I wanted to take this opportunity to wish you and your
families a very very Merry Christmas and share my hopes for a very prosperous
and safe New Year for you and your loved ones.
Over the past couple of weeks, I have discussed why was positioning
portfolios to participate in the traditional year-end “window dressing” “BS”
rally. The Stock Trader’s Almanac explored why end-of-year trading has a
directional tendency. The Santa Claus indicator is pretty simple. It looks at
market performance over a seven-day trading period the last five trading days of
the current trading year and the first two trading days of the New Year and
unfortunately for the Bad-News-Bears, the statistics are compelling. The stock
market has risen 1.3% on average during the 7 trading days in question since 1950.
Over the 7 trading days in question, stock prices have historically risen 76%
of the time, which is far more than the average performance over a 7-day
period.
Whether optimism over a looming new year, holiday spending,
traders on vacation, institutions squaring up their books before the holidays
(funds marking them up) or just the holiday spirit the bottom line is that
bulls tend to believe in Santa Claus and bears believe Santa is delivering coal
😊!
Please remember (please put those
thought hats on) remember that at the beginning of 2020 the indexes posted a
negative January effect/return following an incredible rally in 2019. More
like 2013, the market’s extension was extreme with a near-record number of stocks
above their 200dsma. The market needed to correct before continuing its advance
to all-time highs in February. January 2021 has a lot of similarities to both
2013 and 2019. With the FED continuing QE and a near-record number of stocks
above their 200dsma, and an extreme bullish bias, the risk of a correction looms
heavy. A King-Trump government shutdown, stalled stimulus bill, or a surge in
virus deaths could be the catalysts.
As I have spoken about much of the equity rally this year
has been supported by the decline in the USD. Currently, foreign inflows into
U.S. equities are near a record, along with net-short
positioning on our precious greenback.
Such is the perfect stealth type of environment for a sharp reversal in the
dollar from deeply oversold conditions. Notably, over the past few days, we
have seen a slight positive turn in the dollar. While still too early to
definitively say a turn has occurred, this is something to watch very closely.
While I expect the “Santa Claus” rally to materialize
over the next few trading days, there are risks heading into January. As there
are occasions when investors have received a “lump of coal.” With
current market dynamics more similar to 2013 and 2019, this may be a year
investor wind up on the “naughty boy/girl” list.
I have shared data showing the more extreme overvalued
conditions in the market. As quite often sentiment and valuation go
hand-in-hand. One impacts the other and creates a self-reinforcing loop
until something happens to break the vicious cycle. Over the past 40+ years,
there have never been more severely overvalued firms within the SPX-500.
What is essential to understand is that excessive bullish
sentiment and overvaluation are the two required ingredients for a “bubble.”
Since stock market bubbles reflect speculation, greed, and emotional
biases; valuations are also a reflection of those emotions. It is not just
P/E’s showing elevated valuations but virtually every conceivable valuation
metric used in finance.
With the “Santa Claus” rally officially kicking off this
coming week, I am maintaining our long bias with reduced hedges at the
moment. Once we get into January, depending or a definitive answer on the
state of the stimulus bill, potential government shutdown, and market technical
levels, I will likely begin reducing risk and hedging portfolios with index
SHORTS and inverse leveraged funds accordingly. As hard evidence is mounting
quickly that the economy and earnings will likely disappoint very overly
optimistic projections currently. Ans I believe that investors, in general, are
way too far over-confident. Historically, such has always turned out to be a witch’s
brew for a continued bull market advance in the near-term.
Amazingly the SPX-500 has risen by just over 69% since hitting
its cesspool depth of despair on March 23rd and most of the strength
has come technology stocks like (the TFAANG+M,
semi-conductors, and stay at home massive overly bloated players) they have
driven the rally for months as consumers have been hunkered down due to the
pandemic.
No question, 2020 has been a horrific year for the health of
Americans during the Covid-19 crisis and the economic toll it has taken on
society. But for technology and so-called disruptor investors, it was sheer
bliss.
software stocks have gained on average 79%, in 2020, driven
by low interest rates, and massive tailwinds from the change in basic
assumptions about needing to work from home, and the lack of real decent alternatives
for growth investors. As a bonus, firms with rising subscription revenues
tightened their belts (layoffs) on expenses, helping margins. The Nasdog has
rallied 46%, year to date, almost triple the return on the SPX-500. Chip
stocks have vaulted 54%, cloud software stocks have gone parabolic returning 72%,
within technology, almost everything worked out sweetly (I just wish I had held
longer).
