Saturday, November 24, 2007

Brace Yourself !

After the stock market bloodbath which we have witnessed in the last few weeks, why shouldn't an enterprising investor stay away from the markets temporarily?
It appears investors have been spooked by recent colossal write downs reported by nearly all the major investment banks indicating that the turmoil in the credit markets is far from over. In fact some pundits warn that this is just the beginning and forecast that 2008 will be the year of reckoning.

You remember the controversial summer bailouts-when the major central banks around the world infused over a hundred billion dollars into the markets to ease the liquidity crunch? So much for the band aid solution which did not address the underlying weaknesses in the credit markets but instead sought to act as a temporary reprieve and serve as an artificial stimulus!

Deja-vu all over again? After a second run to past 14,000 a few weeks ago, the Dow has since lost over 1000 points, the NASDAQ and S&P are both down as well.
Outside of the financials, fundamentals seem to be sound as of now with some companies like HP who recently reported a 28% increase in profits in the last quarter. This holiday season is expected to be the slowest since 2002 with retail sales forecasted to increase only by 4% compared to last years 4.8%.

Personally, I don’t think that consumption will slow down. Yes, while it is true that foreclosures and delinquencies are at their highest level and home values have adjusted downwards, the American consumer is tenacious and will borrow to the hilt in an effort to maintain the lifestyle.

I managed to rollout of bed and join avid shoppers the queue at Best Buy at 4am on “Black Friday” not to shop, because I had already done so online, but to gauge consumer sentiment. My erudition yielded results that reinforced my opine-that shopping patterns haven’t changed and will not change much and consequently, we can expect retailers to report blow out earnings next quarter. My portfolio is long AAPL and GRMN because I believe their bottomline will benefit tremendously from this shopping season resulting in some nice capital gains when I exit.

However, I would advise investors with a short time horizon to refrain all together, go short or buy put options. Use ETF’s like QID, DOG, SDS, MZZ…etc which short indices. Avoid shorting individual stocks. Advanced investors should profit from the volatility using combination option strategies like straddles, which allow the holder to profit based on how much the price of the underlying security moves, regardless of the direction of price movement.

I foresee a continuing onslaught on the financials. Look for more surprises in the form of restated earnings and more write downs which have besmirched the balance sheets of otherwise profitable companies like Citi (C), Merril (MER) and Bear (BSC). These events will foreshadow overall good earnings results reported next quarter and hurt consumer and business confidence which will result in another sell off.

In an effort to mitigate risk and reduce exposure to consumer debt, banks will follow suit lowering credit lines thus dampening both consumer and business spending further; the tighter credit markets will result in a drag on the overall economy which will soon spread beyond housing into other sectors.

If the Fed vacillates like last time, the credit squeeze might spell doom for all and spiral us into a recession. Yes I said the R word.

6 comments:

The Black Mamba said...

The S&P is down YTD, DJIA is skidding fast and GOOG closed at 666 today.

The market is going to hell in hand basket. Literally.

PS. I just thought I should throw in google's closing price to spice up my comment.


I hope you woke up at 4 am on Black Friday because it was part of your job. Or were you on your way home?

Fedha said...

Ssem: Ebu i digress...back in the day rumor had it that the pope never chomowad his kofia coz his head was branded 666. He he, kids!

I am perpetually optimistic and hold the view that this is a wanton emotional sell off not helped by the fact that the dollar keeps sliding and oil is at stratospheric heights. Oct-Dec are traditionally good months for stocks.

The Fed needs to step in and halt the skid; cut by 100 basis to calm the street.
A 10% correction is major and if the indices keep plunging through support levels, then we are in dogs!

Fedha said...

Bilaz, I braced the baridis just to validate my conviction that consumers aren't about to slow down (at least not this season)

When i saw them snapping up Garmin GPS devices & Apple products, i felt a warm rush of justification fill me, confirming my recent decision to buy the two at $107 and $155 respectively.

I fear though that all the bad news may overshadow blow out earnings next quarter.

The Black Mamba said...

Fedha, the problem with the US is that most assets are bubbled up. Even if Fed cut the rates to 0% it will not help much because there is no liquidity unless people borrow more than they have.

Like the oil, why the heck is it going for 100 bucks a barrel? Are traders hoading that stuff? It's almost at a $20 premium!

As we head into a bear market, just remember no stock is immune to selling pressures. The worst part is that people sell the good stocks to cover for their losses. I can't see the market closing positive this year. The Fed is out of options.

Fedha said...

I agree on principal, however alot of investing is psychological. Look at what happened to the market today after one of the governors hinted at another rate cut-easing rates increases money supply and credit availability- investors,businesses and consumers cheer to that.

OPEC is a cartel, they do whatever they damn please.

Great point about selling good stocks to cover for losses. there are also those investors doing a bit of tax loss selling in the latter part of Dec.

I don't think we'll end the year in negative territory though. I guess we'll find out soon!

pesa tu said...

I think Central Banks are more worried about the threat of stagflation.Than just recession.
I think rate cuts will end soon