Situation: When I started investing, I picked up the phrase “stocks for widows and orphans.” Typically, Probate Court will assign fiduciary responsibility for investments made on behalf of a widow or orphan to lawyer. I later became acquainted with one of those and learned that she expected after-inflation returns from low-risk stocks to be well over 5%/yr. But she hadn’t fully considered transaction fees, taxes, or the need to balance stocks 50-50 with 10-yr US Treasury Notes (to hedge against what could be a catastrophic loss for a widow or orphan). And, few stocks make suitable long-term holdings in a portfolio that is supposed to be immune to gambling. Given that a stock broker’s main talent is to wisely supervise gambling, a broker is likely to welcome the prospect of building a portfolio of “boring” stocks that will have little turnover.
Many young but upwardly mobile “salary workers” face the same problem that lawyer is facing: how to invest wisely without gambling. I have 4 children who are trying to grapple with this problem; none have gained lasting satisfaction from consulting investment advisors. And, they don’t much like my advice, which is to research the problem and find their own solution, which is called DIY investing. But, they already have the most important asset: which is to be disinclined to gamble.
Starter Stocks, like those for widows and orphans, are usually (but not always) boring. Consumer Staples are most likely to be Starter Stocks, and Utilities are close behind. But then you’ll find that technology-related companies start to pop up from Health Care and Information Technology industries.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to screen out companies that are missing from either of the two key value indexes, which are the iShares Russell 1000 Value Index ETF -- IWD and the income-oriented variant of the Russell 1000 Index that was created as the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index but is marketed in the US as the Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF -- VYM. Companies that issue bonds having an S&P rating lower than A- are also excluded, as are companies that issue stocks having an S&P rating lower than B+/M. Stocks must have a 16+ year trading record, to allow quantitative analysis by the BMW Method.
Administration: Most of the strategies that are likely to give high returns from owning stocks in a bull market also carry a high risk of loss in a bear market. So, when the market falls 25% those stocks might fall 50%. That means a 100% gain would have to occur over ensuing years just to get back to where the stock was priced when the last bull market ended. Banking and Finance faculty at business schools teach that this strategy is the only legal way to beat the market. In other words, reversion to the mean growth rate is sacrosanct. One way for an investor to hedge against such volatility is to pick stocks that go up or down less than 75% as much as the S&P 500 Index. In other words, exclude stocks with a 3-yr Beta that is higher than 0.75. Another way is to pick stocks issued by very large companies, namely those found in the S&P 100 Index. To be included in that index, companies are required to have an active market in put and call options at the Chicago Board Options Exchange, which means that “price discovery” for the underlying stock is efficient and relatively well insulated from “momentum” investors who are trading on the basis of fleeting rumors or sentiment. The other advantage of very large companies is that they have multiple product lines, at least one of which is expected to produce an attractively priced product during a recession. Integrated oil companies, for example, maintain a fleet of refineries that would be paying less for their feedstock (oil) during a recession--thereby allowing the company to make a nice profit from selling gasoline at a lower price than the customer had been used to paying.
Bottom Line: The problem with screening for “Starter Stocks” is that you’ll pull up some that are broadly thought of as desirable. Both gamblers and non-gamblers will bid up such stocks but forget to sell them when shares become overpriced. Given that most Starter Stocks (see Table) are found in channels of the economy that are already saturated (i.e., companies can grow their revenues no faster than GDP grows), there is little reason to hold overpriced stocks in expectation that earnings will explode upward. For example, the stocks issued by all four of the Consumer Staples companies on our list (KO, PG, PEP, WMT) are overpriced (see Columns AB to AD in our Table). You’ll have to figure out when to buy (or sell) overpriced shares of such high-value stocks. A common strategy is to buy more shares when the price drops 5-10% below its usual range. This is called the buy the dip strategy.
The easiest (and probably best) way to be certain of buying shares when they’re bargain-priced is to do it automatically. Sign up for a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) that takes a fixed amount of money out of your checking account on a specific date each month to buy more shares. That strategy is called dollar-cost averaging, and is the strategy that Warren Buffett favors to build a position in stocks that are often overpriced.
How well do our 10 Starter Stocks (at Line 10 in the Table) perform vs. the underlying ETFs -- VYM and IWD (at Lines 19 and 20)? Answer: quite a bit better (see Columns E, F and K).
Risk Rating: 6 (where 10-yr US Treasuries = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into NEE, KO, PG, INTC, WMT and JNJ, and also own shares of PFE, DUK, SO and PEP.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
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Invest your funds carefully. Tune investments as markets change. Retire with confidence.
Showing posts with label bull market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bull market. Show all posts
Sunday, September 29
Sunday, March 31
Month 93 - Members of "The 2 and 8 Club" in the S&P 500 Index - Winter 2019 Update
Situation: Some investors are experienced enough to try beating the market, but few tools are available to help them. Business schools professors like to point out that it is a settled issue, with only two routes are available: A stock-picker can either seek information from a company insider (which is illegal) or assume more risk (buy high-beta stocks). The latter route can provide higher returns but those will eventually be eroded by the higher volatility in stock prices. In other words, risk-adjusted returns (at their best) will not beat an S&P 500 Index fund (e.g. VFINX) or ETF (e.g. SPY).
Mission: Develop an algorithm for investing in high-beta stocks. Use our Standard Spreadsheet for companies likely to have higher quality.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: We call the resulting algorithm “The 2 and 8 Club” because it focuses on companies that a) pay an above-market dividend and b) have grown that dividend at least 8%/yr over the most recent 5 year period. Quality criteria require that a company’s bonds carry an S&P rating of BBB+ or better, and that its common stock carry an S&P rating of B+/M or better. We also require 16 or more years of trading records on a public exchange, so that weekly prices can be analyzed by the “BMW Method”. We use the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) as our benchmark, given that it rarely has a dividend yield lower than 2% or a dividend growth rate lower than 8%. And, we use the US companies listed in the Financial Times Stock Exchange (FTSE) High Dividend Yield Index as our only source for stocks paying an above-market dividend. That index is based on the FTSE Russell 1000 Index. The Vanguard Group markets both a mutual fund (VHDYX) and an ETF (VYM) for the ~400 companies in the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index. The same companies are found on each list, and weighted by market capitalization and updated monthly.
Bottom Line: As expected, this algorithm beats the S&P 500 Index (see Columns C, F, K & W) at the expense of greater risk (see Columns D, I, J & M). Its utility lies in risk mitigation (see Columns R & S), where the cutoffs for S&P rankings make these companies above-average for the S&P 500 Index with respect to the risk of bankruptcy. Only 23 companies in the S&P 500 Index qualify for membership in “The 2 and 8 Club”, and only 5 of those are in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (JPM, TRV, CSCO, MMM, IBM). An additional 5 companies are found in the FTSE Russell 1000 Index but have insufficient market capitalization to be included in the S&P 500 Index (WSO, HUBB, SWX, EV, R; see COMPARISONS section in the Table).