I hope that the bulls have thoroughly enjoyed the run in
2020) as 2021 will be a different outcome. As we have seen that interest rates
have begun crawl higher and growth stocks historically underperform when rates
rise. I believe the Covid-19 vaccines, in addition to reopening the economy, could
drive demand for commodities and add fuel to rising rates. There are certainly
areas of the global economy that have secular growth trends, and that will not
change. As we look to the continued adoption of cloud computing, the rollout of
5-G, and the battery electrification of vehicles.
But “valuations are extremely
rich,” especially for the kind of “herd-mentality” stocks that populate far-far
too many growth funds. The so-called great reopening trade premise could push
investors to leave technology for cheaper opportunities elsewhere.
The IPO market will likely grow as I noted last week,
2020 was the biggest year for IPOs since 2014, and that’s not including special
purpose acquisition companies, a suddenly extremely popular alternative manner
to go public.
According to Renaissance Capital, the average initial public
offering in 2020 returned 75%, the best performance since the late 1990s dot-com
bubble years. Renaissance counts another 71 firms that have selected bankers or
filed paperwork to go public.
And there are several potential
behemoths waiting in the wings: Renaissance sees post-IPO valuations north of
$50 billion for Flipkart the Indian e-commerce leader now owned by Walmart and
the payments company Stripe. Also, possible: IPOs for Instacart, the grocery
delivery company; stock-trading platform Robinhood; and Compass, the real-estate
brokerage firm.
Remember all these offerings will likely suck liquidity out of the
markets
Cloud-based software companies have fantastic, asset-light
business models, with predictable revenue streams, big growth, and gigantic
addressable markets. But the prices...folks are paying for these players are
NUTS! Morgan Stanley’s Weiss recently noted that enterprise value-to-sales
multiples for software stocks now stand 85% above their five-year average. Valuations
will contract in my opinion significantly (look at “ZM” as a recent example).
Open for business, or are
we Now, that vaccines are here, it is really time to consider
reopening bets. (INTU), (YELP), and (GRPN) should all
benefit as conditions normalize for small businesses. Expect gains at online
travel firms (BKNG) and (EXPE), which are both cheaper
than (ABNB) business, which was buoyed by the quarantine, could be a
burden in the recovery.
Some food for thought: Dell (DELL) seems likely to spin off its
controlling stake in (VMW) later this year. (IAC) has said it might spin
out Vimeo, its video tools firm, and do not be surprised if IAC also
distributes its huge stake in (ANGI).
No one can truly doubt that this market has been mostly fueled
by speculative buyers on a massive locoweed drunken tear, thanks to trillions
and trillions of stimulus monies and the FED’s near “0%” interest rates:
Despite the market’s parabolic rise, the moves we experienced throughout most
of 2020 often felt like a bubble of “free and easy free-flowing monies” that
has been happening for the past several decades!
As we are about to enter a New-Year it is time to start
looking ahead and figuring out what is the next leg of this highly manipulative
market journey will take us! In contrast to the dot-com bubble, the stocks that
moved the markets this year were churning out earnings at a decent clip and the
upstarts were close to or already profitable.
Investors shifted course at the beginning of November,
trading away from the Covid-19 helped darlings after the election results and
the announcement of positive clinical data for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.
The reopening stocks, including airlines, hotels, cruise
lines, traditional retail, and industrial firms, rallying in anticipation of
renewed activity in their operating environments (folks hoping and praying for
the economic light-switch to turned on). The other Players on a rampage are the
latest so-called technology disruptors, most of which have recently gone
public, including TTD, SNOW, PLTR, MDR, CRWD, QS, to name a few “primarily
software firms” that provide a unique way and/or system to store, sort and
utilize information, often for specific industries. One look at the near-parabolic
price charts of these illustrate how hot this chase and speculative type of market
has been.
I have previously written about the surge in retail
trading (Robin hood type), which has been a major force behind this phenomenon,
especially among younger folks for whom stock trading seems to serve as a
surrogate for unavailable leisure activities and sports gambling. Public.com,
a social-networking site, created for small dollar-dominated trading and
first-time traders were fostered so many could learn about stocks from each
other.
In terms of how extended some of these investor favorites
have become, I compared the number of stocks valued at over $10 billion that
trade for more than ten times revenues for 2021 and I found over 150 such
players; according to FactSet...there are 5-6 times more stocks in this over the extended category now than at the close of 2018. Some of this can be
explained by significantly depressed interest rates thanks to the FED’s intervention
and overt speculation and yearning to participate in the parabolic-rise to-the-right an incessant trend where all dips are bought is also a likely bullish factor. This
parabolic rise of the aforementioned technology names reminds me plenty of the
Greenspam dot-com bubble.
Please let us not forget that a high percentage of the
stocks rising parabolically into thin air on most traders apps will face new potential
entrants with new novel technologies, crowd appeal, and their luster will fade.