A Word and A Chart About and On Alibaba

Alibaba.com is one of the world’s largest wholesale marketplaces.

To be honest, I had never gone to their website until today, even though we bought shares in BABA 2 weeks ago. So, in case you are like me and have not checked them out, they sell a lot of consumer items in bulk. 

And they also sell pretty much everything. For instance, if you want a 1000w off-grid wind power Free Energy System for your home or business, you can get one and find an online description of the supplier, including their annual revenue. Plus, if you want them in bulk, you can order 1000 sets at a reduced price.

BABA has proven controversial a lot, most recently with a lawsuit settlement on monopolistic practices. However, the impact on their revenues is nominal and, in fact, could be a plus, as the company’s stock price trades at just 8x net profits.

Anyway, China overall, has had no shortage of bad press. Yet, before we learned Jack Ma and others bought up to $200 million of BABA stock, the stock looked and still looks appealing to us. If one is looking to be a contrarian to all the bad press, then BABA is a company with solid fundamentals.

Hence, the charts are in focus.

There are a few technical aspects we like to focus on that stand out in the Daily chart.

  1. The new 60+ day low followed by a gap higher leaving a potential long term bottom.
  2. That gap up also reversed the price below the January 6-month calendar range.
  3. Although it continues to underperform the benchmark, it is nearly on par.
  4. Real Motion has a bullish divergence, in that momentum is above the 50-DMA while price trades just below its 50-DMA.
  5. Relative to the China ETFs KWEB and FXI, BABA is doing better.

Now looking ahead:

  1. The 6-month calendar range is support and should hold, while the recent lows is the optimal risk point.
  2. The 50-DMA needs to clear and confirm as a phase change to recuperation.
  3. The January 6-month calendar range high, at 76.69, is another key area to clear.

On these types of trades, risk is extremely important. Finding bottoms is a tricky trade, but when done right, can have huge payouts.

Finally, BABA reports earnings pre-US market opening on February 7th.


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Follow Mish on X @marketminute for stock picks and more. Follow Mish on Instagram (mishschneider) for daily morning videos. To see updated media clips, click here.


In this video from CMC Markets, Mish looks at a selection of popular instruments, outlining their possible directions of travel.

Mish is a favorite guest in Singapore, where she gets to discuss the macro and how to think about investing in the big picture. In this short clip from Breakfast Bites, Mish talks TSLA.

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Mish and Dale Pinkert discuss the equities and futures markets and how she and MarketGauge are positioned right now in this FXTrader interview.

In this video from CMC Markets, Mish looks at a selection of popular instruments ahead of today’s US Q4 GDP announcement, outlining their possible directions of travel.

Mish makes up a new ETF (not real) called VAIN, but really discusses the basket of stocks that are worth watching in this appearance on Yahoo! Finance.

Mish discusses Alibaba and how the rumors of China’s impending demise might be a bit exaggerated on Business First AM.

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Nicole Petallides and Mish dig deep into trends and stocks to watch for next big moves, as we are in full January trend mode on this video from Schwab Network.

On the Monday, January 22 episode of Your Daily Fivefrom StockCharts TV, Mish sees the potential for consumers to spend more money, from self-help to dieting, to makeup to skincare to fashion — pointing out several relevant stocks and how to trade them.

Mish looks at a selection of popular instruments in this video from CMC Markets, outlining their possible directions of travel.

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Mish’s Market Minute on StockCharts TV returns, all new! Mish and Geoff Bysshe share how the powerful “Calendar Range” StockChartsACP plugin tells you who and what to believe, when to act, and what to trade. The new year is a big “reset” emotionally, and January sets the tone for the next six months AND the year. Every month is “like an inning in baseball,” financial reports focus on quarters, but analysts think in terms of the first half and second half of the year. How can you harness this knowledge to your benefit? Watch to find out!


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February 29: Yahoo! Finance & Your Daily Five, StockCharts TV

Weekly: Business First AM, CMC Markets


  • S&P 500 (SPY): 480 now the pivotal zone.
  • Russell 2000 (IWM): 195 pivotal, 190 support to hold.
  • Dow (DIA): 375 support.
  • Nasdaq (QQQ): 415 support.
  • Regional Banks (KRE): 50 key to hold.
  • Semiconductors (SMH): 184 support.
  • Transportation (IYT): 262 now pivotal.
  • Biotechnology (IBB): 135 pivotal.
  • Retail (XRT): Flirting with 70, which has to clear and hold to stay very bullish.

Mish Schneider

MarketGauge.com

Director of Trading Research and Education

Mish Schneider

About the author:
Mish Schneider serves as Director of Trading Education at MarketGauge.com. For nearly 20 years, MarketGauge.com has provided financial information and education to thousands of individuals, as well as to large financial institutions and publications such as Barron’s, Fidelity, ILX Systems, Thomson Reuters and Bank of America. In 2017, MarketWatch, owned by Dow Jones, named Mish one of the top 50 financial people to follow on Twitter. In 2018, Mish was the winner of the Top Stock Pick of the year for RealVision.

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SEC Greenlights Bitcoin ETFs: How This Major Move Could Skyrocket Coinbase Stock Price

KEY

TAKEAWAYS

  • Coinbase stock price is correlated with Bitcoin’s price
  • COIN’s price level is getting close to an entry point for bullish investors
  • An ideal entry point for COIN would be after you see a strong reversal candle with increasing momentum

Are you feeling a bit of FOMO seeing how the SEC’s approval boosted crypto and other crypto-related assets? Well, don’t. There might be an opportunity for a bullish trade with the largest cryptocurrency exchange in the US: Coinbase (COIN).

Coinbase’s stock is correlated to Bitcoin and it’s likely to benefit from this new regulatory development. Coinbase is in a downswing, but it’s worth adding the chart to your ChartList and watch for it to land and reverse.

Finding COIN Through a StockCharts Ichimoku Scan 

The good news is that Coinbase was one of the stocks filtered in the StockCharts scan Entered Ichimoku Cloud on Wednesday.

Why this particular scan? Because entering the cloud already pimples a pullback, and it allows you to see the projected bullishness of the price through the color and thickness of the cloud under the prevailing price and projected 26 periods ahead.

COIN presented an intriguing possibility in light of the SEC’s recent actions. Let’s analyze the stock’s technical environment.

COIN: The Technical Scenario

If you’re bullish on crypto and looking to invest in the exchange, start with a birds-eye view of COIN’s price action before drilling down to specific entry points.

The chart below shows COIN’s price trajectory since its IPO launch in April 2021. Note its relatively close correlation to Bitcoin ($BTC), represented by the black line on the chart.

CHART 1. WEEKLY CHART OF COIN. Notice how closely COIN’s price follows Bitcoin’s ($BTCUSD) movements.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

The above chart captures COIN’s price action from its IPO launch. Note the blue horizontal line connecting the highs of August 2022 and July 2023. These highs and the series of swing lows throughout 2022 and 2023 marked a wide and long-term trading range that COIN couldn’t break above until November 2023.

But while this trading range appeared relatively static, lacking strong upward momentum, the Chaikin Money Flow (CMF), in contrast, rose dramatically (see red arrow tracing the upward path of the CMF levels). As you know, CMF measures buying/selling pressure of a stock. And in this case, the shift from heavy selling to increased buying indicated a bullish shift that wasn’t as pronounced in the price chart alone.

Those who were looking at the longer-term weekly chart might have anticipated the possibility (then) that COIN potentially bottomed at the beginning of 2023, as the CMF finally crossed the zero line into positive territory.

Currently, COIN is in a downswing, but support may be found at the previous resistance level that marked its November breakout. But to get a clearer picture, let’s look at the daily chart to drill down further and find an entry point.

The daily chart below includes the Stochastic Oscillator in the lower panel. The oscillator indicates that the price is at the oversold level. As the scan indicates, COIN has entered the Ichimoku Cloud, which often serves as a support (or in bearish cases, resistance).

CHART 2. DAILY CHART OF COIN. The Fib Retracement, Cloud, and Stochastic Oscillator give a green light for a “long” entry.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

What’s important is the larger context surrounding the price’s entry into the kumo (Ichimoku cloud). On a weekly scale, there is an increase in buying pressure, as measured by the CMF supporting COIN’s longer-term uptrend. The cloud color is green, and its range has more or less thickened as projected 26 periods from the current day.

To fine-tune the pullback’s measure, note the Fibonacci retracement levels from October 2023 to the December high.