Risk Rating: 7 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into JPM and NEE, and also own shares of TRV, MMM, BLK, IBM, R and CMI.
Caveat Emptor: This week’s blog is addressed to investors who a) have been investing in common stocks for more than 20 years, b) don’t use margin loans, and c) have more than $200,000 available for making such investments. Most investors are best served by maintaining a 50-50 balance between stocks and bonds, e.g. by investing in the total US stock and bond markets (VTI and BND at Lines 30 & 38 in the Table). That 50-50 investment has returned ~8%/yr over the past 10 years and ~5%/yr over the past 5 years. The same result can be found by investing in a balanced mutual fund where stocks and bonds are picked for you: The Vanguard Wellesley Income Fund (VWINX at Line 35 in the Table). Either way, you’re likely to have no more than 2 down years per decade: VWINX has had only 7 down years since 1970. NOTE: all of the stocks in VWINX are picked from the same FTSE High Dividend Yield Index that we use for “The 2 and Club”.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Mission: Develop an algorithm for investing in high-beta stocks. Use our Standard Spreadsheet for companies likely to have higher quality.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: We call the resulting algorithm “The 2 and 8 Club” because it focuses on companies that a) pay an above-market dividend and b) have grown that dividend at least 8%/yr over the most recent 5 year period. Quality criteria require that a company’s bonds carry an S&P rating of BBB+ or better, and that its common stock carry an S&P rating of B+/M or better. We also require 16 or more years of trading records on a public exchange, so that weekly prices can be analyzed by the “BMW Method”. We use the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) as our benchmark, given that it rarely has a dividend yield lower than 2% or a dividend growth rate lower than 8%. And, we use the US companies listed in the Financial Times Stock Exchange (FTSE) High Dividend Yield Index as our only source for stocks paying an above-market dividend. That index is based on the FTSE Russell 1000 Index. The Vanguard Group markets both a mutual fund (VHDYX) and an ETF (VYM) for the ~400 companies in the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index. The same companies are found on each list, and weighted by market capitalization and updated monthly.
Bottom Line: As expected, this algorithm beats the S&P 500 Index (see Columns C, F, K & W) at the expense of greater risk (see Columns D, I, J & M). Its utility lies in risk mitigation (see Columns R & S), where the cutoffs for S&P rankings make these companies above-average for the S&P 500 Index with respect to the risk of bankruptcy. Only 23 companies in the S&P 500 Index qualify for membership in “The 2 and 8 Club”, and only 5 of those are in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (JPM, TRV, CSCO, MMM, IBM). An additional 5 companies are found in the FTSE Russell 1000 Index but have insufficient market capitalization to be included in the S&P 500 Index (WSO, HUBB, SWX, EV, R; see COMPARISONS section in the Table).
Risk Rating: 7 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into JPM and NEE, and also own shares of TRV, MMM, BLK, IBM, R and CMI.
Caveat Emptor: This week’s blog is addressed to investors who a) have been investing in common stocks for more than 20 years, b) don’t use margin loans, and c) have more than $200,000 available for making such investments. Most investors are best served by maintaining a 50-50 balance between stocks and bonds, e.g. by investing in the total US stock and bond markets (VTI and BND at Lines 30 & 38 in the Table). That 50-50 investment has returned ~8%/yr over the past 10 years and ~5%/yr over the past 5 years. The same result can be found by investing in a balanced mutual fund where stocks and bonds are picked for you: The Vanguard Wellesley Income Fund (VWINX at Line 35 in the Table). Either way, you’re likely to have no more than 2 down years per decade: VWINX has had only 7 down years since 1970. NOTE: all of the stocks in VWINX are picked from the same FTSE High Dividend Yield Index that we use for “The 2 and Club”.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, February 24
Month 92 - Dow Jones Industrial Average - Winter 2019 Update
Situation: There have been 30 companies in the $7 Trillion “Dow” index since it was expanded from 20 companies on October 1, 1928. Since then 31 changes have been made. On average, a company is swapped out every 3 years. Turnover decisions are made by a committee directed by the Managing Editor of The Wall Street Journal. Dollar value is determined at the end of each trading day by adding the closing price/share for all 30 companies, and correcting that amount with a divisor that changes each time a company is removed & replaced. State Street Global Advisors (SPDR) markets an Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) for the Dow under the ticker DIA. To get “a feel for the market” before buying or selling a stock, investors around the world look to the Dow. They’re aided in that decision by Dow Theory, which uses movement of the Dow Jones Transportation Average to “confirm” movement in the Dow. If both march together to higher highs and higher lows, the primary trend in the market is said to be up if trading volumes are large. If the reverse is true, then the primary trend is said to down.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to analyze all 30 companies in the Dow.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: Many investors use a tried-and-true “system” called Dogs of the Dow (see Week 305), which calls for buying equal dollar-value amounts of stock in each of the 10 highest-yielding companies in the Dow on the first trading day of January and selling those on the last trading day of December. The idea is to have better total returns on your investment over a market cycle than you would from simply investing in DIA. The system works most years and over the long term. Why? Because a high dividend yield a) moderates any price decreases during Bear Markets and b) is such a large contributor to total returns.
Bottom Line: As a stock-picker, you need to keep up-to-date on Dow Theory and also know which high-yielding Dow stocks are among the 10 Dogs of the Dow. Dow Theory tells us that the stock market switched from being in a primary uptrend to being in a primary downtrend on December 20, 2018. The Dogs of the Dow for 2019 are the same as last year (see bold numbers in Column G of the Table), except that General Electric (GE) has been removed from the Dow and replaced by Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA), which doesn’t have a high enough dividend yield to be considered a Dog. Instead, General Electric’s place has been taken by JP Morgan Chase (JPM).
When picking stocks from the Dow Jones Industrial Average, be aware that the historically low interest rates we’ve seen over the past decade have led to excessive corporate borrowing. You’ll want to pay close attention to Columns N-S in the Table, where different consequences of corporate debt are addressed. Companies with items that are highlighted in red carry a greater risk of loss in the upcoming credit crunch than has been recognized in the price of their shares.
Risk Rating: 5 (where 10-Yr Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into NKE, MSFT, JPM, KO, INTC, JNJ and PG, and also own shares of MCD, TRV, CSCO, MMM, IBM, CAT, XOM and WMT.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to analyze all 30 companies in the Dow.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: Many investors use a tried-and-true “system” called Dogs of the Dow (see Week 305), which calls for buying equal dollar-value amounts of stock in each of the 10 highest-yielding companies in the Dow on the first trading day of January and selling those on the last trading day of December. The idea is to have better total returns on your investment over a market cycle than you would from simply investing in DIA. The system works most years and over the long term. Why? Because a high dividend yield a) moderates any price decreases during Bear Markets and b) is such a large contributor to total returns.
