Sunday, October 18, 2009

Bartering for the Dow

The Dow Jones Industrial Average crossed the psychological threshold of 10,000 last week, before retreating slightly. Once again the Dow is in dollar terms at the level reached back in March 1999. On October 15, John Authers at the Financial Times, pointed out that priced in Euros or gold, the Dow has performed much more poorly. Moreover, it has drastically underperformed emerging markets, and other stock indices.

How has the Dow performed compared to oil? This chart compares the performance of the Dow in dollar terms to its performance when priced in barrels of oil from January 1999 to October 2009.


The price of the Dow in oil is measured by dividing the daily closing level by the daily spot price of oil (WTI). The first day of trading in January 1999, the Dow closed at 9,184 and spot price of oil was just over $12. October 16, 2009, the Dow closed at 9,995, or less than 10% higher than January 1999. In contrast, that same day oil closed at just over $78, 6.5 times the January 1999 price. Measured in oil, the Dow is down 81% since 1999.

Although we don’t literally call our stockbrokers in order to barter oil for stocks, it is important to consider the price movements of equities relative to other assets. In general, the value of equities has declined significantly relative to raw materials, oil being the most salient example. The weak dollar has been closely linked to the U.S. stock market rally, mainly since both reflect increased risk appetite (a weak dollar improves earnings for global companies as well). Yet a weak dollar also has been fueling a further surge in dollar priced commodities. A lot of oil producing countries are very concerned about the value of their dollar reserves. Furthermore, supply concerns will continue to make the world subject to oil price shocks. Whatever impacts animal spirits have on the near term stock market movements, there is little reason to believe that the value of U.S. based equities will perform well when compared to oil, or any other raw material.


Of course the Dow is a bit primitive as an index, especially when you consider that in it, companies are weighted by stock price, rather than market capitalization. Moreover, this analysis doesn’t include the reinvestment of dividends. Nonetheless, in price terms, it is clear that equities have underperformed oil. For a deep discussion of flaws in and alternatives to the Dow click here.



Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Aussie Aussie Aussie(Oi Oi Oi)

Hat tip to the Australian Central Bank for being the first in the G-20 to make a clear post crisis move away from currency debasement*. Indeed when Central Bank Governor Glenn Stevens boosted the Australian target overnight cash rate by 25 basis points to 3.25%, no one should have been particularly surprised. Yet the markets appeared to react strongly anyways. The Aussie dollar is up against the majors, and gold is way up.

The Australian economy is in a far better situation than the rest of the G-20. Inflation is a bigger problem than contraction. Compared to America, Australia didn't even really have a housing crisis. Australia has benefited from a strong trading relationship with China(Rio Tinto problems notwithstanding), booming exports to Asia and the world of coal, iron ore, alumina, meat and wool. Domestic water scarcity and environmental problems remain a major downside risk, but with population so sparse, this problem seems minor compared to the rest of the world.

The currency trends over the last couple months hints at the strength of the Australian economy, as well as the fact that the rate move was widely anticipated. This chart, highlighting the pound/aussie exchange rate, is ironic when you consider the fact that Australia started as a British penal colony:




We're all gold bugs now

Not quite. Gold reached$1,045 Tuesday, but anyone who got in too late and overleveraged will likely feel a bit of pain as profit taking drives a pull back during the Asian Wednesday morning. That being said, going short gold at anytime leaves one incredibly vulnerable to a low probability high impact tragedy that leads to widespread panic. Take the spike in gold post 9/11 for example. Moreover, even if China scales back on buying raw materials, the Federal Reserve's loose policies will in the long term ceteris paribus make expensive anything tangible that is priced in dollars, even without a global conspiracy to "ditch the dollar."



*Israel raised rates in August, but it is not a member of the G-20

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

国庆快乐!

下 周更新,欢迎关注

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

中国人吃鸡爪子,保护世界的贸易?

美国和中国最近有贸易的矛盾。美国总统提高中国轮胎 的关税,气死中国。 结果中国威胁说提高鸡爪子关税。 不过这个对中国人不好。很多很喜欢吃鸡爪子。所以,中国的政府有可能 不这样做,今天纽约时报说。可是中国大概高汽车的关税来报复。 这个可能帮助中国的汽车公司。

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

美国报纸的新闻

从这个星期之后,我每个星期把特别有意思的英文新闻,总结在这个博客. 欢迎您的评论.
  • 华尔街日报 开玩笑, 说中国财政部祝贺本伯南克。 中国财政部给伯南克的写信(其实华尔街日报写的)。 祝贺他, 因为美国总统再次统任命他。 感谢他保护中国房利美公司的投资(他甚至用美国人的钱保护中国政府的投资)。 不过也比较担心,害怕他的政策会导致通货膨胀. 中国毕竟在美国投资很多钱。 有的时候为了说明事情,开玩笑 就是最好的方法。
  • 这个星期美金下跌。 有可能世界的投资家认为美国没有以前的安全。 好像中国人最近买很多黄金




Monday, August 31, 2009

Two reasons why the August rally in US equities will end badly

1.) Corporate executives and directors sold about 30 times as much stock as they bought in August. Perhaps, they sold from a position of knowledge advantage. Meanwhile, sheepish mutual funds and retail investors gobbled up rising shares. Of course, these shares are typically part of compensation along with a salary, and executives sell them for cash needs, Yet, in a typical month the ratio is 7:1. Certainly, executive's personal cash needs don't explain the entire gap: they likely recognize the overbought conditions of their own companies. But the fact that corporate executives were scrambling for cash, (perhaps to cover mortgage debt?), still feeds into the second reason that the equity rally won't last.

2.)The fundamentals of the U.S. economy are still dreadfully weak.

In July Non-Farm Payrolls declined by 247,000. Consensus estimate among economists is for a loss of 222,000 in August, with data to be released this coming Friday. Non-Farm payrolls is highly subject to statistical aberration, given that it is released monthly, but the trend of job losses is clear. How are the unemployed going to fuel a rebound?

If Non-Farm payrolls surprises to the positive(i.e. less than 222,000 jobs lost in August), the rally could revive temporarily, but this will just make the pigs fatter for the slaughter. The talk of "positive second derivatives" is absurd, even if you have full faith in the statistics. The trajectory of the economy is not entirely linear. One a couple months of slightly less negative data does not make a recovery. As it is the economy will need to add a lot of jobs before consumers can get back on track to boosting the economy.

If non farm payrolls surprise to the negative, short sellers will have a heyday before the long weekend. In July, nearly 5 million U.S. citizens had been looking, but unable to find work for more than 27 weeks. As unemployment insurance runs out, they will be no help in the recovery.

For the speculators: Deep out of the money puts on the Dow and the S&P, or major other indices not just in the U.S. but globally. According to the Financial times, put/call ratios on the S&P have already spiked upwards, indicating a rising bear. Moreover, futures on the VIX, a measure of volatility, or investor fear, have also spiked.

For the highly risk adverse: don't listen when your advisers tell you to take the money out from under your mattress.