Inside the Catholic Church
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
It is nice and quiet when no one is there. The bothersome noise of doctrine attaches much more to people than it does to the church per se.
The Market
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
The place to buy produce, flowers and plants.
To Be a Kid Again
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Checking out a small fish they caught.
Serious Attire and Conversation
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Women of social status, probably nobles. There are three classes here. Royal, nobles and commoners.
This Kid is Heavy
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
She gains weight when she doesn't want to go.
Dock Fish Market
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
The day's catch just came in.
Am I a Cutie Pie or What?
Kimball Corson
10/30/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Girls always give me their best expressions. Lucky old dog that I am.
Blue and More Blue
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Steps into the more blue.
The Sky Frowns
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
And over a church, at that.
Watchout for the Plant
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
It's about to get mowed over.
Streaming Upwards + Market Compromised
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Not a whole hull of a lot.
_______
How Trend Trading Compromises the Stock Market
There are three basic approaches to stock market "investing:" fundamentals analysis, charting theories and raw trend trading. Obviously, some market participants mix two or more of these approaches to some degree. By fundamentals analysis, I basically mean a Value Line or Graham & Dodd approach to buying and selling. The other two approaches depend on one or another type of trend analysis. Raw trend trading is simply jumping in and out of the market to ride up long and down trends short, with little real consideration given to the fundamentals of the stocks selected. How is it so little attention need be paid to stock selection, according to investment criteria, in order to successfully trade the market trends? That is the core question. Obviously, a disconnect has clearly arisen between company performance and stock market price performance. Why?
I argue that all forms of trend analysis and trading - anything but classic investment criteria buying and selling - compromises the stock market as a market per se. What do I mean, you say? By compromising the market, I mean the following:
1. Market prices less accurately reflect true company performance;
2. Market prices move less independently of each other;
3. Herd behavior and band wagon effects become more dominant;
4. The market becomes more volatile and less stable;
5. The market is more amenable to manipulation by major players;
6. The market is more open to trading abuses;
7. The market disconnects from reality and has internal life of its own;
8. The market is more inclined to react to irrelevant information;
9. The market also overreacts to external information;
10. The market has a shorter term memory;
11. The market seeks new information to overreact to; and
12. The market is more disposed to bubble up and to crash.
In short, the market does a less good job by far of accurately reflecting companies' current actual and expected performance and of distinguishing between companies in the market and having their stock prices move more independently of each other in the shorter term. These are major failings for a market.
None of this should come as a surprise. The more buying and selling in the stock market is based on factors other than underlying actual and expected company performance based on fundamentals, the less well market prices will reflect that performance and those fundamentals. The reverse is true as well. The more actual company performance becomes irrelevant to buy and selling stocks, the more the stock market takes on the characteristics (1) through (12) above and the less effective the market becomes as a market for the stock of those companies. These may not be popular notions, but that does not alter the truth of them.
The real difficulty is that, given these results from trend trading and given the market's consequentially developed failings, it is still not unreasonable to engage in trend trading. More do it all the time, in one time frame and manner or another. That is because, for everyone, the market is about making money, not about the health of the market per se. But the situation does become a vicious circle and the problems (1) through (12) above are exacerbated the more trend trading occurs. The market is further compromised. Trading manipulations and abuses become more prevalent.
As a practical matter, I believe that little can be done about this problem, but it is very much worth noting and keeping an eye on because it does have a strong bearing on what you should be able to expect from your investments, especially in the shorter term, if you investment using classical investment criteria.
Rejected for publication. Very unpopular notions? Too controversial? Who knows? Its just economic analysis. The more buying and selling in the stock market is based on factors other than underlying company actual and expected performance, the less well market prices will reflect that performance. Surprise! Obvious, at that level, but not at others. One of my more insightful articles, too.
Flash Bulletin: The article was published, albeit late and out of order. Perhaps there was a struggle among the editors or perhaps an assigned editor was simply on vacation. Whatever, it made it.
Posted and published on seekingalpha.com
Turtlitus + Three of My Comments
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
It is just turtles all the way down, young man.