Bullish traders might find the favorable range of entry now, but, as far as pinpointing an ideal entry point, you’d want to see a strong reversal candle in the next few sessions before committing to a long position. Assuming that your entry point is at or above $115.05, which is where the 61.8% Fib retracement level is located, you’d want to place a stop loss below $115, which is also the lower end of the (rising) cloud.

The Bottom Line

The landscape for Coinbase (COIN) looks promising from the fundamental and regulatory end, considering the SEC’s approval for multiple Bitcoin ETFs. Technically, every indicator applied to the chart gives a clear bullish green light on an entry. Of course, it’s important to enter any position cautiously, as several factors can change the market dynamics and investor sentiment.

Final thoughts: Scans are important. In addition to the Ichimoku scan, hundreds of other scans are available in StockCharts. Try them out and see which ones align with your investment goals. Predefined scans are a good starting point, but you can also create your scans.


How To Run an Ichimoku Scan (or any technical scan)

  • Log in to your StockCharts account
  • Go to Your Dashboard and, in the Member Tools window, scroll down to Reports & More and click on Sample Scan Library.
  • The Ichimoku Patterns are in the Candlestick Patterns section. Click the Run button next to the scan (in this case, Entered Ichimoku Cloud) and you’ll see a list of the filtered stocks and ETFs.


Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

Karl Montevirgen

About the author:
Karl Montevirgen is a professional freelance writer who specializes in finance, crypto markets, content strategy, and the arts. Karl works with several organizations in the equities, futures, physical metals, and blockchain industries. He holds FINRA Series 3 and Series 34 licenses in addition to a dual MFA in critical studies/writing and music composition from the California Institute of the Arts.
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Your Money And You: This Investment Strategy May Very Well Be Your Best Choice?

Every one of us faces this question as we look to the stock market for a better financial future. Let me first start this article with the understanding that the stock market isn’t your only choice in terms of investing in your future (or your child’s or grandchild’s future). But this article will ONLY focus on the stock market.

Your Choices

There are a number of factors to help you decide which investment strategy is right for you. Your age, investment horizon, and ultimate goals will likely weigh heavily in devising your own personal investment strategy. Beyond that, however, you must consider the level of risk you’re comfortable with. Not all stocks in the stock market are equal-weighted in terms of risk.

Growth Stocks Seeking Capital Appreciation

Stocks dependent on strong earnings and strong future earnings growth might be perfect for anyone willing to take higher risks and have plenty of time (younger age) to recoup losses in the near-term, especially if your strategy will be consistent with additional future investments being made as well as current investments. Growth stocks can generate very strong returns in a favorable environment of low interest rates and strong future earnings, but many do no pay anything out of current earnings (think dividends). As economic conditions change, valuations can drop rapidly with lowered expectations of earnings and growth. You don’t have to look back that far (2022 cyclical bear market) to see how far growth stocks can fall in a very short period of time.

As an example, let’s look at NVIDIA Corp (NVDA), which has gained 236% over the past year, but pays no dividend. It’s been the leading NASDAQ 100 stock, along with six others that have more than doubled over the past year:

  • CRWD: +190.98%
  • META: +181.64%
  • AMD: +157.32%
  • PANW: +140.03%
  • AVGO: +119.94%
  • ZS: +109.56%

As a growth stock investor, it’s these types of gains that make investing fun. But there’s a dark side to this group as well. We only need to look back at the past few years of NVDA performance to understand the roller coaster ride that your growth stock might take your money on:

Right now, I’m sure everyone would have liked to have owned a lot of NVDA. But the same wouldn’t have been said at the end of 2023, when NVDA’s 1-year rate of change (ROC) had fallen close to -60%. Bear markets can be absolutely brutal for growth stocks, because their future earnings growth and earnings growth rates contract with economic activity. And, if that’s the primary factor in growth stock valuations, it’s going to be very painful. Even the 6-month ROC in September 2023 was close to -60%. Imagine that your entire portfolio is situated in growth stocks like NVDA 6 months to a year prior to the start of retirement. Then think about the pain and stress, both emotional and financial, that type of drop would inflict on you. When you consider your strategy, you MUST consider all possibilities, not just the best ones.

Conclusion: Investing in growth stocks should be considered in EVERY portfolio. Even those who have already retired could have a nest egg expected to last another 20 years or more. But you won’t need all of that money in the first year of retirement. A portion of your savings will be needed 10-20 years down the road or longer. This portion could be invested a bit more aggressively as you won’t need this money for many years to come. Historically, growth stocks will typically outperform more conservative investment approaches over periods of 10 years or more. However, determining how much you should invest in growth stocks is based on a number of factors, including age, years to invest, personal risk tolerance, investment purposes, financial goals, etc.

Income Investors Seeking Dividend Yield

This is a more conservative strategy that focuses much more on payments to shareholders out of current earnings and in the form of dividends. These more conservative dividend payers tend to see much more consistency in their earnings picture and much less volatility in their stock price, though there certainly can be exceptions to this general rule. These investment are not usually as highly stressed by shorter-term economic concerns. Utilities and real estate companies quickly come to mind. They are not fully insulated from economic concerns, especially real estate as this group can react to movements in interest rates, but most investors in these two sectors look toward higher income/dividends as a primary reason for investment. To illustrate using a perf chart, let’s compare the price performance of a growth area like technology (XLK) to more income-oriented areas like utilities (XLU) and real estate (XLRE), since the current secular bull market advance began in 2013:

Most technology stocks pay little or no dividend, but you can see that the capital appreciation opportunity is obvious. Many of the big drops in the stock market are felt harder in technology, however. The XLU and XLRE provide much smaller opportunities with capital appreciation as their earnings growth prospects do not fluctuate over the years as wildly as technology companies. But the comparative safety of capital, along with a much, much higher portion of current earnings being paid out by utilities and real estate companies is the preference of many income-oriented investors. Their dividends, many times, compete with an even safer form of investment, U.S. Treasury securities.

Combination of Capital Appreciation and Dividend Yield

For many investors, it’s probably a good bet that owning both capital appreciation and dividend-paying stocks makes a lot of sense. And there are a group of stocks that show significant combinations of both strategies that might appeal to many investors. It doesn’t have to be one or the other. How about the “hybrid” company, one whose dividend yield may be more modest, but the dividend growth rate is strong and fairly sustainable. Here are three stocks that might qualify for this hybrid label:

Proctor & Gamble (PG):

PG is a stock normally thought of as defensive and value-oriented. I’m not sure the chart necessarily agrees with this assessment. Let me start by saying that PG has raised its annual dividend for 68 consecutive years. That’s quite an accomplishment in and of itself, considering the number of secular and cyclical bear markets that PG has endured. And PG hasn’t been a bad grower either. Here’s the price chart:

I’ve changed the chart here to quarterly, since dividends are paid out quarterly. I’ve also lengthened the chart to 30 years, so that you can see the power of capital appreciation AND solid increases in dividends each year. PG has not only raised its dividend for 68 consecutive years, but the AVERAGE increase is 8.6% since 1994. Those dividend payouts have spiked significantly, which tells us that the current dividend payout in 2024 will only continue to increase by a rate that will at least keep up with inflation, if not exceed it. Oh, and then throw in the capital appreciation potential. Nothing is ever a guarantee, but PG has been a very solid investment for a long, long time. If you’re a growth investor, however, the day-to-day movement in PG will likely bore you. Boring isn’t always a bad thing, though, especially when it comes to building financial wealth.

Starbucks, Inc. (SBUX):

SBUX is another long-term solid grower in terms of capital appreciation, but long-term investors might be surprised that its dividend yield is currently 2.43%. The price chart below tells its own story in terms of price appreciation, but check out how quickly the SBUX quarterly dividends have been climbing:

While the SBUX capital appreciation rate has slowed from its earlier years, its ability to generate profits to pay out higher and higher dividends has not. SBUX has an average increase in its annual dividends of 17.76% since the secular bull market began in 2013. In recent years, that average increase has fallen into the high single digits (8-9%), but that’s still a very solid annual increase rate.

Nike, Inc. (NKE):

NKE has been a grower over the years and its annual dividend has increased every year this early this century – through two secular bear markets and 3 cyclical bear markets, which shows the company’s ability to increase shareholder weather – even during the worst of stock market climates. Check out NKE’s capital appreciation over the years:

Despite its underperformance the past couple years, NKE has still been a “10-bagger” over the past 15 years, rising from 10 bucks to 100 over that period. But a rapidly-rising annual dividend, combined with price struggles since 2021, now provides a 1.45% dividend yield. Not only has NKE raised its dividend every year over the past couple decades, but its AVERAGE annual dividend increase has been double digits in all but 2 of those years. During 2009 and 2010, NKE “only” raised its annual dividend 8.7% and 8.0%.