Bottom Line: As a stock-picker, you need to keep up-to-date on Dow Theory and also know which high-yielding Dow stocks are among the 10 Dogs of the Dow. Dow Theory tells us that the stock market switched from being in a primary uptrend to being in a primary downtrend on December 20, 2018. The Dogs of the Dow for 2019 are the same as last year (see bold numbers in Column G of the Table), except that General Electric (GE) has been removed from the Dow and replaced by Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA), which doesn’t have a high enough dividend yield to be considered a Dog. Instead, General Electric’s place has been taken by JP Morgan Chase (JPM).
When picking stocks from the Dow Jones Industrial Average, be aware that the historically low interest rates we’ve seen over the past decade have led to excessive corporate borrowing. You’ll want to pay close attention to Columns N-S in the Table, where different consequences of corporate debt are addressed. Companies with items that are highlighted in red carry a greater risk of loss in the upcoming credit crunch than has been recognized in the price of their shares.
Risk Rating: 5 (where 10-Yr Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into NKE, MSFT, JPM, KO, INTC, JNJ and PG, and also own shares of MCD, TRV, CSCO, MMM, IBM, CAT, XOM and WMT.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, December 30
Week 391 - Members of “The 2 and 8 Club” in the FTSE Russell 1000 Index
THIS IS THE LAST WEEKLY ISSUE. FUTURE ISSUES WILL APPEAR MONTHLY.
Situation: “The 2 and 8 Club” is based on the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index, which represents the ~400 companies in the FTSE Russell 1000 Index that reliably have a dividend yield higher than S&P 500 Index. Accordingly, a complete membership list for “The 2 and 8 Club” requires screening all ~400 companies in the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index periodically to capture new members and remove members that no longer qualify. This week’s blog is the first complete screen.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to analyze all members of “The 2 and 8 Club.”
Execution: see Table
Administration: The requirements for membership in “The 2 and 8 Club” are:
1) membership in the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index;
2) a 5-Yr dividend growth rate of at least 8%;
3) a 16+ year trading record that has been quantitatively analyzed by the BMW Method;
4) a BBB+ or better rating from S&P on the company’s bond issues;
5) a B+/M or better rating from S&P on the company’s common stock issues.
In addition, the company cannot become or remain a member if Book Value for the most recent quarter (mrq) is negative or Earnings per Share for the trailing 12 months (TTM) are negative. Finally, there has to be a reference index that is a barometer of current market conditions, i.e., has a dividend yield that fluctuates around 2% and a 5-Yr dividend growth rate that fluctuates around 8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) is that reference index. In the event that the 5-Yr dividend growth rate for that reference index moves down 50 basis points to 7.5% for example, we would use that cut-off point for membership instead of 8%.
Bottom Line: There are 40 current members. Only 9 are in “defensive” S&P Industries (Utilities, Consumer Staples, and Health Care). At the other end of the risk scale, there are 12 banks (or bank-like companies) and 5 Information Technology companies; 13 of the 40 have Balance Sheet issues that are cause for concern (see Columns N-P). While the rewards of “The 2 and 8 Club” are attractive (see Columns C, K, and W), such out-performance is not going to be seen in a rising interest rate environment (see Column F in the Table). Why? Because the high dividend payouts (see Column G in the Table) become less appealing to investors when compared to the high interest payouts of Treasury bonds).
NOTE: This week’s Table will be updated at the end of each quarter.
Risk Rating: 6 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into JPM, NEE and IBM, and also own shares of TRV, CSCO, BLK, MMM, CMI and R.
Caveat Emptor: If a capitalization-weighted Index of these 40 stocks were used to create a new ETF, it would be 5-10% more risky (see Columns D, I, J, and M in the Table) than an S&P 500 Index ETF like SPY. But the dividend yield and 5-Yr dividend growth rates would be ~50% higher, which means the investor’s money is being returned quite a bit more rapidly. That will have the effect of reducing opportunity cost.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Situation: “The 2 and 8 Club” is based on the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index, which represents the ~400 companies in the FTSE Russell 1000 Index that reliably have a dividend yield higher than S&P 500 Index. Accordingly, a complete membership list for “The 2 and 8 Club” requires screening all ~400 companies in the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index periodically to capture new members and remove members that no longer qualify. This week’s blog is the first complete screen.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to analyze all members of “The 2 and 8 Club.”
Execution: see Table
Administration: The requirements for membership in “The 2 and 8 Club” are:
1) membership in the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index;
2) a 5-Yr dividend growth rate of at least 8%;
3) a 16+ year trading record that has been quantitatively analyzed by the BMW Method;
4) a BBB+ or better rating from S&P on the company’s bond issues;
5) a B+/M or better rating from S&P on the company’s common stock issues.
In addition, the company cannot become or remain a member if Book Value for the most recent quarter (mrq) is negative or Earnings per Share for the trailing 12 months (TTM) are negative. Finally, there has to be a reference index that is a barometer of current market conditions, i.e., has a dividend yield that fluctuates around 2% and a 5-Yr dividend growth rate that fluctuates around 8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) is that reference index. In the event that the 5-Yr dividend growth rate for that reference index moves down 50 basis points to 7.5% for example, we would use that cut-off point for membership instead of 8%.
Bottom Line: There are 40 current members. Only 9 are in “defensive” S&P Industries (Utilities, Consumer Staples, and Health Care). At the other end of the risk scale, there are 12 banks (or bank-like companies) and 5 Information Technology companies; 13 of the 40 have Balance Sheet issues that are cause for concern (see Columns N-P). While the rewards of “The 2 and 8 Club” are attractive (see Columns C, K, and W), such out-performance is not going to be seen in a rising interest rate environment (see Column F in the Table). Why? Because the high dividend payouts (see Column G in the Table) become less appealing to investors when compared to the high interest payouts of Treasury bonds).
NOTE: This week’s Table will be updated at the end of each quarter.
Risk Rating: 6 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into JPM, NEE and IBM, and also own shares of TRV, CSCO, BLK, MMM, CMI and R.
Caveat Emptor: If a capitalization-weighted Index of these 40 stocks were used to create a new ETF, it would be 5-10% more risky (see Columns D, I, J, and M in the Table) than an S&P 500 Index ETF like SPY. But the dividend yield and 5-Yr dividend growth rates would be ~50% higher, which means the investor’s money is being returned quite a bit more rapidly. That will have the effect of reducing opportunity cost.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, December 9
Week 388 - Has The 4-Yr Commodities Bear Market Ended?
Situation: In Q2 of 2014, the trade-weighted index of 19 Futures Contracts for raw commodities peaked (DJCI; see Yahoo Finance), as did the SPDR Energy Select Sector ETF (XLE; see Yahoo Finance). Both hit bottom in early Q1 of 2016. That should have been the end of the Bear Market but prices have not risen much since then. On the plus side, both ETFs tested their early 2016 bottom in Q3 of 2017 and failed to reach it, suggesting that prices for both are in a new (albeit weak) uptrend.
