US bond returns are now negative over the past 2 years. The last time that happened was 1981. While there will likely be bumps along the way, I don’t think it will take another 37 years before we see another negative rolling 2 year return, do you? If not, it’s a good time to be thinking about how to immunize your portfolio.
Setting Up
If any of you saw James Cameron’s film, Avatar and were blown away by the graphics and visual effects, then you have seen what Autodesk’s software can do in the hands of experts. Centered smack in the middle of the red hot technology sector, Autodesk’s stock, ADSK, is setting up for a breakout to all-time highs.
As you can see in the chart of ADSK below, price sits well above a rising 200 day moving average and is consolidating just under the $139 resistance zone. Each of the past 3 attempts buyers tried to push through that level it was rejected, indicating an overwhelming supply available for sale. On the positive side, these past 3 months of sideways chop, a nice-looking cup and handle pattern has developed. A confirmed breakout and hold above the current $139 resistance points to an upside target in the area of $155.
Cup and handle patterns that have their handle bottoms no greater than 50% of the depth of the cup provide higher probability setups, this one is slightly greater. More importantly shallow handles provide a much higher reward to risk ratio. In the case of this ADSK opportunity, using the handle bottom as the exit point if wrong, the ratio sits at 1.7 (meaning a $1.70 return for every dollar invested). I like the setup but don’t like the ratio as it is less than my preferred target of 3. When it comes to a less than perfect setup, an investor has 3 choices 1) deviate from the investment plan (accept a ratio less than target) 2) move on to the next opportunity or 3) tighten up the exit point. Hmmm. Decisions. Decisions.
Forewarned is Forearmed
As you can see in the graphic below, for the most part US equities mirror those of the rest of the world. Well, at least we can say they tend to both move up and down together. There are times when one of the two considerably outperforms the other. The first instance of this performance divergence occurred beginning in 1986 when global equities turned tail and left US stocks in the dust. It took about a decade before they came back into balance.
For the next 20+ years the two pairs tracked fairly well except just before the 2007-’08 huge market draw-down where foreign stocks, once again, vaulted to the upside. In both cases of foreign stock out-performance, you needn’t look any further than the dollar for an explanation as it fell precipitously, bringing rise to foreign asset values.
Fast forward to today’s post-apocalyptic 2008 market crash revival, US stocks are massively outperforming. The reasoning may be flipped but the cause is still the same, the dollar. It’s been ripping higher since the 2009 stock market bottom. If you are like me and believe the dollar is on a mission to much, much higher levels, its likely US stocks will continue their tremendous out-performance. Keep this in mind as you rebalance your portfolio. If I am wrong, it will present investors with one the greatest reversion-to-mean trades in recent history. Forewarned is forearmed.
I’m Baaaack
The Value Line Arithmetic US stock index closed the week at all-time highs, weathering the Jan-Feb double digit correction, reflecting the strength and resiliency of this bull market.
The SP500 index, while not quite as strong as the Value Line, sits just under its January high. Why the difference? The Value Line Arithmetic Composite Index represents a larger slice of the US market as it holds almost 1700 stocks vs 500 for the SP500. Most of the difference is smaller cap stocks which have recently outperformed. Additionally, each company’s shares are held in in equal amounts (equal weighted) rather than being cap weighted. Being the truer measure of the US stock market, the good news is the Value Line index is showing relative strength and broad breadth which reflect the internals of a very healthy stock market.
Mo
There are a number of compelling academic studies including the Jegadeesh and Titman report published in the Journal of Finance which showed a portfolio of momentum stocks outperforms the broad-based SP500 index. Other studies demonstrate it’s not required to put your entire portfolio into momentum stocks if you want outperformance. Just having portfolio exposure works too.
One of my go-to vehicles if I want to spread my risk across many momentum stocks is MTUM, the Ishares ETF. The chart below is a 5 year look at the ETF. In the upper pane is RSI which was massively overbought but after the recent double digit pullback, has been reset, is above 50 and rising. In the middle pane is price which is above both its blue uptrend line and the rising 200 day moving average. I would be remiss if didn’t mention, it is within 9 cents of breaking out to new, all-time highs.
And if you are wondering how it has performed, the bottom pane is the ratio of MTUM against the SP500 index. When looking at ratios remember a rising line says the ETF is outperforming the US stock index. Pretty easy to see this momentum play does very well during uptrends, but loses more in downtrends so keep that in mind when investing. Over the last 5 years, MTUM has outperformed the index by more than 35%, a 6% annualized rate of return greater than the benchmark.