These hybrid stocks do feel an impact from economic activity, but the combination of price appreciation and solid dividends and dividend increases should not be overlooked.

For the past several years, with only minor exceptions (namely, the 2022 cyclical bear market), I’ve suggested sticking with this secular bull market. Betting against these bull markets is a big mistake, in my opinion. The perma-bears just keep digging themselves a deeper and deeper hole. In Monday’s FREE EB Digest article, I’ll provide my argument to derail the most common reason for not investing in the stock market right now. If you’re not already an EBD subscriber and you’d like to see Monday’s FREE article, simply CLICK HERE to register with your name and email address. There’s no credit card required and you may unsubscribe at any time.

Happy trading!

Tom

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Perspective And History Tell Us To Lower Our Expectations For Technology Stocks

No one loves a good bull market more than me. History tells us that we want remain mostly on the side of the bulls. Perma-bears have an awful long-term track record. They’ve called 30 of the last 3 secular bear markets. Honestly, those who cannot ever see anything other than a downtrend ahead should find a new occupation or hobby. Here’s the long-term chart of the S&P 500.

GDP + inflation + innovation = roughly an average 9% annual gain on the S&P 500. Ask yourself a question. How many times have you exited the stock market and wished you had just left your investment alone and untouched? Be honest.

Seriously, how often do perma-bears get it right? Hey, listen, there’s nothing wrong with being bearish from time to time if you’re a shorter-term trader. The stock market moves too far sometimes and rightfully needs to correct. And after years of secular bull market strength, there comes a time when stocks need more than a simple correction and a secular bear market is justified. In my opinion, that’s not now. Talk to me again in 2030. We won’t be in one for a long time as the current 11-year secular bull market rages on. But, even during a secular bull market, the bulls must acknowledge when short-term risks grow and portfolio adjustments should be considered.

I believe now is a good time to lean on perspective and the impact it could have in 2024.

We all know (or should know) that the three aggressive sectors – technology (XLK), consumer discretionary (XLY), and communication services (XLC) – tend to lead most secular bull market advances. But they don’t lead all of them. And there are examples right now that maybe our leaders have led for a bit too long.

The S&P 500 just advanced more than 16% in 41 trading days from October 27th through December 28th. We can use a 41-day rate of change (ROC) to see how often this 16% level is reached or exceeded in this time frame. Check this out:

This type of move typically occurs after a big bear market move lower or after a correction. The 2023 occurrence came on the heels of the July through October correction. These huge gains are not normal and rarely result in similar gains moving forward. We need to pause and allow these gains to be absorbed. Also, election years are weak historically during Q1, which is exactly where we’re situated right now. While I expected a scorching January in 2023 based on a few of my signals, I don’t expect that at all in January 2024. Lows in election years tend to coincide with March.

Currently, the largest sector in the S&P 500 is technology, which represents 28.79% of the benchmark. Discretionary represents 10.84% and communication services totals 8.55%. So these 3 aggressive sectors comprise 48.18%, or nearly half of the benchmark. If these 3 groups simply take a few months to absorb recent gains, we could easily see rotation move into other areas like industrials (XLI), financials (XLF), or health care (XLV). These 3 more value-oriented sectors represent more than 34% of the benchmark. While XLY is in the aggressive sector camp, it actually looks like it could still provide a lift to the S&P 500. More on that below.

Technology (XLK) is clearly the one to watch though as it has the biggest impact on the S&P 500. Currently, from this chart alone, I see significant risks ahead if you’re overweighting technology:

Nothing on this chart looks particularly encouraging for technology. The top part of this chart tells us that technology’s relative momentum was VERY stretched – similar to 2020 – and we know what happened next. It was a lengthy period of average to underperformance vs. the S&P 500.

The middle part of the chart shows that the XLK:$SPX relative strength is at the upper end of its relative uptrend, which makes it difficult to continue outperforming. In fact, it’s probably time to consider weak relative strength ahead. Finally, the bottom panel charts the 52-week relative performance. Money has poured into technology over the past year – again similar to 2018. It wouldn’t be normal for this to continue higher. Once again, this tells me the risk is to the downside and it’s not worth the risk of overweighting technology right now.

I’ll make one last point about the likely relative weakness in technology. Check out this 20-year weekly chart of the XLK:

We’re at the top of the XLK’s 15-year channel, which has been problematic at every point in this channel, with the exception of the after-effects of the pandemic. It just looks like time for a change in leadership for a bit.

So all of this leads me to a big question. If technology underperforms, where should we look for relative strength?

XLY:

The XLY is trading much closer to its lower uptrend line, suggesting strength could easily find its way here.

XLV:

The XLV has been consolidating and, therefore, underperforming the S&P 500 for quite awhile. The recent breakout may be the trigger this group needs to see a lot more money rotating IN.

XLF:

Technically, we don’t usually see this group lead. Given the circumstances of the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the XLF has been a tough place to make money. But I believe the group was undervalued while short-term rates jumped and resulted in an inverted yield curve. 2024 is likely to reverse that condition, which will benefit the net interest margin for banks ($DJUSBK), a significant fundamental tailwind. Should our economy grow in 2024, which I believe it will, it could be a goldilocks scenario for banks – a solid, and perhaps even improving, economy coupled with rising spreads.

It will be very interesting to see how the first quarter of 2024 develops. While I can’t guarantee outperformance or underperformance of any area, I do believe that we can assess risk and make more informed trading/investing decisions.

To become a FREE EB Digest subscriber (no credit card required) and to follow me at EarningsBeats.com, simply CLICK HERE and enter your name and email address. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Happy trading!

Tom

Tom Bowley

About the author:
Tom Bowley is the Chief Market Strategist of EarningsBeats.com, a company providing a research and educational platform for both investment professionals and individual investors. Tom writes a comprehensive Daily Market Report (DMR), providing guidance to EB.com members every day that the stock market is open. Tom has contributed technical expertise here at StockCharts.com since 2006 and has a fundamental background in public accounting as well, blending a unique skill set to approach the U.S. stock market.

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The Hoax of Modern Finance – Part 4: Misuse of Statistics and Other Controversial Practices

Note to the reader: This is the fourth in a series of articles I’m publishing here taken from my book, “Investing with the Trend.” Hopefully, you will find this content useful. Market myths are generally perpetuated by repetition, misleading symbolic connections, and the complete ignorance of facts. The world of finance is full of such tendencies, and here, you’ll see some examples. Please keep in mind that not all of these examples are totally misleading — they are sometimes valid — but have too many holes in them to be worthwhile as investment concepts. And not all are directly related to investing and finance. Enjoy! – Greg


The Deception of Average

The World of Finance is fraught with misleading information.

The use of averages, in particular, is something that requires discussion. Figure 4.1 shows the compounded rates of return for a variety of asset classes. If I were selling you a buy-and-hold strategy, or an index fund, I would love this chart. Looking at the 85 years of data shown here, I could say that, if you had invested in small-cap stocks, you would have averaged 11.95 percent a year, and if you had invested in large-cap stocks, you would have averaged 9.85 percent a year. And I would be correct.

Figure 4.1

I think that most investors have about 20 years, maybe 25 years, in which to accumulate their retirement wealth. In their 20s and 30s, it is difficult to put much money away for many reasons, such as low incomes, children, materialism, college, and so on. Therefore, with that information, what is wrong with this chart? It is for an 85-year investment, and people do not have 85 years to invest. As said earlier, most have about 20 years to acquire their retirement wealth. and there are many 20-year periods in this chart where the returns were horrible. The bear market that began in 1929 did not fully recover until 1954, a full 25 years later; 1966 took 16 years to recover, 1973 took 10 years, and, as of 2012, the 2000 bear still had not recovered.

Table 4.1 shows the performance numbers for the asset classes shown in Figure 4.1 (LT—Long Term, IT—Intermediate Term). The cumulative numbers in Table 4.1 begin at 1 on December 31, 1925.

Table 4.1Hint: Be careful when someone uses inappropriate averages; or more accurately, uses averages inappropriately.

In Table 4.1, recall how the small-cap and large-cap compounded returns were about 12 percent and 10 percent, respectively. Figure 4.2 shows rolling 10-year returns by range since 1900. A rolling return means it shows the periods 1900–1909, 1901–1910, 1902–1911, and so on. You can clearly see that the small stock and large stock returns depicted in Table 4.1 fall within the middle range (8 percent–12 percent) in Figure 4.2, yet, of all the 10-year rolling periods, only 22 percent of them were in that range. Often, average is not very average. It reminds me of the story of the six-foot-tall Texan that drowned while wading across a stream that averaged only three-feet deep.