Interestingly, the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD; see Yahoo Finance) has traced a similar track, peaking in Q1 of 2014, bottoming at the beginning of Q1 2016, and failing a test of that low point late in 2016. Other metrics also suggest that the Bear Market has ended. For example, recently posted earnings for Exxon Mobil (XOM) in Q3 of 2018 were robust enough to have reached a level last reached in Q3 of 2014.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to track key investment metrics for companies that buy and/or extract raw commodities for processing, transport those by using 18-wheel tractor-trailers or railroads, or manufacture the diesel powered and natural-gas powered heavy equipment tractors that are used to mine and harvest raw commodities. Confine attention to companies that have at least a BBB+ S&P rating on their bonds and at least a B+/M rating on their common stocks, as well as the 16+ year trading record on the NYSE that is needed for long-term quantitative analysis by the BMW Method.
Execution: see Table.
Bottom Line: Near-month futures prices for commodities have come down off a supercycle that blossomed in 1999, and are now back to approximately where they started. This represents a classic “reversion to the mean”, likely due to supply constraints growing out of the somewhat rapid buildout of China’s economy. We’re not at the end of a 4-Yr Bear Market. Instead, we’re in the long tail of a remarkably strong 2-decade commodities Bull Market. It is important to note that commodity production is changing away from fossil fuels. However, petroleum products still represent more than 30% of trade-weighted commodity production. Going forward, the composition of that production will shift toward environmentally cleaner transportation fuels. Gasoline and diesel will yield dominance to CNG (compressed natural gas) and hydrogen (sourced from natural gas). This will mirror the shift toward clean electrical energy that has replaced coal with natural gas during the build-out of wind and solar sources, along with the necessary enhancements to electricity storage and transmission.
Risk Rating: 8 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into CAT, XOM, R and UNP, and also own shares of NSC, BRK-B and CMI.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Interestingly, the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (GLD; see Yahoo Finance) has traced a similar track, peaking in Q1 of 2014, bottoming at the beginning of Q1 2016, and failing a test of that low point late in 2016. Other metrics also suggest that the Bear Market has ended. For example, recently posted earnings for Exxon Mobil (XOM) in Q3 of 2018 were robust enough to have reached a level last reached in Q3 of 2014.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to track key investment metrics for companies that buy and/or extract raw commodities for processing, transport those by using 18-wheel tractor-trailers or railroads, or manufacture the diesel powered and natural-gas powered heavy equipment tractors that are used to mine and harvest raw commodities. Confine attention to companies that have at least a BBB+ S&P rating on their bonds and at least a B+/M rating on their common stocks, as well as the 16+ year trading record on the NYSE that is needed for long-term quantitative analysis by the BMW Method.
Execution: see Table.
Bottom Line: Near-month futures prices for commodities have come down off a supercycle that blossomed in 1999, and are now back to approximately where they started. This represents a classic “reversion to the mean”, likely due to supply constraints growing out of the somewhat rapid buildout of China’s economy. We’re not at the end of a 4-Yr Bear Market. Instead, we’re in the long tail of a remarkably strong 2-decade commodities Bull Market. It is important to note that commodity production is changing away from fossil fuels. However, petroleum products still represent more than 30% of trade-weighted commodity production. Going forward, the composition of that production will shift toward environmentally cleaner transportation fuels. Gasoline and diesel will yield dominance to CNG (compressed natural gas) and hydrogen (sourced from natural gas). This will mirror the shift toward clean electrical energy that has replaced coal with natural gas during the build-out of wind and solar sources, along with the necessary enhancements to electricity storage and transmission.
Risk Rating: 8 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into CAT, XOM, R and UNP, and also own shares of NSC, BRK-B and CMI.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, November 4
Week 383 - Dow Theory: A Primary Uptrend Resumed on 9/20/2018
Situation: The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) fell 9% from the end of January to the end of March because of a developing trade war. The Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJTA) confirmed this move, suggesting that a new primary downtrend was developing. However, neither the DJIA nor the DJTA reached previous lows. By 9/20/2018, the DJIA reached a new high confirming the new high reached a month earlier by the DJTA. So, the decade-long primary uptrend had resumed after an 8-month hiccup. Why? Because trade war fears had abated.
Both the DJIA (DIA) and DJTA (ITY) have out-performed Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B) over the past 5 years, which is unusual. This leads stock-pickers to pay more attention to the stocks that are most heavily weighted in constructing those price-weighted indices.
Mission: Take a close look at the top 10 companies in each index by applying our Standard Spreadsheet.
Execution: see Table.
Bottom Line: Eleven of the 20 companies issue bonds that carry an S&P rating of A- or better, and 6 of those 11 carry an S&P stock rating of A-/M or better: Home Depot (HD), UnitedHealth (UNH), 3M (MMM), Boeing (BA), International Business Machines (IBM), and Union Pacific (UNP). In that group, only IBM has failed to outperform BRK-B over the past 5 and 10 year periods.
Risk Rating: 6 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
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Both the DJIA (DIA) and DJTA (ITY) have out-performed Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B) over the past 5 years, which is unusual. This leads stock-pickers to pay more attention to the stocks that are most heavily weighted in constructing those price-weighted indices.
Mission: Take a close look at the top 10 companies in each index by applying our Standard Spreadsheet.
Execution: see Table.
Bottom Line: Eleven of the 20 companies issue bonds that carry an S&P rating of A- or better, and 6 of those 11 carry an S&P stock rating of A-/M or better: Home Depot (HD), UnitedHealth (UNH), 3M (MMM), Boeing (BA), International Business Machines (IBM), and Union Pacific (UNP). In that group, only IBM has failed to outperform BRK-B over the past 5 and 10 year periods.
Risk Rating: 6 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, May 20
Week 359 - Gold Can Be Useful To Own When Markets Are In Turmoil
Situation: On April 2, 2018, a new downtrend began for the US stock market according to Dow Theory. This officially ends the Bull Market that began on March 9, 2009. Gold now becomes one of the go-to destinations for traders, along with other “safe haven” investments like Japanese Yen, Swiss Francs, US dollars, and US Treasury Bonds. When traders stop moving new money into stocks and instead resort to a safe haven, they often move some into SPDR Gold Shares (GLD at Line 15 in the Table).
Why has the US stock market embarked on a primary downtrend? Because the risk of a Trade War has increased. But it’s a perfect storm because the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the US Treasury has also put the US stock and bond markets at risk by steadily increasing short-term interest rates. Normally when the economy falters, bonds are a good alternative to stocks. The exception happens when the FOMC raises short-term interest rates to ward off inflation: Long-term rates also rise, giving their new investors an asset that is falling in value.
An option to buying gold bullion (GLD) is to buy stock in mining companies. Gold miners are emerging from difficult times, given that the 2014-2016 commodities crash caught them competing on the basis of growth in production, which they had funded with ever-increasing debt. Now they are paying down that debt and instead competing on the basis of free cash flow, in order to reward investors (i.e., buy back stock and increase dividends).
