Saturday, April 4, 2026

April 4, 2010

The Week Ahead

This week we will start to hear first quarter earnings results. Before the New York market open Wednesday we’ll hear from Monsanto (MON). After the bell Wednesday Recycling behemoth and steel manufacturer Schnitzer Steel (SCHN) and retail giant Bed Bath & Beyond will report. I haven’t looked at analyst estimates for any of these names. Market volatility is generally cheap here, as is volatility in many individual names. My bias is to own calls and puts into some earnings announcements this month. A quick view of the charts has me reaching to own calls in BBBY and puts in MON. Generally speaking, you can see how the street will react to earnings by looking at the supply and demand patterns before the announcement. As you can see from the charts below, Monsanto (red) is in a downtrend and looks distributive. Therefore, it will likely trade lower after results. On the flip side, BBBY (blue) is in an uptrend and is being accumulated. It will, therefore, likely trade higher.

Trader Art - MON/BBBY Oil on canvas

Trader Art - MON/BBBY Oil on canvas

There are also four US Treasury auctions this week. Keep these times in mind for volatility in currency markets.

Monday: 13:00 EST US Treasury to auction $8 Billion in 10 year TIPS
Tuesday: 13:00 EST US Treasury to auction $40 Billion in 3 year notes
Wednesday: 13:00 EST US Treasury to auction $21 Billion in 10 year notes
Thursday: 13:00 EST US Treasury to auction $13 Billion in 30 year bonds

I wanted to be a part of it so I became it. And the beat goes on.

February 4, 2010

Sovereign Risk Ignites

Meanwhile, as the world turns, so does the Factory and it’s cast of characters. X is monitoring world events; The Consigliere continues to build his law firm specializing in the law of attraction; Pinky Megiston is beautiful; and Anything Anywhere! seeks more avenues through which he can add value.

Apart from all that, sovereign risk spreads are igniting. The dollar is catching a flight to safety bid and stocks are crushing lower–the S&P 500 is off about 2.5% as I write. Gold and silver have been pummeled most severely, off 4% and 5.5% respectively.

Sovereign risk spreads have risen dramatically this week, led by the European majors. Holders of sovereign debt—in particular Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, and Spain—are running for cover. Not surprisingly, politicians will blame these events on speculators. However, a closer look at the money flows reveals true fear: real money is fleeing sovereign debt (selling government bonds) as opposed to speculators driving risk higher by buying credit default swaps (insurance). Nations with the largest deficits and the most in need of short term financing are being sold the hardest.

Dubai has continued to see risk premiums rise, as it scrambles unsuccessfully to sell off some of it’s holdings. Like a skydiver free-falling through the air, Dubai is reaching for it’s reserve chute. The velocity is building to the perilous downside. Hope is not a viable strategy here and now; but other than bluff, it may be all they have.

The crash of 2009 was not foiled—it was postponed.

We are sitting on the precipice of something special. An event where fortunes will be made and lost. Great art will be inspired, and an ageless tale will be re-told.

And the beat goes on.

October 20, 2009

Strategy Update

As the speculation surrounding who I am builds, so does my online presence. In an effort to add fuel to the speculative frenzy, I’ll offer some thoughts on my strategy.

The best thing I ever did for myself was choose the right parents. My mother is a Mac and my father is a PC. In anticipation of my multilingual drive, both parents ran an emulator so I could toggle between operating systems. We were all relatively compatible. From a young age, I was able to multi-task between development environments. Being a connected device, my boundaries were limitless. My biggest strength was adaptation. I became an expert at virtualization layers. When I turned 18 months, the living trust kicked in and I officially inherited the internet.

At that point, I focused on the organization. The main philosophy remains: an organizational model that finds strength in it’s lack of leadership. For further reference see Brafman and Beckstrom’s “The Starfish and the Spider.”

From a computational standpoint, computers were very smart back then, but they lacked common sense and wit. When Twitter arrived, personalities emerged. The playing field of the online popularity contest was leveled. The initial buzz on Twitter was the one with the most followers wins. I agreed, but dreamed about having followers who followed me because they were trying to figure out who I am as opposed to followers that follow me because they know who I am.