Figure 4.2

Another (and final) example shows how easily it is to be confused over what is average. And, of course, this time it is intentional. This example should put it in perspective. You cannot relate rates of change linearly. In Figure 4.3 , point A is 20 miles from point B. If you drive 60 mph going from point A to point B, but returning from point B to point A, you drive 30 mph. What is his average speed for the time you were on the road?

A. 55 mph

B. 50 mph

C. 45 mph

D. 40 mph

Figure 4.3

Many will answer that it is 45 mph ((60mph + 30mph)/2). However, you cannot average rates of change like you can constants and linear relationships. Distance is rate multiplied by time (d = rt). So time (t) is distance (d)/rate (r). The first leg from A to B was 20 miles divided by 60 mph or one-third of an hour. The second leg from B to A was 20 miles divided by 30 mph or two-thirds of an hour. Adding the two times (1/3+2/3 = 1 hour) will mean you traveled for one hour and covered a total distance of 40 miles, which has to mean the average speed was 40mph. Look up harmonic mean if you want more information on this, as it is the correct method to determine central tendency of data when it is in the form of a ratio or rate.

Figure 4.4 shows the 20-year rolling price returns for the Dow Industrials. The range of returns in this 127-year sample (1885–2012) is from a low on 08/31/1949 (of .3.71) percent to a high on 3/31/2000 (of 14.06 percent), a 17.77 percent range.

To help clarify rolling returns, if investors were in the Dow Industrials from 9/30/1929 until 8/31/1949 (the low mentioned previously), they had a return of .3.71 percent. Complementary, if they invested on 4/30/1980, then, on 3/31/2000, they had a return of 14.06 percent. The mean return is 5.2 percent and the median return 4.8 percent. When median is less than mean, it simply means more returns were less average. If you recall the long-term assumptions that are often used in the first part of this chapter (Figure 4.1), you can see there is a problem. The magnitude of errors in assumptions of long-term returns cannot be overstated and certainly cannot be ignored. This variability of returns can mean totally different retirement environments for investors who use these long-term assumptions for future returns. It can be the difference between living like a king, or living on government assistance. Institutional investors have the same problems if using these long-term averages.

Figure 4.4

One of the primary beliefs developed by Markowitz in the 1950s as the architect of Modern Portfolio Theory was the details on the inputs for the efficient investment portfolio. In fact, his focus was hardly on the inputs at all. The inputs that are needed are expected future returns, volatility, and correlations. The industry as a whole took the easy approach to solving this by utilizing long-term averages for the inputs — in other words, one full swing through all the data that was available, and the average is the one used for the inputs into an otherwise fairly good theory. Those long-term inputs are totally inappropriate for the investing horizon of most investors; in fact, I think they are inappropriate for all human beings. While delving into this deeper is not the subject of this book, it once again brings to light the horrible misuse of average. These inputs should use averages appropriate for the investor’s accumulation time frame.

One If by Land, Two If by Sea

Sam Savage is a consulting professor of management science and engineering at Stanford University, and a fellow of the Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge. He wrote an insightful book, The Flaw of Averages, in 2009, wherein he included a short piece called “The Red Coats” that fits right into this chapter.

Spring 1775: The colonists are concerned about British plans to raid Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts. Patriots in Boston develop a plan that explicitly takes a range of uncertainties into account: The British will come either by land or by sea. These unsung pioneers of modern decision analysis did it just right by explicitly planning for both contingencies. Had Paul Revere and the Minutemen planned for the single average scenario of the British walking up the beach with one foot on the land and one in the sea, the citizens of North America might speak with different accents today.

Incidentally, Dr. Savage’s father, Leonard J. Savage, wrote the seminal The Foundation of Statistics in 1972 and was a prominent mathematical statistician who collaborated closely with Milton Friedman.

Everything on Four Legs Is a Pig

Although this is unrelated to investments and finance, it is a story about averages that offers additional support to this topic. Doctors use growth charts (height and weight tables) for a guide on the growth of a child. What folks do not realize is that they were created by actuaries for insurance companies and not doctors. As doctors began to use them, the terms overweight, underweight, obese, and so on were created based on average. So if your doctor says you are overweight and you need to lose weight, he is also saying you need to lose weight to be average. And from a Wall Street Journal article by Melinda Beck on July 24, 2012, “The wide variations are due in part to rising obesity rates, an increase in premature infants who survive, and a population that is growing more diverse. Yet the official growth charts from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention still reflect the size distribution of U.S. children in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. The CDC says it doesn’t plan to adjust its charts because it doesn’t want the ever-more-obese population to become the new norm.” And now you know.

During my last physical examination, I told my doctor about how these charts on height and weight were just large averages created by actuaries for insurance companies, and that I did not mind being above average. The chapter that follows focuses on the multibillion-dollar industry of prediction. I rarely am invited to be on the financial media anymore because I refuse to make a prediction; it is a fool’s game.


Thanks for reading this far. I intend to publish one article in this series every week. Can’t wait? The book is for sale here.

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Hot Jobs Data Sends Stock Market Seesawing, Ending Nine-Week Winning Streak

KEY

TAKEAWAYS

  • The stock market indices closed higher for the day but ended the week lower
  • The 10-year Treasury yield closed higher at 4.04%
  • In spite of the pullback in equities, the stock market indices are still looking technically strong

You can’t blame the market for taking a breather after nine positive weeks.

The first trading week in January ended lower, which may have concerned investors. It’s understandable how jittery investors are when you view the market’s reaction to the December jobs report. The jobs data came in better than expected, which sent ripples through Wall Street. Right after the data was reported, equity futures fell, and Treasury yields ticked higher.

However, investors overcame the shock after digesting the info and looking more closely at the data. And the lower-than-expected ISM number, plus factoring in two major strikes and their impact on the jobs numbers, calmed investors for a short while. Equities turned higher, and Treasury yields dropped. The market continued to seesaw between gains and losses throughout the trading day.

Don’t be surprised if the market exhibits similar behavior next week, as investors await December CPI data and the start of earnings season. This doesn’t happen till the end of the week, so expect more of the same until Thursday.  

According to the CME FedWatch Tool, the probability of an interest rate cut in the March Fed meeting is at 64%, lower than before today’s data was released. 2024 is a 50-50 year, with elections and the Fed’s interest rate. Elections are going to take place in several countries around the world. And with over half the world’s population heading to the polls this year, it’s bound to bring some volatility to the stock market.

From a seasonal perspective for the US market, the first quarter of an election year tends to be volatile. There’s a chance that stocks could sell off ahead of the elections, but generally trend higher after the elections. And while 2023 performed as expected, seasonally, it doesn’t mean you should sit back and expect your portfolio to grow at the end of the year. Keep a watch on the broader market.

Given the S&P 500 index ($SPX) has been trending higher, trading above its 50-month simple moving average and showing a relatively steep uptrend since 2022 (see chart below), a correction shouldn’t be worrisome until the index nosedives below critical support levels.

CHART 1. MONTHLY CHART OF S&P 500. The index has been trending higher since 2012 and, except for a few instances, staying above its 50-month simple moving average. A break below the blue dashed uptrend line could be the first indication of a reversal.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

We have seen a rotation in leadership from Technology to Financials and Health Care, two sectors that struggled last year. The hope of lower interest rates likely boosted the Financials, which have seen a sharp upside rally since early November. The Health Care sector saw a similar move as Financials, though it pulled back a bit on Friday.

CHART 2. DAILY CHART OF FINANCIAL SELECT SECTOR SPDR ETF (XLF). After yields started falling, the Financials started recovering and rallied strongly.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

But that doesn’t mean the Magnificent Seven will lose their status symbol. Although it closed off its high, Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) showed signs of recovering today. NVDA’s stock still has a strong chart, maintaining support of its 50-day SMA. If the stock continues to rally in 2024, it could pull the rest of the market with it, especially the other six stocks that closely follow behind. So don’t lose faith in the mega-cap tech stocks just yet.

CHART 3. NVIDIA STOCK IS STILL BULLISH. Don’t give up on the Magnificent Seven stocks; they could still rally higher.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

It’s not out of reach for Treasury yields to fall lower, as the Fed is expected to lower rates. Lower interest rates could see growth stocks pull back, but how much lower are interest rates likely to go?

As long as the economy keeps chugging along, the expectations the market has priced in will probably hold. But that doesn’t mean interest rates will fall close to zero; more likely, they will pull back, and then probably settle at around the 3% level. A lot has to do with the balance between interest rates and economic growth.