Mission: Run our Standard Spreadsheet to analyze gold-linked investments, as well as short-term bonds. Include manufacturers of mining equipment, and other enablers like railroads and banks.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: Some advisors suggest that gold should represent 3-5% of your retirement savings. However, gold has marked price volatility but remains at approximately the same price it had 30 years ago. If you plan to hold it long-term, you’d best think of it as one of your Rainy Day Fund holdings (see Week 291).
What actions are reasonable to take when Dow Theory declares that stocks are entering a new downtrend? Gold is one of the 5 places to consider routing new money instead of stocks, the others being US dollars, Japanese Yen, Swiss Francs, and US Treasury Bonds. We’ve shown that US Treasury Bonds are not a suitable choice in a rising interest rate environment. For US investors, that leaves gold and US dollars as safe haven investments. The most inflation-resistant way to invest in US dollars is to dollar-average into 2-Yr US Treasury Notes or Inflation-protected US Savings Bonds at no cost through the government website. But for traders who are willing to pay transaction costs, the 1-3 Year Treasury Note ETF (SHY at Line 15 in the Table) is more convenient.
How best to invest in gold? Let’s start with the old lesson about how to profit from gold mining, learned during the California gold rush of 1949: Gold miners don’t make much money but their enablers do. Those are the bankers who loan them money, and the owners of companies that provide them with equipment, consumables and transportation. Go to any open-pit gold mine and the first thing you’ll notice is the massive yellow-painted trucks carrying ore. Those are made by Caterpillar (CAT at Line 6 in the Table).
Now look at the top of the Table. The second company listed is Union Pacific (UNP). This highlights the fact that ores recovered at any mine have to be transported to smelters. The fourth company, Royal Gold (RGLD), is a Financial Services company. This highlights the fact that bankers can profit greatly from loaning money to gold miners, provided they do it in an unusual way, which is issuing loans that don’t have to be repaid in dollars but instead can be repaid by the grant of either a royalty or a specified fraction (“stream”) of gold produced over the lifetime of the mine. Royal Gold (GLD) prefers royalty contracts. The other two Financial Services companies that service gold miners prefer streaming contracts: Franco-Nevada (FNV) and Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM).
Bottom Line: SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) will be in demand until Dow Theory declares that the downtrend in US stocks has been reversed. 2-Yr US Treasury Notes (SHY) will be in demand until the FOMC stops raising short-term interest rates.
Risk Rating: 10 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into CAT, UNP and 2-Yr US Treasury Notes, and also own shares of WPM.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 20187 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Why has the US stock market embarked on a primary downtrend? Because the risk of a Trade War has increased. But it’s a perfect storm because the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the US Treasury has also put the US stock and bond markets at risk by steadily increasing short-term interest rates. Normally when the economy falters, bonds are a good alternative to stocks. The exception happens when the FOMC raises short-term interest rates to ward off inflation: Long-term rates also rise, giving their new investors an asset that is falling in value.
An option to buying gold bullion (GLD) is to buy stock in mining companies. Gold miners are emerging from difficult times, given that the 2014-2016 commodities crash caught them competing on the basis of growth in production, which they had funded with ever-increasing debt. Now they are paying down that debt and instead competing on the basis of free cash flow, in order to reward investors (i.e., buy back stock and increase dividends).
Mission: Run our Standard Spreadsheet to analyze gold-linked investments, as well as short-term bonds. Include manufacturers of mining equipment, and other enablers like railroads and banks.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: Some advisors suggest that gold should represent 3-5% of your retirement savings. However, gold has marked price volatility but remains at approximately the same price it had 30 years ago. If you plan to hold it long-term, you’d best think of it as one of your Rainy Day Fund holdings (see Week 291).
What actions are reasonable to take when Dow Theory declares that stocks are entering a new downtrend? Gold is one of the 5 places to consider routing new money instead of stocks, the others being US dollars, Japanese Yen, Swiss Francs, and US Treasury Bonds. We’ve shown that US Treasury Bonds are not a suitable choice in a rising interest rate environment. For US investors, that leaves gold and US dollars as safe haven investments. The most inflation-resistant way to invest in US dollars is to dollar-average into 2-Yr US Treasury Notes or Inflation-protected US Savings Bonds at no cost through the government website. But for traders who are willing to pay transaction costs, the 1-3 Year Treasury Note ETF (SHY at Line 15 in the Table) is more convenient.
How best to invest in gold? Let’s start with the old lesson about how to profit from gold mining, learned during the California gold rush of 1949: Gold miners don’t make much money but their enablers do. Those are the bankers who loan them money, and the owners of companies that provide them with equipment, consumables and transportation. Go to any open-pit gold mine and the first thing you’ll notice is the massive yellow-painted trucks carrying ore. Those are made by Caterpillar (CAT at Line 6 in the Table).
Now look at the top of the Table. The second company listed is Union Pacific (UNP). This highlights the fact that ores recovered at any mine have to be transported to smelters. The fourth company, Royal Gold (RGLD), is a Financial Services company. This highlights the fact that bankers can profit greatly from loaning money to gold miners, provided they do it in an unusual way, which is issuing loans that don’t have to be repaid in dollars but instead can be repaid by the grant of either a royalty or a specified fraction (“stream”) of gold produced over the lifetime of the mine. Royal Gold (GLD) prefers royalty contracts. The other two Financial Services companies that service gold miners prefer streaming contracts: Franco-Nevada (FNV) and Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM).
Bottom Line: SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) will be in demand until Dow Theory declares that the downtrend in US stocks has been reversed. 2-Yr US Treasury Notes (SHY) will be in demand until the FOMC stops raising short-term interest rates.
Risk Rating: 10 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into CAT, UNP and 2-Yr US Treasury Notes, and also own shares of WPM.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 20187 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, May 13
Week 358 - Hedge the Crash With Low-Beta Dividend Achievers
Situation: It’s really tough to own stocks when the market crumps. Yes, you can follow Warren Buffett’s advice and tough it out with dollar-cost averaging. His other main idea, which is to buy great businesses at a fair price, may be useful someday down the road. He hasn’t been able to find any in this overpriced market, and neither will you. But after the market crashes, you’ll both be glad you kept a hefty dollop of cash in reserve to serve that very purpose.
But what about hedging against the crash? That’s what hedge funds are supposed to do. Why can’t you and I do it? It’s not that simple. Hedging means that your portfolio pulls ahead in a Bear Market but lags on a Bull Market. Given that the market is historically up 3 years out of 4, you see the problem with hedging. But looking deeper, volatility is what you want to hedge against. You can do that year in and year out by adopting the “School Solution”: overweight low-beta stocks in your portfolio at all times.