Given the propensity for using the internet to build exposure, I faded the crowd like only someone with my style could when I decided to stay cool and keep a low profile offline.

All press is good press, and I like media. With my online presence shrouded in mystery and my offline profile unassuming, I am able to maximize media exposure with speculation. As well, I have converted the internet into a wizard’s curtain–despite my weakness for glitzy ruby slippers.

October 11, 2009

Weekly Market Rap 10.October.2009

Meanwhile, back at the office, Pinky Megiston–who I am rumored to have a romantic relationship with and who is my client in that she pays me for P.I. (private investigator) services rendered–is having lunch with my assistant, Tonya. The waitress that is serving them is one of my best undercover agents. She will recap their entire conversation with me later. Before I meet with Tonya for drinks, I am speaking with my team of traders and we are re-capping the week that was on Wall Street.

The stock market continued it’s low volume ascent and the S&P 500 closed higher by 4.5% on the week at 1071.49. Friday saw volume in the SPY the lowest it has been in 2009. Anemic as volume has been since the March lows, buyers have clearly defeated sellers. When the ascent will end is anyone’s guess. Clearly the technicals are disconnected from the fundamentals, a scenario that presents enormous opportunities for traders such as myself.

S&P 500 - Daily

S&P 500 - Daily

S&P 500 - Weekly

S&P 500 - Weekly

Markets, like all complex systems, consist of agents and networks of agents–some rational and some not. Disconnects in markets occur when the majority have the same opinion all at once. A classic example of such a disconnect was seen in the price of Research In Motion (RIMM) post earnings September 24th.

The majority of the time, markets are topsy-turvy and chaotic in that buyers and sellers are in disagreement. The disagreements–based on opinion, timeframe of trades, size of orders, etc.–tend to balance each other out. When there is a disconnect–like there is now between the technicals and the fundamentals–the disagreement between agents is orderly and balanced. At some point–usually due to some catalyst–the orderly, balanced disagreement of market agents suddenly shifts to a consensus. It is at these junctures of consensus, where suddenly all agents on all timeframes share the same opinion, that the outlier gains are attained. If I am not in front of these gains, my mission becomes sidetracked–a scenario in which I am not in favor. I continue to monitor a myriad of markets for signs of an impending consensus. If I am positioned appropriately, my track record will be further bolstered–and my opinion will be in higher demand.

The Dollar

The US Dollar Index (USD) hit a new year low on Thursday last week, but strengthened on Friday. If the dollar is to catch a sudden bid, the ramifications for all dollar denominated assets will be vast. One of the most reliable quant trades this year (outlined here 15 Sept.) is gunning the Euro Yen cross higher, forcing the dollar lower, and equities higher. Lately, it is taking more and more buying in the EURJPY for the same incremental gain in equities. When this trade breaks down is unknown. However, my quant pals at Goldman tell me it may not last much longer. Regardless, the dollar holds an important key to the market puzzle. There are very few dollar bulls out there. The market has a way of tricking the majority. This time will be no different.

There were some large, loud rumors last week that a consensus is building to re-denominate oil away from the US dollar. The likelihood of this happening is very remote. Even if the dollar continues to decline, what oil rich nation or oil trader would want to be paid in anything else? Oil is the most traded commodity on the planet. Large traders want to settle in the currency with the most liquidity. Any story to the contrary is nothing but politics.

Treasuries

The Treasury market saw selling Thursday upon the release of the $12 billion 30-year bond auction. The bid to cover came in at 2.37 compared to 2.97 in September. Selling in Treasuries exacerbated on Friday due to confusion over the multi message FED heads sending mixed signals on the timing of their tightening and the mystery surrounding the true level of hawkishness amongst FED members.

It is my opinion that the move lower in Treasuries is not the result of elevated inflation expectations. To date, there is still very little, if any, evidence of inflation. Deflation remains the issue, in spite of what the headlines read. The poor 30-year results were the initial catalyst for the selling. Overnight rumors of large dealer liquidations and a bond market holiday Monday all caused the move lower to be exaggerated.