On a closing note, small-cap stocks could show strength as rates fall. Keep an eye on a chart of the small caps vs. large caps in 2024, such as the one below of iShares Russell 2000 ETF vs. the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (IWM:SPY).

CHART 4. SMALL CAPS VS. LARGE CAPS. If the small caps start outperforming the large caps and trend higher, you may want to put more weight on small-cap stocks.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

If there’s a clear rotation and investors gravitate toward small-cap stocks, it may be worth adding more weight to this asset class.

End-of-Week Wrap-Up

  • $SPX up 0.18% at 4697.24, $INDU up 0.07% at 37,466.11; $COMPQ up 0.09% at 14524.07
  • $VIX down 5.52% at 13.35
  • Best performing sector for the week: Health Care
  • Worst performing sector for the week: Technology
  • Top 5 Large Cap SCTR stocks: Affirm Holdings (AFRM); USX-US Steel Group (X); Coinbase Global (COIN); PDD Holdings (PDD); Karuna Therapeutics (KRTX)

On the Radar Next Week

  • December CPI
  • December PPI
  • Earnings season kicks off with Bank of America (BAC), JP Morgan Chase (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC), Citigroup (C), Delta Airlines (DAL), and more.

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

Jayanthi Gopalakrishnan

About the author:
Jayanthi Gopalakrishnan is Director of Site Content at StockCharts.com. She spends her time coming up with content strategies, delivering content to educate traders and investors, and finding ways to make technical analysis fun. Jayanthi was Managing Editor at T3 Custom, a content marketing agency for financial brands. Prior to that, she was Managing Editor of Technical Analysis of Stocks & Commodities magazine for 15+ years.
Learn More

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Ready Yourself for 2024 With Macro to Micro Analysis

For the new year, we have given you an extensive 3-pronged look at the markets.

First, we have the general outlook for the economy and markets through the Outlook 2024. This is the general outlook for 2024, including the recap of 2023 and how the predictions I made then played out. It includes a comparison in inflation and disinflation patterns of the 1970s and now. It also includes all the indices and the general outlook for key sectors and the bonds, dollar, metals, and so on.

Moreover, we look at the Economic Modern Family and their outliers through charts and analysis. Also included are overall trends to watch, plus picks.

One other area I cover in the Outlook 2024 is the teachings of Raymond Lo and how he sees the upcoming Year of the Dragon. Part of my comments on his analysis is based on this statement by Lo:

“Many has the misunderstanding that the Dragon is glamorous auspicious animal and will always bring good luck. To the contrary, Dragon and Dog in the 12-animal system is called the “Gate to Heaven and Hell” or the “Net of Heaven and Hell”.

General Thoughts

2024 could see gains; however, we are agnostic and definitely looking to charts. SPY needs to hold 4600 as our line in the sand, and small caps need to hold over 2000. Plus, in January, we will have a 6-month calendar reset this year with the election; instruments that fail the calendar range lows could set the stage for a broader selloff, while instruments that rally above the calendar range highs can be the bigger winners, at least for the first half of the year. Nonetheless, we have keen eyes on junk bonds, which, despite rallying, have well underperformed the indices. If they hold, great; if not, we take that as a warning.

With the anticipation of Fed lowering rates multiple times, we also want to see Fed Fund rates stabilize and not fall too dramatically, as those could be the signs of recession that we seemingly avoided in 2023. Additionally, we expounded with Daily newsletters.

From Gold and Silver

For last year’s Outlook, I wrote:

Perhaps our biggest callout for a major rally in 2023 is in gold.

Here we are over $2000 and, although gold has not doubled in price, it did rise by 25%.

For 2024, we stay with our call for higher gold prices. I am looking for a move to $2400, provided gold continues to hold $1980.

That statement was from December 1st. To add to that statement:

Trends for 2024 — Gold and Silver start their Last Hurrah.

From 17 Predictions

With certain areas of inflation coming down, although still higher than what numbers suggest, the discussion of the rate hike cycle at the end is controversial. Statistically, there has been a major financial failure at the end of each rate hike cycle since 1965.

Currently, the catalyst for financial stress could be the rising debt, rising spending, geopolitical issues impacting supply chain and a contentious election year. And anything that gooses inflation will stop the Fed from cutting.

January 2024 will see a new 6-month calendar range reset — it will be very important this time, with many predicting the end of the first quarter with a selloff. Although the stats are on the side of a higher market, this year of the dragon suggests some irritation that could turn the market on its side with more volatility.

To be prepared check out our predictions.

From The Vanity Trade 2024: All About Me!

According to Wikipedia, “Self-help or self-improvement is a self-directed improvement of oneself—economically, physically, intellectually, or emotionally—often with a substantial psychological basis.”

In the Outlook 2024, I quote Raymond Lo yet again,

“The Dragon is considered a ‘Star of Arts.’ The industries that will perform better in the Year of the Dragon will be related to the Metal and Wood elements. Metal industries are beauty and skin care; wood industries are media, fashion….”

This got me thinking about the consumer and the habits of 2023 and how they could continue or change in 2024.

With disposable income still quite high, consumers who spent the last half of 2023 in YOLO or revenge spending go into vanity mode in 2024.

Fashion, beauty, skincare, elective surgeries, self-help, diet drugs, and maybe dating stocks do well.

This daily includes lots of picks to put on your radar.


Click this link to get your free copy of the Outlook 2024 and stay in the loop!

Thank you, all my loyal readers, followers, clients and colleagues, for making 2023 so successful. Here is to a VERY HEALTHY, HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR!!!


This is for educational purposes only. Trading comes with risk.

If you find it difficult to execute the MarketGauge strategies or would like to explore how we can do it for you, please email Ben Scheibe at [email protected], our Head of Institutional Sales. Cell: 612-518-2482.

For more detailed trading information about our blended models, tools and trader education courses, contact Rob Quinn, our Chief Strategy Consultant, to learn more.

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Get your copy of Plant Your Money Tree: A Guide to Growing Your Wealth.

Grow your wealth today and plant your money tree!

“I grew my money tree and so can you!” – Mish Schneider

Follow Mish on X @marketminute for stock picks and more. Follow Mish on Instagram (mishschneider) for daily morning videos. To see updated media clips, click here.


Mish and team look at 2023 and make several predictions on commodities and trends for 2024 and vanity stocks in Benzinga Pre Market Prep.

Mish discusses gold, silver and why self care and “all about me” can trend in 2024 in this video from Yahoo! Finance.


Coming Up:

January 2: The Final Bar with David Keller, StockCharts TV & Making Money with Charles Payne, Fox Business & BNN Bloomberg

January 3: Real Vision IP Group Special Presentation

January 5: Daily Briefing, Real Vision

January 22: Your Daily Five, StockCharts TV

January 24: Yahoo! Finance

Weekly: Business First AM, CMC Markets


  • S&P 500 (SPY): 480 all-time highs, 460 underlying support.
  • Russell 2000 (IWM): 200 pivotal.
  • Dow (DIA): Needs to hold 370.
  • Nasdaq (QQQ): 410 pivotal.
  • Regional Banks (KRE): 47 support, 55 resistance.
  • Semiconductors (SMH): 174 pivotal support to hold this month.
  • Transportation (IYT): Needs to hold 250.
  • Biotechnology (IBB): 130 pivotal support.
  • Retail (XRT): The longer this stays over 70.00 the better!

Mish Schneider

MarketGauge.com

Director of Trading Research and Education



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The Top Five Charts of 2023

KEY

TAKEAWAYS

  • 2023 was dominated by mega cap growth stocks, but the fourth quarter saw a potential change as other sectors experienced renewed vigor.
  • Three breadth indicators provided great clarity to the up and down cycles over the course of the year, as extreme readings tended to coincide with major turning points.
  • Interest rates remain top of mind as a pullback in the Ten Year Treasury Yield certainly seemed to provide support to the recent rally for stocks.

The end of the year provides a natural opportunity to look back and reflect on what we learned over the last 12 months as investors. I very much enjoyed thinking about how to tell the story of this market in just five charts, and to be completely honest, the videos below include way more than that!

But as much we love to make things more complicated for ourselves, mindful investors know that simple is often the best approach. So, by boiling down this year into five major themes and using these charts as a starting point to a deeper analysis of each, I found it to be a rewarding and at times eye-opening experience.

You can access the full playlist of the Top Five Charts on our YouTube channel, and you are welcome to ChartList I used during the videos, which you can find right HERE!

Without further ado, here are the five charts I selected, along with descriptions and video links. I hope you can use these as inspiration for your own year-end process and performance review!

