DAILY DIARY
Transports Slipping
Last week I warned about the potential for a breakdown in Transports:
— Mark Newton (@MarkNewtonCMT) October 9, 2017
* Extended Market Sectors: This chart from Mark Newton exhibits how Transports are an important group to watch. Yesterday rails slipped, perhaps a sign of exhaustion:
$TRAN arguably breaking the trend from mid-August today, Counter-trend sells confirmed on daily chart- Pattern not dissimilar from July $IYTpic.twitter.com/I8Wk62jzyP
Recommended Listening
Back in June 2015 my old pal Barry Ritholtz. author of the wonderful Bailout Nation (I endorsed the book on the back cover! ) interviewed -- for Bloomberg's Master of Business -- Professor Richard Thaler, the recent Nobel Prize winner and the Father of Behavioral Finance).
Lets go to the tape and resusciatate the interview from over two years ago!
Tell Me Something (Part Deux) I Don't Know About SPY Volume
Regular readers of my diary know I sometimes post things that replicate the theme of the "Tell Me Something I Don't Know" segment on MSNBC's "Hardball With Chris Matthews."
So... "Tell me something I don't know, Dougie."
OK, here it goes:
With less than thirty minutes to go, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) volume of 18.5 million shares has to increase by nearly 70% by the trading day's end to hit the lowest level of volume for the year!
Tell Me Something I Don't Know About My Bar Mitzvah
Regular readers of my diary know I sometimes post things that replicate the theme of the "Tell Me Something I Don't Know" segment on MSNBC's "Hardball With Chris Matthews."
So... "Tell me something I don't know, Dougie."
OK, here it goes:
The S&P Index has fallen by ten handles from the high today -- that seems like the largest decline since my Bar Mitzvah.
Slippage
My Grandma Koufax used to say, "Dougie, hope springs like rotten water from the East River."
We are experiencing some late day slippage -- its probably meaningless.
But one can hope!
5 Reasons I Avoid Puerto Rican Bonds
I am an active investor in municipal bonds but I have (forever) avoided Puerto Rican bonds based on these quick stats which imply a dire economic outcome over nearly any timeframe:
* Puerto Rico's total debt exceeds $70 billion.
* $30 billion of Puerto Rican debt is not on its balance sheet.
* The island has a population of only 3.5 million.
* The employed population in Puerto Rico is 1.4 million.
* Two-thirds of the employed population works for the government.
Recommended Viewing
The University of Florida's tribute to hometown boy Tom Petty.
This is amazing!
How Narrow Can You Go?
Rev Shark and the Divine Ms. M recently had some great data on how narrow the intraday moves have been.
But I suspect today may be the narrowest of all those narrow daily trading ranges!
This is not a good backdrop to force trades!
Tweet of the Day (Part Deux)
Narrow Range for Columbus Day
The Columbus Day holiday has brought on a very narrow market range today.
Retail represents one of the worst sectors today. And though the bond market is closed, financials are also quite weak. Biotechs are also lower -- I pared down Allergan (AGN) recently ($210-$212) to a small-sized position.
On the upside, FANG continues its winning streak from last week -- with Facebook FB the best in the lot.
Existential Threats
I continue to believe that the existential political and antitrust threats to Facebook FB Amazon (AMZN) and Alphabet (GOOGL) will be one of the most important stories of the next few years.
Putting Any Put and Call Confusion to Rest
I received the following letter (and good idea) from a subscriber, Richard W., that was sent to our editors (keep 'em coming!):
Here is the letter (paraphrased):
Doug infrequently trades in options. A year ago, they started adding weekly options on many different securities, specifically he's shorting the SPY and he's shorting the QQQ. What he's not mentioning in his emails is the time period, since there are four separate expirations in that month. As an example, on Oct. 4 last week, Wed, 8:08 AM, he says, I've accumulated a put position in the QQQ...He's given the QQQs, Oct. is the month, that's fine, 145.50 is the striking price, but not which week. There's a 7th, a 13th, a 20th and a 27th. I've been suggesting this to TheStreet.com for a while, and somebody maybe who has more power and authority needs to let Doug know he needs to be more specific as to which particular date he's recommending.
Here is the post Richard was asking about:
Update on My 'Trade of the Week,' QQQ Puts
Oct 4, 2017 ' 9:05 AM EDT
Stock quotes in this article:
As mentioned Monday I have accumulated a put position in PowerShares QQQ Trust (QQQ) -- the October QQQ $145.50 puts are my "Trade of the Week" (my cost is about $1.60). As I wrote:
As most are aware, I am strongly convicted in the view that directional call and put buying -- as a steady diet -- is not a recipe to profits.
But, on occasion, there is a role in this sort of speculation for those with high risk profiles and appetites.
Here is my rationale for purchasing the PowerShares QQQ Trust, Series 1 ETF (QQQ) October $145.50 puts...
The answer to the subscriber's request that I expand and disclose the maturity is a good one and in the future I won't make any assumptions and will detail the exact maturity, which I always do when I am purchasing weekly puts/calls.
In the past I presumed (obviously wrongly) that when I mention an expiration of a put or call and don't describe it, it should be assumed that it is a monthly with an expiration (the third Friday of the month).