____
The following three comments were posted to Paul Krugman's blog under his article Stimulating Thoughts: Third Quarter Edition in which he argues for ever bigger stimulus programs. My comments:
I. In fact, consumer spending could clearly be better because in truth it tumbled 1.5% in September, as vehicle sales plunged, following a 1.4% gain in August (previously 1.3%). The saving rate rose to 3.3% as consumers returned to saving after buying cars to get clunker monies in August. Real spending dropped 0.6%.
Like too many government programs, including the stimulus program, the effects are too transient and the programs are too expensive. Too little bang per buck and too little impact on the real economy.
The answer is not therefore, as you suggest, to then just make the (stimulus) programs bigger.
___ Kimball Corson
II. The Chicago Fed´s National Activity Index indeed rose for the last quarter, but it is interesting that many of the non-averaged components have been falling for the last two months after a July peak. The Chicago Fed summarized the data:
"Thirty-two of the 85 individual indicators made positive contributions to the index in September, while 53 made negative contributions. Thirty-nine indicators improved from August to September, while 46 indicators deteriorated."
The bad news in this data is that much monthly data has been falling for the last 2 months. If this trend continues, next month this index will likely fall. This would be significant evidence that the recovery is now stalling, after the effects of the government's bump-up programs have passed.
We must face and address our structural problems of the trade deficit, the maldistribution of income, the dysfunctional banking sector and the decline of employment in the manufacturing sector if we want GDP to grow on a solid footing. Until we do this our prospects are poor.
The problem is none of the Keynesian policy makers even recognized these problems or take them seriously enough or believe they really matter. We are barking up the wrong tree, as I keep saying.
___ Kimball Corson
III. What we should be doing is addressing our structural problems of the trade deficit, the maldistribution of income, the dysfunctional banking sector and the decline of employment in the manufacturing sector and we could do that as follows:
The Trade Deficit: adopt an auctioned quota certificate system allowed by the WTO for persistent deficit countries and develop tax employment incentives for the more labor intensive companies in the US engaged in export. Put a surtax on gasoline and use the money to press for the development and use of smaller vehicles that use less or no gas. Provide tax incentives for their purchase. Put a luxury tax on gas guzzlers. We need a big and serious push here, politics be damned.
The Maldistribution of Income: use the tax system and a negative income tax if necessary to quickly redistribute income and raise the marginal propensity to consume. Now, those earning over $85,000 a year get half of all income and dump too much of it into secondary financial markets to create bubbles and messes.
The Dysfunctional Banking System: Run the money center banks through one or another type of FDIC insolvency proceeding to correct incentives, repair debt damage and pass financial reform with less opposition from those banks, while at the same time getting better supervision over them in the interim. We need to get serious here.
Employment in the Manufacturing Sector: We need to subsidize and support employment in this sector and companies with higher labor to capital ratios engaged in exporting a high percentage of what they make. All kinds of programs should be considered to do this.
We need to focus in on our problems and adopt some real fixes if we want to see more sustainable real economic improvements, not just throw more money at the priming pump of aggregate demand and getting temporary increases in aggregate demand that do not last.
We are on the wrong track.
___ Kimball Corson
A Natural Red Head + Picks & Trends
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Waiting, for his hair to fade.
____
Good Picks Can Be Clobbered by Trading Trends
We speak of strategies like perhaps this is a good time to be invested in emerging markets, Latin America or perhaps China or maybe even the BRICs, typically by means of spdrs, ADRs, mutual funds, ETFs or the like. Often these strategies are considered defensive plays where there is a lack of confidence in U.S. companies, the economy or the stock market, but good confidence in what is developing elsewhere. The problem is too often this approach does not work, at least in the short term. Why? Because the market on a downward tear, for example, takes just about everything with it, except maybe gold and a few similar picks. A downward tear seems more likely these days, if Friday, October 30th, is any indication, when the DOW dropped by almost 250 points and the NASDAQ, by over 52.
Although Brazil may be on a terrific upswing, BRE and EZW will sink or drop along with everything else. That China is trending up doesn´t matter; your Chinese GXC and FXI will tank along with the rest of the market. Ditto for emerging market funds such as ESR and EWX. Your BRIC fund BIK will sinks like one. The market takes the good, the improving and everything else all down together when it is dropping quickly. Why? I think simply because they are there and in the same market. A collective herd mentality indiscriminately takes hold. Buyers and sellers react emotionally and not not discriminate.The good sink with the bad and the over-priced. The drop is not about individual funds or stocks; it is about what the market itself is doing and participants getting out of it.That things might well sort themselves out much further down the road is little consolation for the adversities and losses in the here and now.