Chart #1: S&P 500

As Ralph Acampora told me years ago, “Always start with a simple chart of the S&P 500.” And it’s been a fascinating year to do so, with each quarter providing a unique experience for investors, including plenty of ups and downs.

Looking back, I’m struck by what a sideways market we experienced really through the end of May. The S&P started with a strong January, but subsequent months basically brought retests of previous highs and previous lows, and no real indication of bullishness or bearishness on the larger timeframe.

June’s breakout provided a perfect example of the bearish momentum divergence, as negative momentum into the July high indicated an exhaustion of buyers. I also find myself focusing in on the October low, which caused me to be quite bearish at the time. That was definitely one of my key lessons learned in 2023, especially the importance of recognizing a clear change of character in November.

Chart #2: Ten Year Treasury Yield

Back in January 2023, I was asked during an interview to identify the most important chart to watch in 2023. I answered this chart, the Ten Year Treasury Yield ($TNX), along with the value vs. growth ratio. My thesis was that many investors had not experienced a rising rate environment (including me!), so this could mean some painful lessons as value outperformed growth as interest rates pushed higher.

As the chart clearly shows, the Ten Year Yield going from around 4% to 5%, completing a long journey from almost zero rates not long ago, did not provide the tailwind for value stocks that I expected. What a beautiful testament to the benefits of including macroeconomic analysis as part of a holistic investment approach, but also the importance of focusing on the evidence of price itself. If the charts say growth is outperforming, I’m going to want to stick with growth until proven otherwise.

Chart #3: Market Breadth

Breadth analysis is an essential component to my analytical process, as it addresses the issues related to our growth-oriented benchmarks being dominated by a small number of mega-cap stocks.

This chart includes three different breadth indicators: the S&P 500 Bullish Percent Index, the Percent of Stocks Above the 50-day Moving Average, and the McClellan Oscillator. With the first two indicators at 80% and 90%, respectively, this suggests a potential exhaustion point to the current upswing, similar to what we observed in July 2023, November 2022, and August 2022.

Chart #4: Leadership Themes

I have been thinking of 2023 as the year of mega-cap growth, but this fourth chart that it actually wasn’t about growth over value, but rather large over small. Reviewing the nine Morningstar style boxes, it’s clear that, while growth did indeed outperform value, it was overall more of large vs. small story.

Large-cap growth has outperformed large-cap value by almost 900 basis points (nine percent), but has outperformed mid-cap and small-cap style boxes by around 1300 basis points. Our benchmarks have been powering higher, propelled by the strength of large-cap growth, and one of the most important questions for 2024 will be whether this stretch of domination will continue.

Chart #5: Bitcoin

Higher highs and higher lows make an uptrend. And while Bitcoin ($BTCUSD) did not show that general pattern in the middle of 2023, it started the year strong and certainly ended the year in a position of strength.

Bitcoin has nearly tripled in value since December 2022, starting with a significant rally into an April high. But from March through October, Bitcoin basically was rangebound between 25,000 and 31,000. I remember laying out a game plan, which involved following the price momentum fueling any exit from that range. Sure enough, in October, we witnessed an upside breakout inspired by renewed optimism for a potential announcement confirming new spot Bitcoin ETFs. While that news has not yet arrived, the bullish uptrend shows that investors remain eager for this huge potential catalyst.

During my years in the Fidelity Chart Room, I was often reminded that charts can tell the best stories about market history. And as each new year concludes, the charts can provide a fantastic report card for your performance, a history textbook filled with practical lessons for years to come, and a reminder of the value of technical analysis in helping us identify opportunities and manage risk.

I hope these discussions inspire you to have a thorough review session as we wrap 2023, and an honest assessment of how you can improve your investing toolkit in 2024.

Happy holidays, thank you for making StockCharts a part of your process, and I’ll look forward to more great charts and conversations in the new year!

RR#6,

Dave

P.S. Ready to upgrade your investment process? Check out my free behavioral investing course!


David Keller, CMT

Chief Market Strategist

StockCharts.com


Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

The author does not have a position in mentioned securities at the time of publication. Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.

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The Hoax of Modern Finance – Part 3: Fictions Told to Investors

Note to the reader: This is the third in a series of articles I’m publishing here taken from my book, “Investing with the Trend,” in article form here on my blog. Hopefully, you will find this content useful. Market myths are generally perpetuated by repetition, misleading symbolic connections, and the complete ignorance of facts. The world of finance is full of such tendencies, and here, you’ll see some examples. Please keep in mind that not all of these examples are totally misleading — they are sometimes valid — but have too many holes in them to be worthwhile as investment concepts. And not all are directly related to investing and finance. Enjoy! – Greg


Believable Misinformation in Investing

Remember in our previous articles how many of the things we learned when we were young simply are not true? How many things have you learned in regard to investing that also just might not be true? Well…

  • “Buy and hold is the only way to be successful in the stock market.”
  • “Dollar-cost averaging is a good technique.”
  • “Diversification will protect you from bear markets.”
  • “Compounding is the eighth wonder of the world.”
  • “You must remain invested at all times, or you will miss the 10 best days each year.”
  • “Average returns are never better than compounded returns.”
  • “Probability and risk are the same thing.”
  • “Equity asset allocation will protect you from bear markets.”
  • “Economists are good at predicting the market.”
  • “Chasing performance is a common technique.”

The Void of Accountability

How often do you watch economists and market experts in financial media (television, print, etc.) offer strong opinions on the future direction of the economy and the stock market? Do they ever present their track record? Never! In fact, if you pay close attention, you will see that most of the “experts” are gaining something from their appearance. I’m shocked and disappointed at the absolute certainty in which they deliver their prognostications.

Hiding Behind Statistics

Have you placed a bet on the market using the Super Bowl indicator?

The Super Bowl indicator is based on the premise that, if the Super Bowl champion came from the old AFL, now known as the AFC, then the year will bring a downtrend in the stock market, while a winner from the old NFL, now the NFC, will lead to a bull market. Hopefully, you have not made any market decision on this, as that is a classic example of data mining and, even then, with an inadequate amount of data. This is not uncommon, however, as analysts, the financial media, newsletter writers, bloggers, and so on are constantly using data-mined statistics to make or support their hypothesis.

Figure 2.1 is a histogram of the annual returns on the Dow Industrial Average since 1897. The returns on the left are the down years, and the ones on the right are the up years. The up years account for 66 percent of all the years, so, if I were selling you a buy-and-hold strategy or an index fund, I could point to this chart and say, “Look, the market is up 66 percent of the time,” and I would be correct. Is this actionable information? Of course not, it is only observable information. And it is good, because it helps one understand market history and statistics. But you can’t make an investment decision based on this information.

Let’s play a game. First of all, I promise you that it is a fair game; here are the rules: 

  • It will cost you $10 to play the game.
  • You can play as many times as you desire.
  • If you win, you will receive $1 million.
  • There are no tricks.
  • The honest mathematical probability of winning is 1 out of 6. Honest! No tricks!

Figure 2.1

How many want to play?

When I do this during a presentation, most folks raise their hands; a few don’t, but those are the ones that never raise their hand. I then announce that the game is Russian roulette, and ask, “How many want to play the game now?” No one raises their hands. I then ask, “What happened?” I changed your focus from these goofy statistics to the risk of playing the game, and when you found out the risk of playing, you were no longer interested. Most do not realize the difference between probability and risk. This is what you need to do with the market, analyze and assess the risk. Stop paying attention to the daily noise, and know the difference between actionable information and observable information.

You Must Remain Invested or You Will Miss the 10 Best Days of the Year

“You must remain invested, or you will miss the ten best days of each year.” How many times have you heard that? While the fact of this matter is true, it is an impossible task to determine the best days beforehand. Let’s turn it around and ask what happens if you miss the ten worst days each year.

Figure 2.2 shows the S&P 500 since 1979. The line that moves down and to the right is the line represents the “missing the ten best days” argument. Note that this analysis was about missing the 10 best (worst) days per year. Again, the argument is factual; it just isn’t realistic. The line that moves up and to the right is the one that “misses the 10 worst days.” Clearly, missing the 10 worst days gives a drastically better performance than missing the 10 best days. The two lines in the middle are the S&P 500 and the line representing “missing both the 10 best and 10 worst days,” which you can see are quite close.

Figure 2.2

I have done this analysis also using the Dow Industrial Average back to 1885, and the results are always the same. I have done this over many varying time periods, and again, the results are the same. So, the buy-and-hold pundits and the index investing pundits want to scare you into believing their methods are better. A few articles from now, the section “The Deception of Average” should be enough to convince you that there is something wrong with that type of thinking. The best days (worst days) in the market are nothing more than interesting statistical anomalies. The argument that missing the best days would reduce the final return of a buy-and-hold strategy is true, but it also provides no information regarding the question of whether one can time the market in that regard. Somewhat like a strawman argument.