By hedging against volatility, your portfolio won’t necessarily fall behind in a Bull Market. Having less volatility only means that your gains will be less than those for the S&P 500 Index in a Bull Market, AND your losses will be less in a Bear Market. It doesn’t mean you’ll underperform that Index long-term. Why? Because trending stocks become overbought in a Bull Market. But you’re underweighting those high-beta Financial Services and Information Technology stocks! Half of the market capitalization in the S&P 500 Index is currently in those two industries, vs. the long-term average of 30%. Owning high-beta stocks will make you richer faster, but you’ll have to do daily research so that you know when to BUY and when to SELL. My approach to those two industries is to dollar-average into Microsoft (MSFT), International Business Machines (IBM) and JP Morgan Chase (JPM). And keep dollar-averaging no matter what.
Mission: Run our Standard Spreadsheet to identify low-beta stocks of high quality:
1. S&P Bond Ratings of A- or better (Column T in the Table);
2. S&P Stock Ratings of B+/M or better (Column U in the Table);
3. 5-Yr Beta of less than 0.7 (Column I in the Table);
4. Lower statistical risk of loss than the S&P 500 Index (Column M in the Table);
5. Higher Finance Value than the S&P 500 Index (Column E in the Table)
6. Dividend Achiever status (Column AC in the Table).
Execution: see Table.
Bottom Line: Try not to be a momentum investor. The exciting stories that underlie every Bull Market create a crowded trade for stocks issued by Financial Services and Information Technology companies. To usefully deploy the cash that’s rolling into their coffers, those companies will try to innovate and deploy new services and equipment sooner than planned. Things will get messy, bordering on chaos. Parts of the “story” will collapse, or end in court. Current examples abound. So, we’re back to the Tortoise and Hare story because it will be trotted out at the end of every market cycle. Will you channel the Hare, or will you channel the Tortoise?
Risk Rating: 4 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into NEE, PEP and NKE, and also own shares of KO and JNJ.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
But what about hedging against the crash? That’s what hedge funds are supposed to do. Why can’t you and I do it? It’s not that simple. Hedging means that your portfolio pulls ahead in a Bear Market but lags on a Bull Market. Given that the market is historically up 3 years out of 4, you see the problem with hedging. But looking deeper, volatility is what you want to hedge against. You can do that year in and year out by adopting the “School Solution”: overweight low-beta stocks in your portfolio at all times.
By hedging against volatility, your portfolio won’t necessarily fall behind in a Bull Market. Having less volatility only means that your gains will be less than those for the S&P 500 Index in a Bull Market, AND your losses will be less in a Bear Market. It doesn’t mean you’ll underperform that Index long-term. Why? Because trending stocks become overbought in a Bull Market. But you’re underweighting those high-beta Financial Services and Information Technology stocks! Half of the market capitalization in the S&P 500 Index is currently in those two industries, vs. the long-term average of 30%. Owning high-beta stocks will make you richer faster, but you’ll have to do daily research so that you know when to BUY and when to SELL. My approach to those two industries is to dollar-average into Microsoft (MSFT), International Business Machines (IBM) and JP Morgan Chase (JPM). And keep dollar-averaging no matter what.
Mission: Run our Standard Spreadsheet to identify low-beta stocks of high quality:
1. S&P Bond Ratings of A- or better (Column T in the Table);
2. S&P Stock Ratings of B+/M or better (Column U in the Table);
3. 5-Yr Beta of less than 0.7 (Column I in the Table);
4. Lower statistical risk of loss than the S&P 500 Index (Column M in the Table);
5. Higher Finance Value than the S&P 500 Index (Column E in the Table)
6. Dividend Achiever status (Column AC in the Table).
Execution: see Table.
Bottom Line: Try not to be a momentum investor. The exciting stories that underlie every Bull Market create a crowded trade for stocks issued by Financial Services and Information Technology companies. To usefully deploy the cash that’s rolling into their coffers, those companies will try to innovate and deploy new services and equipment sooner than planned. Things will get messy, bordering on chaos. Parts of the “story” will collapse, or end in court. Current examples abound. So, we’re back to the Tortoise and Hare story because it will be trotted out at the end of every market cycle. Will you channel the Hare, or will you channel the Tortoise?
Risk Rating: 4 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into NEE, PEP and NKE, and also own shares of KO and JNJ.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, January 28
Week 343 - Raise Cash For The Crash
Situation: By now, you know that many are predicting that we are in the late stages of a bull market. Euphoria is the last stage, and in the present climate, one would expect that euphoria will begin happening as the new tax bill takes effect. Two or 3 years later, the stock market will over-correct to the downside and recession will likely soon follow. Now would be a good time for small investors to begin to protect themselves. One way to do that would be to “bulk up” on cash equivalents and Treasuries. The money you still have in equities will need to move in the direction of high-yielding Dividend Achiever type stocks.
Why should we start making these changes now? Because the yield curve is flattening (see Appendix below), which is the best indicator that Financial Services professionals have to predict a market crash.
Mission: Draw up a portfolio of stocks and bonds that will carry you through a market crash relatively unscathed.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: There are 4 ways to raise cash for a crash.
1) Have a Rainy Day Fund that covers 6 months of expenses and is inflation-protected. All of us resist maintaining this “Dead Money Account.” Why? Because it keeps taking money away from spending as our income increases. The trick is to make it painless by a) eliminating transaction costs, tax payments, and inflation risk, and b) paying into the Account automatically. Sounds great, but how? By going to the US Treasury website and directing that a transfer of $25+/mo be made from your checking account into an Inflation-Protected Savings Bond (ISB). Follow a First In/First Out (FIFO) policy when cashing-out your Rainy Day Fund, since you’ll lose an interest payment if you cash-out sooner than 5 years. Taxes are only due after you’ve drawn down the Account.
2) Increase your Cash-Equivalents Allocation: dollar-average into 2-Yr Treasury Notes. Normally, this allocation is whatever cash cushion you like to maintain in your Savings, Checking, and Brokerage Accounts. But now isn’t a normal time. You need to plus-up those cash holdings and build a “backstop.” Why? Because there’s a material risk that your household will soon be living on less income (that is, a reduction upwards of 5%/yr). The easiest way to build a temporary backstop is to go back into www.treasurydirect.com and invest $1000 every 2 months in a 2-Yr Treasury Note. After 2 years, you’re done. You’ve allocated $12,000 that will start paying $1000 into your Checking Account every 2 months. Meantime, you can track the value of this investment through the ticker SHY (iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF -- see Line 20 in the Table),
3) Reduce your Equity Allocation but retain Dividend Achievers with above-market yields. This week’s Table has suggestions that may assist you. Those stocks were chosen largely on the basis of a) high ratings from S&P, b) above-market yields, c) the likelihood of payouts continuing to increase in a recession, d) P/E ratios at or below market, and e) predicted losses in a bear market (see Column M in the Table) that are less than or equal to those predicted for the S&P 500 Index (at Line 20). When the crash hits, you will be tempted to sell these (your most crash-resistant stocks) because you’re afraid they’ll fall further. Don’t. Instead of reinvesting dividends, just have the dividend checks sent to your mailbox. If you aren’t a stock picker, simply invest in VYM (Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF at Line 17 in Table) and XLU (SPDR Utilities Select Sector ETF at Line 14).
