentiment indicators that he is working on putting into a more quantitative model. Picking his brain about the process and his experiences in this endeavor was really enlightening. In this episode we discuss current markets, sector rotation, credit spreads widening and the possibilities for the US Stock Market Indexes to break to new lows. I really enjoyed this discussion with Arun. I always do.
We always hear the phrases "fading strength" or "selling into strength" from market participants, but what does that mean from a practical standpoint? How do you know what to sell? When do you sell?
In light of those questions, this week's "Chart of the Week" is going to help provide some context around the types of characteristics we look for when choosing stocks to fade.
This week's "Chart of the Week" answers the question about what characteristics determine the stocks we're fading strength in, so this premium post will outline the best setups I found during my review of the S&P 1500. If you haven't read the other post, click here to do so as it will provide more context around these trade ideas.