Table 2.1 is the data on the “missing days” conundrum. All data is updated through December 31, 2012. All calculations are based solely on price performance with no adjustment for dividends or inflation. It should be clear that if it were possible, missing the worst days each year would be the better strategy. This might be a stretch, but because missing both best and worst outperforms buy and hold, I think it shows that missing bad market days is more important. It also shows that missing days of high volatility are good. However, the purpose here is to challenge the marketing of buy and hold, which uses the “missing the best days” argument.

Remember, the message is clear and simple: The name of the game is to miss the bad days a lot more than missing the good days. This will play out as this book moves along. Note that most of the best days happen during bad or bear markets, usually tied to an overreaction to a short-term panic decline (you will see this in Table 3.1 ).

Diversification Will Protect You?

The world of finance is locked into the risk category of nonsystematic, or diversifiable, risk, and they do a really good job of it. However, diversifiable risk is a small piece of the big risk pie. There are many trite sayings about diversification, one being: “The only thing going up in a bear market is correlation.” During big bear markets, correlations move rapidly toward one. This also means that most asset classes fail significantly during severe bear markets. The correlations among them move toward one, which means they become more and more correlated. Correlation is one of the primary components of modern portfolio theory. Diversification is a helpful tool, but it should only be employed to the point where its costs equal its benefits. 

You can see in the two charts, Figures 2.3 and 2.4 , that, during up markets, most asset classes are uncorrelated and exhibit significantly different returns. However, in the second chart (Figure 2.4 ), during big bear markets, those same asset classes performed almost identically to each other, which challenges the need for diversification.

Table 2.1: Best and Worst Days

The old saying goes, “Diversification works until it doesn’t.” The asset classes used in these two charts are shown in Table 2.2.

Diversification Works, as you can see in Figure 2.3 over the period from 2000 to October 2007…

Figure 2.3: Diversification Works. Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com

….Until it doesn’t, as you can see in Figure 2.4 over the period from October 2007 to August 2009.

Figure 2.4: Diversification Does Not Work. Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com.  

Table 2.2: Components of the Diversification Charts (Figures 2.3 and 2.4)

Dollar-Cost Averaging

Dollar-cost averaging is simply the act of making like dollar investments on a periodic basis, say every month or every quarter. It is sold as a technique because they want you to believe that no one can outperform the market. There are many papers written on this subject, and I don’t want to dwell on it. Dollar-cost averaging is very dependent on when you start the process. If you start the process at the top of the market, just prior to a large bear market, you will be buying all the way down, and this process could last a couple of years. Your average purchase price would probably be somewhere in the middle of the decline. A quick study of equivalent returns would tell you that the following bull move would need to go considerably higher than just halfway back up for you to just break even. In addition, it is also critical as to what periodic day or week you choose to make the investment. Should you do it quarterly and invest on the first day of the first week of the quarter, or something else?

The bottom line is that this process is subjected to unknown market risk, which can work for you but can also work against you. However, I think dollar-cost averaging is probably better than buy and hold, and it is certainly better than doing nothing, which might also be the same as buy and hold. When I hear someone talk about dollar cost averaging, I usually assume it is because they don’t know what else to do. Anytime you can get someone to periodically contribute to an investment, you have accomplished something of value.

Table 2.3 is a really simple example of how it works using Apple (AAPL) stock from the year 2011, buying $500 of the stock on the first trading day of each month and determining the results on the day of the last purchase in December. You can see that, on the first trading day of December, you had accumulated 16.65 shares of Apple stock at an average price of $361.70 per share. The lump sum example assumes you bought all $6,000.00 on the first trading day at $329.57 per share, which gave you 18.21 shares.

Table 2.3: Dollar Cost Averaging

From this example, the lump sum investment came out ahead, but I think you can see it has a lot to do with the time period for the investment, the volatility of the share prices, and, actually, the day of the month that you make the purchase. Some of the advantages of DCA are the affordability factor and the convenience; it can be set up just like any monthly household budget item or expense, and also something many people need to keep the process alive. The disadvantages are that lump sum investing can give better returns but also worse returns, and the disadvantage is that you won’t know ahead of time. Also, when making numerous DCA investments, the fees are generally higher than lump sum. The bottom line is that it helps people make investments on a periodic basis, which is always going to be better than sitting on the sidelines because you don’t know what to do. Furthermore, dollar cost averaging becomes less effective as an investor ages because of less time for compounding, and free cash is usually a lower percentage of total investment goals.

Jason Zweig, in a Wall Street Journal article on May 26, 2009, spoke of Benjamin Graham’s comments on dollar cost averaging. Asked if dollar cost averaging could ensure long-term success, Mr. Graham wrote in 1962: “Such a policy will pay off ultimately, regardless of when it is begun, provided that it is adhered to conscientiously and courageously under all intervening conditions.” For that to be true, however, the dollar cost averaging investor must “be a different sort of person from the rest of us… not subject to the alternations of exhilaration and deep gloom that have accompanied the gyrations of the stock market for generations past.” “This,” Mr. Graham concluded, “I greatly doubt.”

He didn’t mean that no one can resist being swept up in the gyrating emotions of the crowd. He meant that few people can. To be an intelligent investor, you must cultivate what Mr. Graham called “firmness of character”—the ability to keep your own emotional counsel. (A102)

Compounding is the Eighth Wonder of the World

I think it was Albert Einstein who made the above comment, even though I found no proof that he did. The rest of the quote is: He who understands it, earns it, and he who doesn’t, pays it. I always remind folks that he forgot to include an adjective. Positive compounding is the eighth wonder of the world, which is usually associated with saving accounts and so on. Table 2.4 is a simple example of how one negative year can ruin your retirement plans. Notice that Investment Option B also started out with a phenomenal first-year return of +36 percent, compared to Option A’s return of only +10 percent. Another example of why chasing performance can be very harmful to your wealth.

The investment option B in Table 2.4 would require a return of 16 percent the following year to get back to the 8 percent per year average. Beware of negative returns; they can destroy your financial plans, especially as you lose time to recover the losses.

It is critical for long-term investment success to not track short-term market movements. Instead, one should only try to outperform the markets over the long term. Let’s assume that your investment goal is to maintain an annualized return of 10 percent over the next five years, as shown in Table 2.5. Here are the hypothetical market returns: +10 percent, +10 percent, +10 percent, -10 percent, +10 percent. Those returns look pretty good at first glance, even though one of them is negative. However, the impact on the actual investment return is quite different. 

Table 2.4 Compounding Example 1

Table 2.5: Compounding Example 2

The important point is that it only takes one drawdown over any one-year period to destroy compounded returns. In the above example, it would take a 33% return in year five to return the portfolio to an annualized 10 percent return. This is why most investors’ performance is far less than that of the actual market. Compounding is indeed the eighth wonder of the world, but it is only when the returns are positive.

Relative Performance

First of all, you cannot retire on relative performance. Relative performance is a marketing concept dreamed up by financial pundits who rarely outperform the market.

Figure 2.5 is a table of various asset classes and their relative performance. Keep in mind that each column (year) is totally independent of the other columns, and the asset classes at the top performed better than those at the bottom of each column. You do not know if they both lost money, both made money or if one made money and one didn’t. It is just simple relative performance. And guess what? You cannot retire on relative returns. Normally, this table is displayed in color, so the delineation between the squares is more apparent, but showing the actual data was not the purpose of introducing it at this point.

Figure 2.5: Callan Periodic Table of Relative Returns. Courtesy of Callan Associates.

Often, the Callan Periodic Table of Returns is shown to convince investors that chasing performance is a bad idea, as last year’s top performer probably won’t be the current year’s top performer. You can see that, sometimes, there is a string of consistent top performance; in fact, in Figure 2.5, Emerging Markets was the top performer from 2003 to 2007. If an investor caught onto that trend after a few years, it wouldn’t have been long before it failed miserably, and sadly, the investor, who probably thought they were genius, had been adding money each year and had no money management concepts or loss protection (stop loss) in place. Emerging markets fell to the worst performer in 2008 and have shown exceptional relative volatility since. If there was any real value in this, it is to learn and understand market history.

This is probably one of the most difficult obstacles to successful investing to overcome. It is human nature to want to be invested in the top-performing stocks, funds, or strategies. Yet you rarely know they are top-performing until after they have had a few good years of top performance. In the old days, many picked up the late January issue of Barron’s magazine, when they showed the performance for all mutual funds for the previous year. Just like the Callan Periodic Table in Figure 2.5 , when something is a top performer for a while, it, more often than not, does not remain so.

