Barron\'s - 02.09.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

September 2, 2019 BARRON’S M13


Market View


A Sampling of Advisory Opinion


Crude Oil’s 10-Year Message


Chart in Focus


by McLellan Financial Publications


mcoscillator.com


Aug. 30: We currently have trade wars,


presidential tweets, inversions in the yield


curve, slowing earnings growth, decreasing


corporate share buybacks, and all manner of


other problems affecting the stock market.


And yet the long-term message from crude


oil prices says that the stock market ought


to continue trending upward into 2021.


It is a fun attribute of crude oil prices


that their movements give us a 10-year


leading indication of what lies ahead for


the stock market. I discovered this phe-


nomenon a few years ago when taking a


long-term look at crude oil prices on their


own. I happened to notice that the long-


term pattern of crude oil prices looked an


awful lot like that of the DJIA. So I put


them on a chart together, and the result


was less than satisfying. Sometimes they


moved together, sometimes opposite, and


sometimes there was no correlation at all.


It was only after I realized that crude


oil’s movements were getting repeated in


the DJIA with a delay that the clouds


opened up and the sun shone in. After


some tinkering, I discovered that the lag


time was approximately 10 years...Crude


oil prices reached a peak in April 2011.


Looking 10 years forward, that implies a


peak for stock prices in April 2021.


—TOMMCCLELLAN,


Commodities and Bonds


Market Commentary


by Cresset


cressetcapital.com


Aug. 28: Global interest rates are plunging


as investors brace for a worldwide slow-


down. Over the past month, the yield on


the benchmark 10-year Treasury note slid


0.6% to 1.46%, with most of the drop oc-


curring over the past three weeks. This


morning, the U.S. 30-year Treasury bond


yield dipped below 2% for the first time


ever. As we have pointed out in the past,


more than $14 trillion of bonds worldwide


carry negative yields: The French, Ger-


man, and Japanese 10-year notes all offer


negative yields, while the Swiss 10-year


note currently trades at a negative 1.1%.


We believe U.S. interest rates have


fallen too far, too fast relative to actual eco-


nomic conditions. One of the most reliable


indicators of global growth comes not from


the bond market but from the commodity


pits: the relationship between the prices of


copper and gold. Copper is a real-time ba-


rometer of economic activity because it is


an industrial commodity used in construc-


tion (43% of total use), electrical and elec-


tronics products (19%), transportation


equipment (19%), consumer products (12%),


and machinery (7%). Gold, by contrast, has


limited industrial uses and is instead simply


a safe-haven store of value.


Statistically speaking, the variation in


the gold/copper relationship since the end


of Q1/19 explains nearly 97% of the varia-


tion in the benchmark Treasury yield.


That regression implies the 10-year Trea-


sury yield should be 1.6%, not the current


1.46%. While 0.14% doesn’t sound signifi-


cant, it in fact represents a 1.2% price de-


cline in the underlying note.


We maintain our view that the U.S. is


not on the brink of recession. We will con-


tinue to monitor the copper/gold pair for


clues to relative interest rates and the


health of the economy.


—JACKABLIN


Post–Labor Day Playbook


Market Commentary


by Cumberland Advisors


cumber.com


Aug. 28: We enter the post-Labor Day pe-


riod with caution about the policy outlook


in the U.S. and elsewhere. Bonds are in a


barbell and avoiding a ladder...Stock ac-


counts are rebalancing and deploying cash


reserves. Market corrections have allowed


for repricing and entry. Fear is providing


those entry opportunities. Quantitative ac-


counts have been defensive for months;


they are now redeploying as indicators


confirm opportunity and market-based


prices indicate entry. When the inflation-


adjusted interest rate is zero or lower,


money’s usage is free. This is bullish for


many asset prices.


—DAVIDR.KOTOK


Small Caps’ “Death Cross”


Market Commentary


by Gorilla Trades


gorillatrades.com


Aug. 27: The Russell 2000, the main small-


cap benchmark, made headlines yet again


today, closing at its lowest level since Jan-


uary, confirming its relative weakness.


While technicals are not clearly bearish


yet regarding the index, it is well below


both its 50- and 200-day moving averages,


and on another negative note, its short-


term moving average could soon cross be-


low its long-term indicator, as well. The


“death cross” would point to a long-term


trend change, which would cast a shadow


on the ongoing bull market in stocks.


—KENBERMAN


Hedge Fund Lemmings


Commentary


by Stillwater Capital


stillcap.com


Aug. 26: Our standing position is to write


both the good and the bad about hedge


funds. Finding the former is very hard


these days; the latter is a different story.


As they say in the news business, “if it


bleeds, it leads.” This [past] week, the


bleeding was of assets...it looks like 2019


will be even worse for hedge funds that


should be doing well in this environment.


If Bloomberg has the numbers right, and


we have no reason to believe they aren’t,


redemptions from hedge funds are already


up 50% from last year. And by last year


they mean all of last year; right now. we


are only in August.


One of the reasons why the shine is


fading is that managers tend to act like


lemmings, piling into the same trade, often


at the same wrong moment. Goldman


Sachs is finding that health care is the


current Belle of the Ball as the sector has


some of the best earnings growth in the


market and is somewhat insulated from a


global trade slowdown.


In a shock to few, the largest two hold-


ings currently found among hedge fund man-


agers are Amazon.com and Facebook. We


are long the one that has become the domi-


nant global leader in e-commerce and busi-


ness services hosting, while at the same time


short what we consider to be a threat to the


privacy and mental health of many, a fact


that is not lost on the federal government.


—BRYANGOLIGOSKI


Tariffs, Trade, and Tweets


The Weekly Technical Review


by Macro Tides


macrotides.com


Aug. 26: Actions speak louder than words,


or tweets for that matter. When the trade


negotiations were headed toward a positive


resolution between November 2018 and


late April, China allowed the yuan to ap-


preciate 3.9% against the dollar. The path


of the Chinese yuan since late April sug-


gests that China is using the continuing


depreciation of the yuan as part of the


trade war. In late April the yuan was trad-


ing at 6.69 to the dollar but fell to 7.09 on


Aug. 23. Today the yuan was trading at


7.15 to the dollar or -6.9% lower than be-


fore the trade war escalated in early May.


If China was reaching out to the U.S. over


[the past] weekend, as stated by President


TIC [Tweeter in Chief], the yuan probably


wouldn’t have dropped another -0.85% ver-


sus the dollar today.


—JIMWELSH


To be considered for this section, material,


with the author’s name and address, should


be sent to [email protected].


”In a shock to few, the largest two holdings currently found among hedge fund managers are


Amazon.com and Facebook.” —BRYANGOLIGOSKI,STILLWATERCAPITAL

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