4) Increase your Fixed-Income Allocation: dollar-average into 20+ Yr Treasury Bonds. In a Bear Market, you may need to raise cash by selling assets. You might want to sell assets that have temporarily spiked upward in value because stocks are crashing. Only one asset that will predictably do that for you: 20+ Year Treasury Bonds, which are already being bought up and flattening the yield curve (see Appendix below). These are the Treasuries you’ll be buying, and later turning around to sell. So, you’ll need to have a brokerage account that is fee-based (that is, you’re charged ~1% of Net Asset Value/yr in return for transaction costs being waived). Then dollar-average into TLT (iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF at Line 15 in the Table). Sell those when you think the stock market has bottomed, and spend the proceeds on stocks in that Fire Sale.
Bottom Line: To avoid sleepless nights and migraine headaches, pull in your horns now. Stop gambling (but restart after the market collapses). Build up your Rainy Day Fund, and invest in cash equivalents, high-yielding high-quality stocks, and long-term Treasuries. When the crash hits, people will tell you to stop buying stocks altogether. Why do they say that? Because nobody can say for sure how long the market will keep going down. But Walmart (WMT) and McDonald’s (MCD) will be booming, even while layoffs in the Industrial Sector continue to make headlines. The End of the World isn’t happening. Get over it. Read the Wall Street Journal. When the Bear looks to be getting tired, call your stock broker and buy.
Risk Rating: 4 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-cost average into NEE and TGT, and also own shares of PEP, PFE, HRL, and MO. I am executing on the 4 suggestions above for raising cash.
APPENDIX: The yield curve is Flattening. What does that jargon term mean? Savvy investors are moving money out of growth stocks and into Long-Term Treasuries, even while the Federal Reserve is raising Short-Term interest rates. It doesn’t make sense. Long-Term rates would typically move up in tandem with Short-Term rates, provided the economy is truly gaining strength.
You can follow that increase in Long-Term Treasury Bond prices (which move in the opposite direction of interest rates) by going to Yahoo Finance and entering TLT (for iShares 20+ Yr Treasury Bond ETF). Click on “chart” and select the 2 Year chart. Then on “indicator” and choose a 200-day moving average. That will show the steady upward movement in the price of those bonds—because buyers outnumber sellers. That results in a steady downward movement in the rate of interest being earned by new buyers, which flattens the yield curve.
There are several explanations why Long-Term interest rates might fall even as Short-Term rates are rising: “the likeliest...is the simplest: markets are losing confidence in the Fed’s ability to raise [Short-Term] rates without inflation sagging.” You might want to learn more about the falling yield curve, so read on.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Why should we start making these changes now? Because the yield curve is flattening (see Appendix below), which is the best indicator that Financial Services professionals have to predict a market crash.
Mission: Draw up a portfolio of stocks and bonds that will carry you through a market crash relatively unscathed.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: There are 4 ways to raise cash for a crash.
1) Have a Rainy Day Fund that covers 6 months of expenses and is inflation-protected. All of us resist maintaining this “Dead Money Account.” Why? Because it keeps taking money away from spending as our income increases. The trick is to make it painless by a) eliminating transaction costs, tax payments, and inflation risk, and b) paying into the Account automatically. Sounds great, but how? By going to the US Treasury website and directing that a transfer of $25+/mo be made from your checking account into an Inflation-Protected Savings Bond (ISB). Follow a First In/First Out (FIFO) policy when cashing-out your Rainy Day Fund, since you’ll lose an interest payment if you cash-out sooner than 5 years. Taxes are only due after you’ve drawn down the Account.
2) Increase your Cash-Equivalents Allocation: dollar-average into 2-Yr Treasury Notes. Normally, this allocation is whatever cash cushion you like to maintain in your Savings, Checking, and Brokerage Accounts. But now isn’t a normal time. You need to plus-up those cash holdings and build a “backstop.” Why? Because there’s a material risk that your household will soon be living on less income (that is, a reduction upwards of 5%/yr). The easiest way to build a temporary backstop is to go back into www.treasurydirect.com and invest $1000 every 2 months in a 2-Yr Treasury Note. After 2 years, you’re done. You’ve allocated $12,000 that will start paying $1000 into your Checking Account every 2 months. Meantime, you can track the value of this investment through the ticker SHY (iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF -- see Line 20 in the Table),
3) Reduce your Equity Allocation but retain Dividend Achievers with above-market yields. This week’s Table has suggestions that may assist you. Those stocks were chosen largely on the basis of a) high ratings from S&P, b) above-market yields, c) the likelihood of payouts continuing to increase in a recession, d) P/E ratios at or below market, and e) predicted losses in a bear market (see Column M in the Table) that are less than or equal to those predicted for the S&P 500 Index (at Line 20). When the crash hits, you will be tempted to sell these (your most crash-resistant stocks) because you’re afraid they’ll fall further. Don’t. Instead of reinvesting dividends, just have the dividend checks sent to your mailbox. If you aren’t a stock picker, simply invest in VYM (Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF at Line 17 in Table) and XLU (SPDR Utilities Select Sector ETF at Line 14).
4) Increase your Fixed-Income Allocation: dollar-average into 20+ Yr Treasury Bonds. In a Bear Market, you may need to raise cash by selling assets. You might want to sell assets that have temporarily spiked upward in value because stocks are crashing. Only one asset that will predictably do that for you: 20+ Year Treasury Bonds, which are already being bought up and flattening the yield curve (see Appendix below). These are the Treasuries you’ll be buying, and later turning around to sell. So, you’ll need to have a brokerage account that is fee-based (that is, you’re charged ~1% of Net Asset Value/yr in return for transaction costs being waived). Then dollar-average into TLT (iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF at Line 15 in the Table). Sell those when you think the stock market has bottomed, and spend the proceeds on stocks in that Fire Sale.
Bottom Line: To avoid sleepless nights and migraine headaches, pull in your horns now. Stop gambling (but restart after the market collapses). Build up your Rainy Day Fund, and invest in cash equivalents, high-yielding high-quality stocks, and long-term Treasuries. When the crash hits, people will tell you to stop buying stocks altogether. Why do they say that? Because nobody can say for sure how long the market will keep going down. But Walmart (WMT) and McDonald’s (MCD) will be booming, even while layoffs in the Industrial Sector continue to make headlines. The End of the World isn’t happening. Get over it. Read the Wall Street Journal. When the Bear looks to be getting tired, call your stock broker and buy.
Risk Rating: 4 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-cost average into NEE and TGT, and also own shares of PEP, PFE, HRL, and MO. I am executing on the 4 suggestions above for raising cash.