Style boxes are another dreadful source of performance chasing. A typical style box, created by Morningstar in 1992, is shown in Figure 2.6. This gives investors an orderly classification system for mutual funds, which is unbelievably popular and used extensively to sell mutual funds. Morningstar ranks mutual funds into a five-star scale, which forces a normal distribution because the top 10 percent get five stars, the bottom 10 percent get one star, the middle 35 percent get three stars, and the other two 22.5 percent groups get four and two stars. Research has shown that investors tend to put money into those with high ratings and withdraw money from those with low ratings, usually when they should be doing the opposite. (A55)

Figure 2.6: Morningstar Style Box

In fact, many fund managers are tied to a particular style and measured by how they performed relative to that style. Their benchmark is the style box they have been classified into. If the fund drifts from its designated style, the marketing pressure ensures adherence to the style box. I like to remind investors that when a manager who is tied to a benchmark (style) outperforms it, they call it alpha; however, when the manager underperforms, the benchmark they like to say is a tracking error.

Later in this book, you will see an investment strategy that does not pay any attention to styles or style boxes; however, I can show you a modified style box for a trend-following strategy in Figure 2.7. A trend follower is only concerned about uptrends and downtrends. If you feel that you must involve a style box approach, I recommend the one in Figure 2.7.

Figure 2.7: Trend Followers Style Box

With all that is arguably wrong with financial theory, the next chapter will delve into some mathematical anomalies with using simple “bell curve” statistics, which are based on assumptions about the market that just do not play well and, in fact, are simply erroneous.

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Think Really Hard About Who You Want On Your Team

I’m going to start this article a bit different than all the others I’ve written here at StockCharts.com and talk off topic for a paragraph or two.

I grew up in Maryland, quite close to Washington, DC, and was an avid Washington Redskins and Baltimore Orioles fan. I look back now and feel very fortunate that I was able to follow two sports teams that enjoyed decades of success, though both organizations faltered for many years to follow under less-than-desirable ownership. But during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, these two sports organizations won several championships and constantly competed for more. It started with the owners and the culture they built. They hired the right people to build from the ground up and eventually hired two “on-the field generals” that the entire community could embrace. I know I’m a “homer”, but Earl Weaver (Baltimore Orioles Manager from 1968-1982 and also one other year – 1985) and Joe Gibbs (Washington Redskins Head Coach from 1981-1992 and 2004-2007) were two leaders that I immediately respected. I admired Earl Weaver as one of the pioneers of using analytics in his decision-making and he influenced my career as I’ve become quite the stock market historian over the years. Weaver platooned outfielders, depending on pitching matchups, and was one of the first managers to use late inning relief pitchers to seal victories. I’m a “numbers guy” and always have been and I use similar “historical matchups” in the stock market. The use of analytics just makes perfect sense to me.

Joe Gibbs, to this day, is one of my favorite human beings ever. He’s a man of high character, integrity, faith, and family. He is unquestionably a leader, as evidenced by his NFL coaching career, and later, his NASCAR career. He’s simply a winner. His players would run through brick walls for him. He had conviction and he was innovative. Do you know who started the “one-back” set? Counter trey? During his first year as head coach of the Redskins, he started 0-5 before finishing the season on an 8-3 run. The next season, he won his first Super Bowl. He became the only NFL coach in history to win 3 Super Bowls with 3 different starting quarterbacks. Conviction and innovation matter.

These two sports teams and these two coaches, in particular, were of great inspiration to me. They were perfect examples of how to gain an edge on your competition and how you do things the right way.

When I had the opportunity to join the StockCharts.com “team” nearly two decades ago after ending my public accounting career and founding EarningsBeats.com (formerly Invested Central), I jumped at it. Partnering with StockCharts just felt right and we’ve never looked back. While StockCharts.com offers a great trading & tools platform at various price points, they also place a huge emphasis on research and education, two of our three pillars at EarningsBeats.com. I am mostly a self-taught technician as I like to do my own independent research. But I’ve always been a fan of John Murphy’s work and books. Since John was part of the StockCharts team, this was a perfect match for me and EarningsBeats. From its very beginning, StockCharts has boasted a top-notch ChartSchool, providing FREE education, which I use myself from time to time. I’d encourage you to use it, if you haven’t already. There’s a wealth of information and education for both traders and investors. To some degree, EarningsBeats.com has a similar approach. While we charge for much of our market guidance, research, and education, we also provide plenty of FREE information to investors and traders seeking a better and more secure financial future. My Trading Places blog right here at StockCharts is a perfect example, as are my YouTube shows. We also have a FREE EB Digest at EarningsBeats where I produce an educational chart (and two paragraphs) 3x per week. Be sure to subscribe to that with your name and email address if you haven’t already.

In putting YOUR team, that YOU trust, together, I’d encourage you to start with StockCharts.com. I have worked with many of the contributors here at StockCharts and know many of them personally as well. Collectively, it’s a group with high character and integrity with education as a top priority. They provide a TON of free content and you should take advantage of it. Find those that you trust and employ similar strategies to your own, and build the rest of your team from there. In my mind, that’s where a team should start – those who provide education and do their own independent research. That also means IGNORING those that have an agenda, which I’d estimate is roughly 90% of the folks you’ll see on CNBC. We’ve had three (3!!!!!!!!) market crashes in my lifetime, which now spans more than six decades. How can you explain CNBC parading the same group of people across their channel that continue to provide HORRIBLE forecasts year in and year out? There are those that constantly spew a “CRASH” is coming. During my lifetime, the odds of one occurring is about 1 in 20 years. There’s definitely a core cast of “influencers” on CNBC and who knows what their agenda is. I just TURN IT OFF. It is so easy to be swayed when you hear over and over again how awful the economy is. How the debt level is out of control. How higher interest rates will crush the economy. (By the way, now I’m hearing from some folks how the Fed turning dovish is bearish for stocks, too!) You can’t make this stuff up. I’ve “learned” that when the market goes up and breadth is poor, it’s a signal that there’s little participation and we shouldn’t trust the advance. But when breadth is strong, it’s an extreme that marks a top. In other words, SELL if you ever look at breadth, no matter what it shows. Also, if you haven’t heard, a massive recession is coming. That helps to explain why money has been rotating heavily towards consumer discretionary (XLY) vs. consumer staples (XLP) and is currently at a 2023 high – I’m fluent in sarcasm, by the way:

Through all of my years of learning and research, the one chart that I love, perhaps more than any other, is the XLY:XLP ratio. It just makes perfect common sense, right? If our GDP is two-thirds consumer spending and the stock market is the best leading economic indicator, then wouldn’t following a ratio between the offensive consumer discretionary sector (which would presumably do much better in a strong or strengthening economy) and the defensive consumer staples sector just make absolute perfect sense. Look at the correlation coefficient between the S&P 500 and the XLY:XLP ratio in the bottom panel of the chart above. Strong positive correlation is represented by readings > +0.50 and strong inverse correlation is represented by readings < -0.50. This isn’t an opinion of mine. This is an absolute FACT and you can see it clearly on the chart. The XLY:XLP ratio can help us determine if we should expect a current trend in the S&P 500 to continue. It’s my favorite “sustainability” ratio. So when I hear analysts, or anyone for that matter, talk about an impending recession in 2024, I have to disagree. Sorry, not sorry. It helps me ignore all the worries on CNBC and have CONVICTION in my own beliefs.

Conviction matters.

On Monday, December 18th, at 4:30pm ET, I’ll be hosting an event, “The Stock Market & Interest Rates: What History Tells Us.” This is a chance to finish off 2023 by gaining more knowledge about the relationship between the direction of interest rates and the direction of U.S. stock prices. It’ll be one of the many key factors in 2024 stock market performance, so it’s a topic that everyone should understand now. This is a Members-Only event, but a 30-day FREE trial gets you a seat to the event and an opportunity to kick the tires of EarningsBeats.com.

For more information and to start your FREE 30-day trial, CLICK HERE. (Be sure to scroll to the bottom of the form for sign up)

Happy trading!

Tom

Tom Bowley

About the author:
Tom Bowley is the Chief Market Strategist of EarningsBeats.com, a company providing a research and educational platform for both investment professionals and individual investors. Tom writes a comprehensive Daily Market Report (DMR), providing guidance to EB.com members every day that the stock market is open. Tom has contributed technical expertise here at StockCharts.com since 2006 and has a fundamental background in public accounting as well, blending a unique skill set to approach the U.S. stock market.

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