Here is an another example of monthly put buys:
Putting the SPY
Oct 4, 2017 ' 3:06 PM EDT
Stock quotes in this article:SPY
I purchased a starting position in SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust Dec (SPY) $255 puts at about $5.10.
These puts have a delta of 0.54.
I plan to make this a sizable position.
Bottom Line
In the future I will not assume that you all know I am referencing monthly expirations when I don't mention that I am buying weeklies.
And I will delineate all expirations in my columns.
Tweet of the Day
This, to me, is an important observation:
The Dangers of a 'Get It While You Can' Mentality
* There is a wide disconnect between the current market's focus on short-term influences and the long-term and worrisome trends in pension obligations, spiraling debt, the wealth/income gap and the Fed's ability to extricate itself from its large balance sheet.
"I'd say get it while you can, yeah
Honey, get it while you can, yeah
Hey hey, get it while you can
Don't you turn your back on love, no, no
Don't you know when you're loving anybody, baby
You're taking a gamble on a little sorrow
But then who cares, baby
'Cause we may not be here tomorrow, no."
--Janis Joplin, "Get It While You Can"
We live in a not-so-brave world in which time frames have been increasingly compressed, owing in part to the impact of technology on human behavior. It is as if almost everyone these days has ADHD, or attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.
This short-term behavior permeates our society as physical human interaction is diminished in a world of Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat.
Even politics is subverted to the short term. For example, politicians are elected and almost the next day they have begun to campaign and raise money for their next election. Another example of the short-term orientation and subversion of longer-term thinking is seen in President Trump's impulsive, possibly dangerous and seat-of-the-pants tweeting, which is now being "normalized," as an expression of delivering policy that in the past has been conducted in a far more contemplative way. Or even in Anthony Weiner's sexting!
Nowhere is the compression of time frames more apparent than in the investment business, where it seems that everyone has become a day trader.
As it is said, market opinions are like noses -- everyone has one!
The business media spend most of their time asking the talking heads questions that are likely to be responded to without much rigor because it's easier looking at a price chart or monitoring "unusual call activity" in making short-term trading decisions than employing fundamental analysis that is time-consumptive and laborious. Among the usual questions:
* Where are interest rates going by year-end?
* What is the next 50-handle move in the S&P Index?
* How will XYZ Co.'s shares respond to this afternoon's earnings report?
* What is the next move in the U.S. dollar, the price of oil, in soybeans or in the emerging market space?
The limited discussion and consideration of intermediate to longer-term prospects -- such as whether we are pulling investment returns forward -- may be a technologically influenced event or may be the desire, as Janis Joplin reminded us all, of "getting it while we can." Or it might be the byproduct of the continuing eight-year bull market in which dips are ever bought.
Regardless, current prices always must be measured and judged not only by the next near-term variable (such as interest rates, earnings and the price of oil), but also by the assessment of the intermediate to longer term.
And it is the longer term that to me and to some others is where the greatest concerns lie for investors today.
These longer-term concerns seem to have been ignored by most market participants and by the machines, algorithms and ETFs, which have been fueled by large inflows that have translated into the virtuous market cycle I recently wrote about in "Active vs. Passive Conflict, and Why All Dips Are Bought."
Stated simply, passive investing is agnostic to long-term fundamentals such as private market value and secular earnings growth projections. One can spend weeks discussing these profound headwinds and challenges, and I will follow up on them in the time ahead by expanding on my non short-term concerns. However, here are the four leading issues as seen in my eyes with a big, big assist from my friend, Outside the Box's rigorous John Mauldin (links to his thoughts on the first two issues):
* Uncle Sam's Unfunded Promises: The Trump administration's tax plan is not a plan. It is a melange of ideas put forth without precision or arithmetic. Any possible supply-side benefits of the tax proposal must be weighed against the dampening impact of future deficits on economic growth.
* Pension Storm Warning
* The Screwflation of the Middle Class: A longstanding concern of mine, the continued income and wealth gap and the likely continued failure of "trickle-down economics," holds important and adverse social, political and economic ramifications.
* The Fed's Role and Its Effect on the Markets The bullish cabal is taking an incredible leap of faith that the Fed's tightening cycle is going to be without hiccup and essentially have been brainwashed by not just the Fed but by the actions of all central banks in believing that every slip-up will be fully rectified. The central banks believe they have cured the diseases called "bear market" and recession and convinced us that we are in a new paradigm. I would argue that this is likely a big mistake, as evidenced by the numerous policy boners by the Fed in the last one to two decades.
Bottom Line
"A bull market is like sex. It feels best just before it ends."
--Warren Buffett
We live in a world of instant gratification.
Basing investments on short-term influences and worshiping at the altar of price momentum can be profitable, but it obscures our attention from long-term trends, many of which are potentially quite adverse.
The long term can be seen as a collection of short terms; the long term is little discussed as the investment debate principally is governed by questions regarding near-term market and price movements, in which market participants try to "get it while they can."
There is a wide disconnect between the current market's high valuations and focus on short-term influences and the long-term and worrisome trends in pension obligations, spiraling debt, the wealth/income gap and the Fed's ability to extricate itself from its large balance sheet.