APPENDIX: The yield curve is Flattening. What does that jargon term mean? Savvy investors are moving money out of growth stocks and into Long-Term Treasuries, even while the Federal Reserve is raising Short-Term interest rates. It doesn’t make sense. Long-Term rates would typically move up in tandem with Short-Term rates, provided the economy is truly gaining strength.
You can follow that increase in Long-Term Treasury Bond prices (which move in the opposite direction of interest rates) by going to Yahoo Finance and entering TLT (for iShares 20+ Yr Treasury Bond ETF). Click on “chart” and select the 2 Year chart. Then on “indicator” and choose a 200-day moving average. That will show the steady upward movement in the price of those bonds—because buyers outnumber sellers. That results in a steady downward movement in the rate of interest being earned by new buyers, which flattens the yield curve.
There are several explanations why Long-Term interest rates might fall even as Short-Term rates are rising: “the likeliest...is the simplest: markets are losing confidence in the Fed’s ability to raise [Short-Term] rates without inflation sagging.” You might want to learn more about the falling yield curve, so read on.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, January 18
Week 185 - Transportation-related Companies with Good Credit
Situation: Dow Theory predicts that a bull market will continue if the primary trend is upward, i.e., both the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and the Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJTA) are making new highs. The idea is that the movement of goods to satisfy demand is every bit as important as producing the goods. As of this writing, the DJTA continues to “confirm” the bull market denoted by the DJIA’s current all-time highs. The problem is that very few companies in that important Transportation Average are investment-grade quality. Only 5 of the 20 companies have 1) a long-term S&P credit rating of BBB+ or better; 2) an S&P stock rating of B+/M or better; and 3) enough revenue to appear on the Barron’s 500 List of the largest public companies on the New York and Toronto Stock Exchanges.
Those 5 are:
CSX Railroad (CSX),
Norfolk Southern Railroad (NSC),
Union Pacific Railroad (UNP),
Expeditors International of Washington (EXPD), and
JB Hunt Transportation Services (JBHT),
We’ve come up with 9 more companies that meet all 3 requirements and derive much (but not all) of their revenue from transportation-related activities. Three of the 9 happen to be among the 30 companies on the DJIA list:
United Technologies (UTX),
Caterpillar (CAT), and
Boeing (BA).
The remaining 6 are:
Canadian National Railway (CNI),
Sysco (SYY),
Canadian Pacific Railway (CP),
PACCAR (PCAR),
Cummins (CMI), and
Honeywell (HON).
How does our newfangled list of these 14 companies help? For starters, the quality is there. You can invest in any of the stocks issued by those companies at any time, as long as you only invest a small and fixed amount over regular intervals (dollar-cost averaging). Second, fundamental information is readily available because all 14 appear on the Barron’s 500 List published annually (in May). There you can find the most recent year’s sales, and the cash-flow related ROIC (Return on Invested Capital) vs. its 3-yr average. Then you can see how those data rank each company and how that ranking compares to the previous year. Third, we show whether the company was a small loser or a big loser during the Lehman Panic (see Column D in all the Table), and whether the company’s long-term total return (Column C in the Table) mitigated that risk (see Column E in the Table). If the Finance Value in Column E beats our benchmark’s (VBINX), you’re likely to benefit from owning the company’s stock instead of shares in VBINX.
Bottom Line: These stocks are the pulse of the economy, meaning they're high-risk high-reward. Only 5 of the 14 are Dividend Achievers, and only one of those (NSC) has a Finance Value that beat’s our key benchmark, the Vanguard Balanced Index Fund (see Table). But there is one other reasonable approach to investing in this sector, and that is to gradually build a position in iShares Transportation Average (IYT), which is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the performance of stocks in the Dow Jones Transportation Average. When the earnings of transportation company stocks are growing at a nice clip, you can be confident that the economy is doing well. And vice versa. So own a few of these stocks and learn from their price movements. Then you won’t be mystified by the next lurch upward or downward in the stock market, and you won’t panic (sell) when others do. Except for the railroads (which are government-regulated to protect both customers and investors), the stocks in this week’s Table are not the “buy-and-hold” variety.
Risk Rating: 7
Full Disclosure: I own shares of CNI, UTX, and CMI.
NOTE: Metrics in the Table are current as of the Sunday of publication; metrics highlighted in red denote underperformance vs. our key benchmark (VBINX).
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Those 5 are:
CSX Railroad (CSX),
Norfolk Southern Railroad (NSC),
Union Pacific Railroad (UNP),
Expeditors International of Washington (EXPD), and
JB Hunt Transportation Services (JBHT),
We’ve come up with 9 more companies that meet all 3 requirements and derive much (but not all) of their revenue from transportation-related activities. Three of the 9 happen to be among the 30 companies on the DJIA list:
United Technologies (UTX),
Caterpillar (CAT), and
Boeing (BA).
The remaining 6 are:
Canadian National Railway (CNI),
Sysco (SYY),
Canadian Pacific Railway (CP),
PACCAR (PCAR),
Cummins (CMI), and
Honeywell (HON).
How does our newfangled list of these 14 companies help? For starters, the quality is there. You can invest in any of the stocks issued by those companies at any time, as long as you only invest a small and fixed amount over regular intervals (dollar-cost averaging). Second, fundamental information is readily available because all 14 appear on the Barron’s 500 List published annually (in May). There you can find the most recent year’s sales, and the cash-flow related ROIC (Return on Invested Capital) vs. its 3-yr average. Then you can see how those data rank each company and how that ranking compares to the previous year. Third, we show whether the company was a small loser or a big loser during the Lehman Panic (see Column D in all the Table), and whether the company’s long-term total return (Column C in the Table) mitigated that risk (see Column E in the Table). If the Finance Value in Column E beats our benchmark’s (VBINX), you’re likely to benefit from owning the company’s stock instead of shares in VBINX.
Bottom Line: These stocks are the pulse of the economy, meaning they're high-risk high-reward. Only 5 of the 14 are Dividend Achievers, and only one of those (NSC) has a Finance Value that beat’s our key benchmark, the Vanguard Balanced Index Fund (see Table). But there is one other reasonable approach to investing in this sector, and that is to gradually build a position in iShares Transportation Average (IYT), which is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the performance of stocks in the Dow Jones Transportation Average. When the earnings of transportation company stocks are growing at a nice clip, you can be confident that the economy is doing well. And vice versa. So own a few of these stocks and learn from their price movements. Then you won’t be mystified by the next lurch upward or downward in the stock market, and you won’t panic (sell) when others do. Except for the railroads (which are government-regulated to protect both customers and investors), the stocks in this week’s Table are not the “buy-and-hold” variety.
Risk Rating: 7
Full Disclosure: I own shares of CNI, UTX, and CMI.
NOTE: Metrics in the Table are current as of the Sunday of publication; metrics highlighted in red denote underperformance vs. our key benchmark (VBINX).
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