Several years ago, before the Great Recession, but after problems in the world economy began to emerge, The Economist Magazine attracted much attention by arguing that the emerging markets were no longer closely coupled or tied to American and European markets. The emerging markets had "decoupled" and now had independence and freedom of movement, we were told. I was skeptical, as were others at the time. The financial collapse of the Great Recession made it quite clear how wrong the Economist Magazine was, at least in regard to financial markets. Indeed, world financial markets are closely tied together. It was an example of what economists jokingly refer to as Walras' third law: 'everything is related to everything else.' America sneezes and Ecuador catches a cold. So perhaps the good sinking with the bad or over-priced is not just a stock market phenomenon, but a larger real or financial one as well, at least to an extent. But again, in a market on a downward tear, is this the market's prescience, or simply a friction or vacuum effect of being along side? I suspect the latter. It is kind of like being financially rear-ended.
This phenomenon has several untoward consequences, generally. First, it makes it harder to determine what a good stock, mutual fund or ETF pick is, at least short term, by looking at price performance. This is because performance gets separated from the company's or fund's fundamentals in a strongly trending market. Secondly, it is hard on the truly good picks. Instead of basking in their earned glory with rising prices, they sink with the market trend and the bad and over-priced apples. Thirdly, depending on your internal rate of discount, even if your careful picks will do better in the longer run and stand out then, the beating you can take in the short run by having them move with a downward trend can be prohibitive. These facts, in turn, themselves have significant consequences for the market.
What we observe is why many players in the market are much more concerned about going long with the trend if it rises and short with the trend if it drops, rather than in picking good solid stocks, funds and ETFs. Playing the trend and believing the trend is your friend are nothing new. You can aggressively go after trying to pick the turning points or like old J.P. Morgan, you can sit back and take your bite out of the middle. There are many kinds of trend players and many time frames within which to play trends. The argument is you don't care how good your picks might really be on a Value Line or Graham & Dodd basis, because if you fight the market, using those selection criteria, you can get clobbered. If you go with the trend, even riding picks that are known dogs, you can make money. Quirky, but true. In this case, a changing tide lifts or lowers all boats, even those about to sink.
The problem is that the net result of these developments, if too many market participants become trend players instead of investors, is the market begins to look more like a casino and it more readily disconnects from the real economy and the companies whose stocks are involved. It becomes less and less like a forum for good secondary investment, according to time honored investment principles. Herd behavior, band wagon effects, manipulation and the like are able to generate increasing instability in such stock markets. Such increased volatility is viewed opportunistically by traders playing the trends, even if they are only daily ones. At the same time, stock markets become more amenable to bubbles and their consequences. The market incentives to participants have become non-optimal.
These are not developments we should like to see. They reflect on the health of the market as a market per se. They leave us few safe havens in the event of a down pour. They can waste or compromise a lot of good work on careful stock or fund selection and they can send mixed signals to IPO and secondary offering markets. These matters go far to keep money market funds in business and brokerage cash accounts active and busy.
But what are reasonable market participants to do?
His Boat Came Through + Krugman's Views
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
Now the home of someone who swallowed the anchor, as the expression goes.
_____
Paul Krugman Thinks More Federal Debt is Fine and Dandy
Never concerned with the consequence of large deficits and accumulating federal debt, Paul Krugman has recently dismissed concerns about Japan sliding toward the financial brink, expressed by candidate for Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii, due to Japan´s rapidly accelerating public debt. What are Krugman's arguments, you ask?
In a nutshell, they are (1) the 6-week high yield on 10-year bonds is 1.36%, evidencing that such fear certainly isn't reflected in Japan's borrowing costs, and (2) the spread between ordinary bonds and inflation-linked bonds in Japan suggests investors expect substantial deflation in Japan over the next five years, hardly what you'd see if they were worried about an imminent collapse in the yen.
I contend that when it comes to macro instability and threatened collapse, this kind of micro analysis is absolutely irrelevant. Worse, it is a feeble, if not disingenuous duck away from the pretty well known elements which in fact portend collapse or at least a disastrously crunching dislocation.
