âPoundedâ
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
August 22, 2011
I have been âpoundedâ with questions about the Dow Theory âsell signalâ I spoke of; and, that occurred three weeks ago. The ubiquitous question has been â âHey Jeff, how can you tell people to buy in light of the signal?â My response has been that such a huge amount of energy had been used up in rendering the Dow Theory âsell signalâ that the market, at least on a short-term trading basis, is likely a âbuy.â Reinforcing that view are numerous oversold readings of epic proportions. To be sure, one has to go back to the German Armyâs invasion of France to find a session where less than 2% of the stocks traded on a particular day on the NYSE were âupâ for the session, which is what happened two weeks ago (8/8/11). Yet to readers of these missives, such action should not come as a surprise. Indeed, for the past three weeks I have likened the current selling stampede to those of October 1978 and October 1979. When studying the charts of those periods one finds said declines came out of the blue on no fundamental news; and while many people have argued there are plenty of fundamental reasons for the current decline, I am not one of them. The 1978 and 1979 declines were straight down affairs ending with âselling climaxesâ (like seen on 8/8/11). Subsequently, there were sharp rebound rallies peaking within four to five sessions, followed by a downside retest of those âselling climaxâ lows. Accordingly, in last Tuesdayâs verbal strategy comments I said:
âIf the October 1978/1979 sequence is correct, the throwback rally we are currently experiencing should peak in the 1200 â 1220 zone (last Tuesdayâs intraday high was indeed near our signal point âthrowbackâ rally high estimate of 1206) leading to a pullback towards the recent intraday reaction low of 1101. Nevertheless, I am still respecting the Dow Theory âsell signalâ until it is reversed. Opinions, however, vary for Richard Russell (captain of The Dow Theory Letters) suggests there has NOT been a Dow Theory signal because he is using the July 2010 closing lows for the D-J Industrials and D-J Transports rather than the March 2011 âlowsâ I have been using. For the record, those July 2010 closing lows were 9686.48 and 3906.23, respectively, which are a long way from the averagesâ current levels. Whoever is right, enough damage has been done that the May 2nd âprint highâ of 1370.58 for the S&P 500 is likely the high for the year. The quid pro quo is that last weekâs 1101.54 âprint lowâ is either near the low, or the actual low, for the year. This week should reveal the answer if my 1978/1979 analogy is anywhere near the mark. If so, that leaves us hopefully range bound between~1100 and 1370 into year-end with my sense stocks will be at the upper-end of that range by December provided we donât have a recession, a view I continue to embrace.â
My controversial non-recession âcallâ is driven by the fact that industry analysts are still bullish on earnings with the S&P 500âs (SPX/1123.53) consensus estimate approaching $114 for 2012. Corporate insiders are clearly bullish as they have been buying their own companyâs shares at the highest rate since the bottom in March 2009. Layoffs have slowed and while the economy is certainly slowing, metrics like L.A. seaport traffic, railcar loadings, etc. are not falling off a cliff like they did prior to the 2008 recession. Moreover, China and Indiaâs economies are still percolating; and as this weekâs Barronâs writes, âItâs Time to Buy: After a 20% pullback, emerging markets offer strong growth at a discount price.â Then there is the European mess, which appears to be a little less of a mess, interest rates will remain tame for an extended period, it feels like tax reform is coming, and crude oil prices have collapsed. Indeed, change you can believe in is coming because according to The Washington Post, âThe financially strapped U.S. Postal Service is proposing to cut its workforce by 20 percent and to withdraw from the federal health and retirement plans because it believes it could provide benefits at a lower cost.â Ladies and gentlemen, if correct that implies the post office is not only going to break its labor agreements, but throw Obamacare under the bus.
Speaking of throwing Obamacare under the bus, an Atlanta Federal Court did just that by ruling that Congress exceeded its authority by passing the âindividual mandates,â which will surely be escalated to the nationâs highest court; but, such developments has the administration doing some pretty strange âthingsâ like calling for market-based solutions. One such market-based solution is already at work in Puerto Rico. According to The Wall Street Journal (WSJ):
âA stimulus program on the island, long ripe with vacant houses and condos, has sent sales of new homes surging 80% and sales of existing homes up 24% in the past 10 months from a year earlier, even as the market in much of the U.S. mainland is dead. ...One of the incentive program's popular provisions offers qualified buyers down-payment assistance for homes purchased with a mortgage, as well as a second mortgage of as much as $25,000 that can be used to make down payments and pay closing costs. Buyers of new homes also pay no transfer taxes when a property changes hands, escape paying property taxes for five years and future capital-gains taxes, and pay no taxes on rental income for 10 years. Sellers don't have to pay capital-gains taxes on profits.â
As stated, there is a change afoot inside the D.C. Beltway that is palpable and market-based solutions to our problems are but one example. As I told one of our more worried financial advisors last week, âWe could solve the debt issue in very short order with a Value Added Tax (VAT).â