A few months back, I outlined that implied volatility was so low that I was replacing some of my long positions with long call options (and short positions with long put options). If volatility moves higher, I will likely be doing the opposite and replacing these long call / put positions with short calls / puts.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Put Selling as a Replacement For Stocks
A few months back, I outlined that implied volatility was so low that I was replacing some of my long positions with long call options (and short positions with long put options). If volatility moves higher, I will likely be doing the opposite and replacing these long call / put positions with short calls / puts.
First Quarter GDP Revised Down to 1.9%
Marketwatch details:
The U.S. economy ran into a deeper soft patch in the first quarter than initially estimated, a government report showed on Thursday.
The Commerce Department estimated that the economy grew at a 1.9% pace in the first quarter, slower than the 2.2% rate initially reported.
This is down from a 3.0% growth rate of real gross domestic product, the output of goods and services produced in the U.S., in the fourth quarter.
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
What Happened to the Great Bond Sell-Off?
It's amazing that it was only a bit more than two months ago that I wrote this post defending bonds against what was labeled the "Bond Market Arab Spring". It's also amazing how wrong pundits continue to be as Long Treasuries have now caught up to the S&P 500 year-to-date after the ten year Treasury reached an all-time low.
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Existing Home Sales Rise Across the Board
While the overall level of existing home sales is still well below the bubble peak (4.62 million vs. 7+ million in mid-2005), the trend is positive across housing markets and prices.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
(U.S.) Relative Strength
Checking in on Inflation
Marketwatch details:
Inflationary pressures are fading, just as Federal Reserve officials expected. But don’t think that the decline in the inflation rate will automatically lead to further quantitative easing by the Fed.
The consumer price index was flat in April, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Tuesday. And the CPI is expected to drop by at least 0.2% in May on account of the big drop in gasoline prices.
The CPI has increased 2.3% compared with a year ago, down from a 2.7% year-over-year rate in March and 3.9% last September. By May, the year-over-year rate could slow to 1.8%, below the Fed’s longer run target.
Friday, May 11, 2012
EconomPics Recap
I just came to the realization that I haven't had an EconomPic recap since March 9th, so here goes:
Economic Data
- Trade Deficit Blow Out
- The Consumer is Back... Consumer Credit Positive (even excluding student loans)
- Ugliest Employment Chart You'll See?
- Employment Market Continues to Muddle Along
- Personal Income and Outlays... A Few Charts
- GDP Breakdown
- How's That Austerity Working?
- Leading Economic Indicators (less Fed Control) Negative
- Retail Sales Continue to Show Strength
- State Taxes
- What's Another Trillion?
Investing
- Stocks for the Long Run?
- When Leverage Attacks
- April ETF Performance Recap
- Baby's Got Sauce... Checking in on the World's Greatest Rotation Strategy
- More on that Treasury Blood Bath
- The Power of Momentum
- Why Investors are Reaching for Yield?
- Chinese Treasury Holdings Back to 2010 Levels
- The VIX as an Equity Hedge
- Baseball Valuations Soar
- "Risk On" in Q1
- Not All Bonds are the Same
- About that Treasury Blood Bath
Random
And your video of the week... Beastie Boys (RIP MCA) closing out 'The New Style'.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Trade Deficit Blow Out
BusinessWeek details the reality:
The trade deficit widened more than forecast in March as American demand for crude oil, computers, automobiles and televisions propelled imports to a record.Change in Trade Balance - Chain-Weighted 2005 $$ (i.e. real change in 2005 dollar valuation)
The gap grew 14 percent to $51.8 billion, the Commerce Department reported in Washington today. The median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for an increase to $50 billion. A 5.2 percent jump in imports, the biggest in more than a year, swamped the 2.9 percent gain in exports, which also reached a record.
With the re-emerging crisis in Europe since the March trade balance print (and what will likely be a resulting oversupply of goods coming from emerging Asia), don't expect this trend to slow any time soon.
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Stocks for the Long Run?
Monday, May 7, 2012
The Consumer is Back... Consumer Credit Positive (Even Excluding Student Loans)
SF Gate details:
Consumer borrowing in the U.S. surged in March by the most in more than a decade on growing demand for educational financing and autos.I've been showing the below chart for some time. It shows the year-over-year change in revolving consumer credit, non-revolving consumer (excluding student loans), and student loans. Headline consumer credit has been growing since early last year, but this had been solely due to student loans (not necessarily a bad investment, but it doesn't reflect consumers re-leveraging for goods and services).
Credit rose by $21.4 billion, the biggest gain since November 2001, to $2.54 trillion, Federal Reserve figures showed today in Washington. The advance was paced by a $16.2 billion jump in non-revolving debt, including student and car loans.
Americans may have been trying to get school financing before a possible increase in interest rates takes place on July 1. Rising consumer confidence also means that households are more willing to take on debt to boost spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy.
Friday, May 4, 2012
Ugliest Employment Chart You'll See?
Per Felix Salmon:
As Mike Konczal noted this morning, a key indicator of labor recession is still in force: if you’re unemployed, you’re still more likely to drop out of the labor force entirely than you are to find a job.Let's see how that trend has fared over the longer term.
The chart below shows the ten year rolling change in the number of individuals employed divided by the ten year rolling change of those individuals no longer in the labor force. Any number over 1 means that the marginal person of working age is more likely to have gotten a job ten years later than to be out of the labor force.
In the late 1980's / mid 1990's, this marginal individual was a whopping 8x more likely to have found a job than no longer be looking. Today? 0.35x, which means that the marginal individual of working age (relative to 2002) is 3x more likely to be out of the labor force, than to have found a job.
Employment Market Continues to Muddle Along
The NY Times details:
The nation’s employers added 115,000 positions on net, after adding 154,000 in March. April’s job growth was less than what economists had been predicting. The unemployment rate ticked down to 8.1 percent in April, from 8.2 percent, but that was because workers dropped out of the labor force.The first chart shows the unemployment rate from the payroll survey, which shows the headline improvement.
The share of working-age Americans who are in the labor force, either by working or actively looking for a job, is now at its lowest level since 1981 — when far fewer women were doing paid work.
The next chart shows the issue with the calculation. The reason for the improvement in the unemployment rate is due to the continued departure of millions from the labor force (if you're not looking for a job, you're not technically unemployed).
The final chart attempts to account for the declining labor force through a cyclical adjustment. Similar to Shiller's cyclically adjusted P/E ratio, the below normalizes the labor force participation rate through a 10 year rolling average, then assumes the difference in that average and the latest number of participants are unemployed (or in the case of a rising workforce, it reduces the number of unemployed).
What we see is that the labor force was potentially much stronger than headline figures indicate throughout the 1960's - 1990's as the participation rate increased (in no small part due to women entering the labor force), as it took some time for the labor market to accommodate the increase. Since 2000, the reverse has been true as the participation rate has trended down... now at the lowest rate since 1981. Taking the current number of workers and assuming a cyclically adjusted labor force, unemployment is still above 10%.
Which seems more accurate at first glance.
Source: BLS
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
When Leverage Attacks
Real risk is the risk of permanent loss of capital.Investments made with borrowed money reduces the range that the investment can move without causing a permanent impairment of capital.
- 5x leverage (i.e. a 20% down payment... pretty standard, though not so much during the bubble)
- If prices rise, sell your investment property each year and with the equity gains, buy a more expensive property at 5x leverage
- Mortgage payments = rental receipts
- No taxes / transaction fees
- Real estate investment is not riskless, especially when leverage is introduced
- Down payments of 20% do not prevent bubbles (as the chart above shows, asset appreciation allows an investor to put gains back in the market)