This
is our first newsletter of the New Year and we wanted to take some time to
recap our performance for 2012 and outline our thoughts on the coming year.
The
JSK equity portfolio finished the year up approximately 30% and our enhance
yield portfolio was up roughly 22%. While we are pleased with the year end
results, specifically for the equity portfolio, the gain is somewhat bitter
sweet. Sweet in that we handily bet our benchmark comparison which is the
S&P 500 which finished up close to 14%, bitter in that we largely underperformed the
benchmark in the final quarter of the year.
In
our opinion we witnessed a complete breakdown of market sentiment and
fundamental theory as the market was trading purely on headline data stemming
from Washington D.C.
That
said, we produced our market call in mid-December that took us from a short
position to a long position and we managed to recoup some loses that hurt us in
the final quarter of the year and we are off to a very strong start for 2013.
We continue to be long this market but are Leary as to the strength of this
rally.
Market
optimism and complacency is one key item that concerns us.
Fund
Flows
The
investment Company Institute released their fund flows data and it turns out
that a whopping $8 billion poured into U.S. equity mutual funds during the week
of January 9. This represents the highest amount of inflows since the company
began tracking this data in 2007. Mutual fund investors are usually considered
the “late” money and can be viewed as a contrarian indicator.
Lipper
also reported some $18 billion moving into both foreign and domestic ETF’s and
mutual funds which is the biggest one week reading since 2008 and the fourth
largest weekly inflow since the firm began tracking the data in 1992.
All
told, many on Wall Street point out that these types of money flows usually
precede a market correction as less sophisticated money starts to chase returns
from a market that is at new five year highs.
While
we would not predicate our investment thesis solely on these types of sentiment
indicators, it bears further analysis and monitoring.
AAII
Investor Sentiment Survey
One
item we tend to track in the American Association of Individual Investors
(AAII) Sentiment Survey. Taken from
their web-site, “The AAII Investor Sentiment Survey measures the percentage of
individual investors who are bullish, bearish, and neutral on the stock market
for the next six months; individuals are polled from the ranks of the AAII
membership on a weekly basis. Only one vote per member is accepted in each
weekly voting period.”
While
we do not incorporate this model into our behavioral calculations, we track the
results for certain anomalies. This
survey has been used in the past as a contrarian indicator.
“Investor
sentiment measures have historically been used as contrarian indicators—meaning
one would expect the market to do the opposite of what the data was saying. The
analysis here appears to support that point.
While
little may be gleaned from changes in investor sentiment, identifying extreme
levels of positive or negative sentiment appears to offer a glimpse of where
the markets may be headed. In looking at the AAII Member Sentiment survey, we
found that when sentiment reached overly bullish levels, the markets normally
responded negatively in the months that followed. Conversely, the market tended
to rise when members became overly bearish.
While
our results here seem to lend validity to the notion that investor sentiment
may be used as a contrarian indicator, it would not be wise to base all your
investment decisions upon it. Indicators such as this are best used in tandem
with others so that you receive confirming signals of potential market
movements. Sentiment merely serves as an additional tool when making investment
decisions.
However,
as we have shown, if you run with the herd, you might get trampled.” - Wayne A.
Thorp, CFA, associate editor of Computerized Investing and AAII’s financial
analyst.
Last
week, the survey produced 43.9% of respondents saying they are “bullish”
towards the market and only 27.3% claimed to be “bearish. These results are at
extreme levels and have been for the past several weeks. Since the start of the
year, investors responding to the AAII survey have been overly bullish as the
percent of bullish responders has remained above 40% while those that claim to
be bearish have hovered near 30%. We use a ratio of bullish to bearish
respondents to attempt to capture an increasing sense of bullishness.
CNNMoney’s
Fear and Greed Index
We
found this interesting tidbit on the internet.
“Investors
are driven by two emotions: fear and greed. Too much fear can sink stocks well
below where they should be. When investors get greedy, they can bid up stock
prices way too far.
So
what emotion is driving the market now? CNNMoney's Fear & Greed index makes
it clear.
We
look at 7 indicators:
•Stock
Price Momentum: The S&P 500 (SPX) versus its 125-day moving average
•Stock
Price Strength: The number of stocks hitting 52-week highs and lows on the New
York Stock Exchange
•Stock
Price Breadth: The volume of shares trading in stocks on the rise versus those
declining.
•Put
and Call Options: The put/call ratio, which compares the trading volume of
bullish call options relative to the trading volume of bearish put options
•Junk
Bond Demand: The spread between yields on investment grade bonds and junk bonds
•Market
Volatility: The VIX (VIX), which measures volatility
•Safe
Haven Demand: The difference in returns for stocks versus Treasuries
For
each indicator, we look at how far they've veered from their average relative
to how far they normally veer. We look at each on a scale from 0 - 100. The
higher the reading, the greedier investors are being, and 50 is neutral.
Then
we put all the indicators together - equally weighted - for a final index
reading.
When
the S&P 500 (SPX) plummeted to a three-year low on Sept. 17, 2008 - the
height of the financial crisis -- the Fear and Greed index sank to 12. The
index gained some ground to 28 before stocks finally bottomed out on March 9,
2009 and the latest bull market began.
Most
recently, in the first quarter of 2012, stocks staged their best run in
decades, and the index showed pure greed.”
http://money.cnn.com/investing/about-fear-greed-tool/
Paul
R. La Monica from CNNMoney sums the
results of this model in the following way, “If you didn't know any better,
you'd think that earnings were surging, the economy was expanding at a robust
pace, everyone who wanted a job had one and that there was peace and harmony in
Washington.
That's
obviously not the case. But look at the stock market and it's as if we've all
been transplanted back to the good old days of the mid-1980s or late 1990s.”
Bottom
Line: We remain in a long position and are enjoying this January rally. That
said we are very cautious regarding the strength behind this rally and will
take profits quickly come the first signs of a market breakdown.
Joseph
S. Kalinowski, CFA
Twitter:
@jskalinowski
References
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323783704578247790148637234.html
http://www.businessinsider.com/volatility-is-collapsing-right-in-front-of-our-eyes-as-debt-ceiling-fears-fade-2013-1
http://stockcharts.com/members/analysis/20130118-1.html
http://www.traderplanet.com/commentaries/view/163218-is-low-vix-a-concern-yet/
http://online.barrons.com/article/SB50001424052748704843204578245671887406226.html?mod=BOL_hpp_highlight_top
http://m.usatoday.com/article/news/1839971?preferredArticleViewMode=single
http://rightsideofthechart.com/aaii-bull-bear-extremes/
http://humblestudentofthemarkets.blogspot.com/2013/01/big-tests-for-stocks.html?m=1
http://blogs.wsj.com/marketbeat/2013/01/17/maybe-this-market-just-wants-to-go-higher/
http://ciovaccocapital.com/wordpress/index.php/stock-market-us/is-there-any-hope-for-stock-bears/
http://buzz.money.cnn.com/2013/01/17/investors-stocks-fear-greed/?iid=Lead
http://buzz.money.cnn.com/2013/01/17/stocks-funds-inflows/
http://www.thereformedbroker.com/2013/01/19/escaping-the-fear-factory/
http://money.cnn.com/data/fear-and-greed/
JSK Partners of New York,
LLC
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New York, NY 10005
40 Wall Street, 28th Floor
New York, NY 10005
T (212) 537-0462
T (800) 618-1120
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