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Posts Tagged ‘Greece’

Reminder on how to approach markets

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Markets are sending clear signals …

 

Friday May 7 – day after Flash crash trade, SPX opens at 1126 and closes at 1,110

Monday May 10 – market opens at 1,160

Thursday May 13 – market trades at its intra-week high of 1,175, closes down 1.4% that day from the peak

Friday May 14 – market sells off again, with heavy selling pressure at the open

Monday May 17 – big selloff intraday with a huge recovery rally

Tuesday May 17 – the week’s bear market begins, with a strong open and a  decline of 2.5% that day …

Thursday May 19 – already down to 1,086 (almost at the “Flash Crash” lows). Market is down 7.5% since the peak on the 13th

Markets are in untested waters. I would like to give a great quote from Larry Hite, one of the premier systematic investors of our times:

“Two basic rules: 1) if you don’t bet, you can’t win, and 2) if you lose all your chips, you can’t bet.”

Keep that principle in mind. Why do we say untested waters? Because sovereign risk is an ugly situation for markets to face, because it isnt about corporate profitability, it isnt about market sentiment, it is about global macro panic. It is about the potential for a new global crisis …

Trade safely,

The Covert Analytics Team

 

Keeping an eye on the indicators

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

As we mentioned back here in our post on the direction of the stock market over the upcoming months, it is important to track the indicators.  Long story short, they have turned a bit ugly.  To paraphrase one of the true brightest and best:

“Put your ears to the railroad tracks. Prices move first, and fundamentals come second.”

This tells you that though reports are confirming that fundamentals are sound …

  • M&A, Capex, share buybacks, dividend increases have been running at historically low levels and are just beginning to rise
  • Corporates are lean, and richer in cash than they have been in decades
  • Profit margins are approaching all time highs, only a year after the “Great Recession”

… the market is sending a different signal:

  • Dr Copper and Dr Crude are both down about 17% (through today, May 18)
  • S&P was spooked into its largest intra day loss since 1987, and is now down about 7% from April 26
  • Yield curve (10s / 3Ms) has flattened by about 50 bps from nearly 380 bps to 330.

Where to from here? The Greek drama reflects a broader sovereign crisis that took us by surprise with respect to how quickly it cascaded into a crisis.  Greece was one of the weaker guys in the pack, but its amazing to us how Ireland has a deficit of -14.7%, compared with Greece’s deficit of -12.2% and little mention is made in the press of their situation. True, the total indebtedness of Greece is higher, at 124.9% of GDP compared with Ireland’s 82.9%.

And thats not all.  A massive oil spill, looming uncertainty over financial reform, civil lawsuits against the investment banks, etc.

Difficult times indeed. However we think the market is going to trade lower over the next few months. This is not to say the rally has been officially delayed, but these are major headwinds that have reminded the market that volatility is always around the corner. It is very easy to say that this has spooked a bunch of investors who have been cautiously adding to their exposure and are now reminded of the awful 2nd half of 2008.

Sincerely,

The Covert Analytics Team

 

Quantification Can Create the Illusion of Precision

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

At Covert Analytics our dynamic asset allocation models are based on risk indexes which portfolio managers build to evaluate the risk inherent in a market. But this quantitative indicator may create a false illusion as to the true risk of any market. Today was an example of this.

The past few weeks showed an amazing resurgence in seemingly black-swan type risks. First an Icelandic ash volcano that paralyzed European travel, a massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the “smartest guys in the room” aka Goldman Sachs getting hit with civil fraud charges by the S.E.C. and now out of nowhere a -9% selloff intraday on the US stock market. It was the biggest intraday selloff in percentage points since 1987.

Today showed us that financial markets are fickle. Sentiment and risk perception often swing abruptly. Greece’s economy is small, at EUR 254 billion, particularly in an economic bloc that is nearly EUR 9 trillion or 35x its size. The Greek problem has the potential to develop into a full blown epidemic, threatening the entire European economy.

The political tension is rising: elections in the UK today with a change in leadership from Labour to Conservatives, Germany’s elections in North Rhine – Westphalia, etc. A Greece bailout is very unpopular, but so is preempting a global financial crisis. Whereas some rumors have indicated that Greece has consulted with Lazard to examine a restructuring, other rumors have hinted at G-7 coordination today (May 7) to contain the crisis.