The test for financial stability is not whether the interest rate is positive, increasing or decreasing, or whether one more bond can be sold or what just some bond holders think. It is not about micro-market conditions. It is much more about things like the ratio of debt to GDP, the ratio of deficits to expenditures, the credibility of the issuing government, whether the debt is being monetized and how quickly, the economic soundness of the government´s programs, the public's support of those programs or lack of it and other things like that. The credit crunch should have taught us just how important trust and confidence are in credit and other contingent markets. They are key to determining risk, a threat to expectations and therefore stability.
Economist Peter Bernholz, Professor Emeritus of economics at the University of Basel in Switzerland, is an expert on national hyperinflations. He has studied all cases of national hyperinflation since 1980. His conclusion is that the tipping point on whether hyperinflation will occur is when a government's deficit exceeds 40% of its expenditures and is monetized by the central bank. The U.S. is fast approaching the 40% mark even though not all the deficit is being monetized.
There have been 28 episodes of hyperinflation of national economies in the 20th century, with 20 occurring after 1980, all of which were caused by financing huge public budget deficits through in effect money creation, as we have been doing somewhat.
Whether the economies in fact were in recession or not had surprisingly little to do with it. The reason that is so is because there can be structural reasons not addressed to have a semi-permanent condition of recession as, for example, in the U.S. with our on-going trade deficits, skewed distribution of income, asset pricing bubbles, etc. Too, hyperinflation is not the only way to have collapse, but it is most typical. Stagflation in our case is as likely.
Indeed, we might just have a genuine hyperstagflation, where real conditions deteriorate in the face of runaway inflation. It is the optimal resolution of conflicting deflationary and inflationary pressures, where there is a stagnate or declining economy and too much money in circulation, albeit with lower velocity. This is what happened when Rome fell, prices went through the roof as velocity fell. We start to get hints of this prospect when Keynesian multipliers start to drop and excess industrial capacity and high unemployment become increasingly irrelevant to price increases. The real economy and the monetary system begin to separate and disconnect, each going their own way, a situation we are beginning to observe in the U.S. economy, just as our real economy is too disconnected from our stock and financial markets.
While the dollar collapse might have some built-in protection as the world's current reserve currency, the question is, how much. As central banks diversity away from the dollar -- which could markedly accelerate if they understand this analysis -- the protection may become less and less. So do we buy 5%? What is the comfort margin for our financial misbehavior? How do we find out except by stepping over the line?
We are clearly playing with fire here, but Krugman, Washington policy makers and the Fed do not seem to notice. Markets will react and react violently when they feel matters have been pushed too far and over the line. We saw that earlier. Indeed, this argument is the heart of former World Bank and IMF economist Richard Duncan's predicted "Fall of Rome" scenario for the U.S. He has been right too often in the past to be ignored now. We have already had one major macro tremor and, as things are going, we too likely will have more before Washington gets the message. We can only hope that when they do, it is not too late and time then remains to somehow recoup our position and stay on our feet.
Almost Under Fire + The Market's Take
Kimball Corson
10/27/2009, Neiafu, Vava'u, Tonga
This old canon is aimed straight at my boat from the bar where it is located.
____
The Market's Read on the Economy
It is well known that for quite some time now the Dow has vacillated between approximately 9500 and 10,000, waiting I think for a more definitive read on the economy and where we are going. On Thursday, October 29th, the Dow had a significant rally, not surprisingly with the 3.5% GDP growth rate announced then. However, as market participants thought about the growth rate and how much of it was due to the federal government's thumb on the scale in the form of the transient effects of the cash for clunkers program, the tax credit for first time home buyers and of the stimulus program, they realized that real unadulterated grow was probably more on the order of 1%, with no prospect near term for truly improved employment figures.
The next day, on Friday, October the 30th, the DOW tanked for almost 250 points, largely I suspect, in the hands of traders. More broadly viewed, that drop might be one of two things: gaining wiggle room to rise again without sailing too far beyond 10,000 or recognition that this market is too bloated and a correction should start now.
My take is we will continue to dance within the 500 or so point band, at least for a while, waiting for yet more news, good or bad. The market believes the new data are too little to act on. And I say that, realizing that from my point of view, it is much easier for me to make money in the market, without becoming a day trader, if the market trends one way or the other longer term.
What is your take and why?