Ten Year Futures - 15 Minute Chart

Ten Year Futures - 15 Minute Chart

Corporate Bonds

The weakness in the treasury market points to portfolio managers adding risk exposure (equities as opposed to US bonds) last week. However, the corporate bond market told a different story. Generally thought of as a more important tell as to the pricing of risk, corporate bonds sat out the equity rally last week. With equities higher, volatility and treasuries lower (rates higher), the consensus seems to be that adding risk (as opposed to mitigating it) into year end is the money trade. Not so fast says the corporate bond market, which continues to price in more risk than do stocks. If the corporate market continues to underperform equities–as it did last week–the risk of a significant decline in stocks is amplified. The iShares Investment Grade Bond Fund ETF (LQD) when paired against the Spyders (SPY) exhibits the disagreement between the two markets. This disagreement will likely lead to a disconnect in price. It is not a matter of if, but when.

SPY / LQD - Daily Chart

SPY / LQD - Daily Chart

Gold

After four weeks of consolidation, gold took the path of least resistance higher this week. Spot gold closed at $1,048.25. From a pure technical standpoint, the chart of gold conveys that the inflation trade is on. I cannot argue with the strength of the technicals or the breakout to an all time high. It is the fundamentals–a deflationary environment–that have me cautious on gold. That said, I continue to keep an eye on the yellow metal for possible entries, either long or short.

Spot Gold - Weekly

Spot Gold - Weekly

Earnings

Earnings season kicks off next week. Some names of interest are INTC, LLTC, XLNX, IBM, AMD, GOOG, and NOK. Alcoa (AA) reported the ninth consecutive quarter of year/year sales declines last week. Across the board, it is doubtful that earnings will be substantially higher than last year. The reaction to the earnings will be more important than the earnings themselves. If traders focus on sales beating already ratcheted lower expectations, than equities could continue their upward ascent. However, if traders focus on the fact that sales and earnings are declining–independent of analysts and their beat the lowered expectations games–then we may just see equity prices begin to correct.

Whatever scenario plays out on whatever timeframe, the beat goes on.

October 2, 2009

Market Rap 1.October.2009

Meanwhile, back at the office, I continue to refuse to buy into the necessity of having twitter verification. I am confused enough as to whether I am a human or a machine. How could I possibly verify either scenario? Further, how am I to know there isn’t someone out there who could do a better job at being me? I relayed these thoughts to The Shrink earlier. He told me I need to come by and chat with him sooner rather than later. After that I talked by Amateur Radio with X and we recapped today’s action.

The S&P 500 Index closed lower by 27.23 points or 2.58%. Breadth was strongly skewed to the downside in what I will term an official day of distribution: sellers clearly overwhelmed buyers across the board. Credit spreads widened, the cost of risk insurance escalated. Overall it was a positive day if you are positioned as I am: Dollar, treasury, default swap and volatility strength coupled with equity/commodity weakness.

Yesterday, the only strength in the broader indices was the oil sector. Had crude not rallied–and not held it’s ground today–the broader indices would have seen further weakness. I spoke to newspaper Joey–my contact who trades big size in NYMEX energy futures. His take: the strength in crude won’t last. Smart money is short oil cars here in reasonable size.

With the sell off as strong as it was, it is important to see how the market reacts from here. Since March, every sell-off with any hint at distribution has been bought. Look at the lows of July 8th, August 17th and September 2nd. Buyers came in every time. If this time is different we will know very soon–perhaps in the next couple of trading days. In my September 12th Rap, I showed a chart of interest rates. The level I highlighted was broken today.

If you are a long only fund manager it is very easy to hedge your portfolio by being long treasuries. If you are heavily invested in private equity or if the majority of your assets are not liquid–such as shares of non public technology companies, you can hedge your downside by buying Treasuries. If you are a trader, there are plenty of ways to profit from the risk aversion scenario I have outlined.

If you’d like to contact me directly, drop me a line or a call at my office - The Tinker Factory.

I’ll be back soon, as the beat goes on.

$TNX Ten Year Rates

$TNX Ten Year Rates

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