A simple punchline is that a Greek debt default or restructuring is inevitable. Even in the event of restructuring the result is the same.  Looking back to the 1930s the Creditanstalt bank default occurred in 1931, sparking a global banking crisis, but the great crash of the Great Depression occurred 2 years before in 1929.

Regardless on the view of whether Greece will be bailed out it is difficult to envision an environment where this will be beneficial for the Euro. This is not to say that a breakup of the EUR is in order. But, countries now including the ECB will be inclined to transition into quantitative easing, ie print their currencies.

Own gold as a hedge. Stocks are a good buy given that this event will definitely leave in place accommodative monetary policy. We dont think an all out default of Greece or a disintegration of the Euro bloc will occur. If we are right, stocks will rocket from current levels with renewed stimuli and a refocusing on economic fundamentals.

Greece, the Euro, and the European Union

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

The EUR/USD remains stuck in a downward trend. The Euro has had a tumultuous two years.  After peaking at nearly $1.60 in the summer of 2008, it then plummeted 20% in a little less than 3 months as the financial crisis gripped the EU and it became clear that Europe’s banking sector was under considerable duress. As the market rally unfolded in early 2009, the EUR staged a rally up to $1.50, and has since been hijacked by the Greek drama and sold off to $1.36.

The fragility of the financial system
Given that Greece’s GDP is approximately US$ 356 billion (compared with Germany’s US$ 3,652 billion economy), the Greek debt crisis is not an insurmountable task for the EU.  In fact, current talk is to help Greece meet its immediate obligations (20 billion EUR of its debt falls due in April and May) only. What the Greek crisis has shown the market is the fragility of the global financial system (much like the Dubai scare did in November of last year).  Also clear are the deflationary pressures still circling through the global economy.

Further profligacy is feared
Clearly, either Germany or the EU can gather enough financial resources to bail out Greece. Most likely it will be  a joint effort led by France and Germany, the country with the deepest pockets.  But as the Economist said: “Berlin frets that a rescue will only encourage further profligacy”.

Why the markets got spooked
What is most at question now is the “common currency regime” of the Euro bloc.  Combine the moral hazard problem of bailing Greece out, with bleak finances in the peripheral euro area, the small chance that the Euro bloc countries can maintain their fiscal responsibilities, along with the continuing economic contraction in Europe and you will understand why markets got spooked.

Where do we go from here?
After vague promises, markets want European finance ministers to come up with concrete measures.  The issue at hand is whether the EU will finalize the details of support extended to Greece to prevent a default.  Since January 22, markets have been seized by the ongoing concerns regarding Greek public finances though the S&P rallied back to 1,100 from a low of 1,040.  Let’s put this in a global context:

  • As we discussed on our blog post on January 26 ( click here to read ), Greece’s problems relate not only to an extraordinarily high debt load but a really ugly deficit problem as well: the debt to GDP ratio in Greece is near 125% and the fiscal deficit as a percent of GDP is near 12.5%.
  • The ECB has not done as much as the Fed in reflating its economy: since 2008 M2 has expanded about 13% in the US, whereas in Europe M3 has expanded only 6%.  Additionally the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet has grown by a multiple of 2.6x in the same time frame, compared with 1.4x in the Eurozone.
  • Euro area authorities will find a way to bail out Greece and avoid the markets forcing the PIGS into a default scenario. PIGS refers to Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain.  Note that since last week Greek rates have dropped from 7% to 6%.

In summary
We think evaluating the EUR move over the past two months has been fundamentally logical (the EUR is overvalued on a purchasing parity basis, combined with the Greek drama) as well as on a technical basis (DXY seemed to make a major market bottom this year).  We think the EUR will drift lower versus the US$.

Good trading,

The Covert Analytics Team

US$ Rally Mostly Against EUR, GBP

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

The EUR is trading at $1.45 for the first time since September (when it broke to the upside, going as high as $1.513). If the EUR heads to the 200-day moving average, it would reach a level in the low $1.40s. It broke below the 50-day moving average earlier in December, which is important given that since the EUR bull move began in March, this has served as a great support level. There are plenty of reasons for the EUR weakness, including Greek CDS spreads continuing their break out. From the Big Picture:

“Greek bonds are down sharply again with their 10 yr yield rising 24 bps to 5.70%, up 83 bps in 2 weeks and at the highest level since April and their 5 yr CDS is at the highest since March due to the lack of faith in the plan laid out by Greece’s PM.”

DXY (US Dollar Trade Weighted Index) has made a notable strong move, its first since January of this year. Its current reading is 77.06.